News – Newsletters
International Spotlight: An Interview with International Coalition of Sites of Conscience
This article was released in the ICOM Canada September 2019 e-newsletter on Cultural Diplomacy. See more articles from this issue here. Ben Fast (Alberta Museums Association; ICOM Canada) Each e-newsletter issue will feature an international spotlight, highlighting the work of an ICOM committee, international museum, partner organization, or other related body working in the area of our newsletter theme. For this issue Ben Fast, ICOM Canada’s Digital Content & Outreach Coordinator, connected with Dina Bailey (Director of Methodology and Practice), Linda Norris (Global Networks Program Director), and Sarah Pharaon (Senior Director Methodology and Practice) to learn about the cultural diplomacy work conducted by and through the US-based International Coalition of Sites of Conscience. BF: What is the International Coalition of Sites of Conscience? SP: The International Coalition of Sites of Conscience (ICSC) is a worldwide network of sites, museums and memory initiatives dedicated to remembering past struggles and addressing their contemporary legacies. Sites [...]
New Research Project on Museum Diplomacy in Canada
This article was released in the ICOM Canada September 2019 e-newsletter on Cultural Diplomacy. See more articles from this issue here. Dr. Sascha Priewe (Royal Ontario Museum; ICOM Canada) This summer, researchers from Queen’s University, in partnership with the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (MMFA), commenced work on Global Engagement of Museums in Canada, a research project supported by the Mitacs Accelerate Program. Filling a considerable data gap, this project parses the international cultural work and activities of eleven museums and art galleries across Canada, including the Art Gallery of Alberta, Aga Khan Museum, Canadian Museum of History, Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Museum of Anthropology at UBC, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa Art Gallery, Pointe-à-Callière Montréal Archaeology and History Complex, and the Royal Ontario Museum. The selected museums are by no means representative of all museums and art galleries in Canada, but [...]
Building Connection through Universal Stories
This article was released in the ICOM Canada September 2019 e-newsletter on Cultural Diplomacy. See more articles from this issue here. C.W. Gross (Glenbow Museum) There has been a tremendous emphasis put on representing our differences in the recent political climate. As a museum educator I often worry that we place so much emphasis on diversity of characteristics that we lose sight of one of the most powerful connections our museums make: the universality of our stories. One of the stories my wife, a fellow educator, and I most like to tell is the story of my father. He was born in 1932 in what was known at the time as Regenwalde, Pomerania, in the Weimar Republic (the unofficial historical designation applied to the German state from 1918-1933). His father had served as a Prussian medic in World War I, and when the Nazis seized power shortly after my father’s birth, he helped persecuted peoples escape [...]
Book Review: Cosmopolitan Ambassadors
This article was released in the ICOM Canada September 2019 e-newsletter on Cultural Diplomacy. See more articles from this issue here. Simge Erdogan (Queen’s University) Cosmopolitan Ambassadors: International Exhibitions, Cultural Diplomacy and the Polycentral Museum by Lee Davidson and Leticia Pérez Castellanos What is an international exhibition? How can museums work internationally through international exhibitions? What roles do international exhibitions play in our society? Cosmopolitan Ambassadors is a treasure trove of theory, practice, exploration, and insight, which provides in-depth answers to these questions. Authors Lee Davidson (Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand) and Leticia Pérez Castellanos (Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Mexico) examine international exhibitions as mobile contact zones which not only mobilize objects but also people, ideas, and experiences around intercultural understanding and a cosmopolitan worldview. To read the full book review, please click here. The book starts with a rich discussion of the history, issues, and models of international exhibitions which are put against [...]
From Decolonization to Indigenization: the Road to Equality
A version of this presentation was given September 2, 2019 by ICOM Canada Board member, Michèle Rivet, C.M. at the 25th ICOM General Assembly in Kyoto, Japan. Michèle's presentation was part of the "Decolonisation and Restitution: Moving towards a more holistic perspective and relational approach" panel (Session 1) moderated by Afşin Altayli (ICOM Secretariat) and Tonya Nelson (Chair, ICOM UK). The presentation spanned two rounds of talks. From Decolonization to Indigenization: The Road to Equality I would like to thank my ICOM Canada colleagues for their contributions, and to Marie Lalonde, Board chair, and the others attending here today. ICOM’s potential contribution to the process of decolonizing museums and museology lies in formal and informal exchanges and collaborations between Canadian Members, within International Committees, and with ICOM members from countries that are, like Canada, in the process of decolonizing their museums. In 2016, Indigenous peoples in Canada constituted over 1.6 [...]