The Period Room: Museum, Material, Experience
Thursday 18th Friday 19th
& Saturday 20th September 2014
The Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham
Since the late 19th century the Period Room
has been a consistent presence in the public museum, and yet over the past 25
years the Period Room has become a contentious museum object, leading many
museums to question the legitimacy of the Period Room as an effective and
appropriate method of display and interpretation.
As dislocated fragments, often remodelled to fit the
spaces in the museum, the Period Room is, for some: a signifier for the inauthentic,
an outmoded method of display and an example of unfashionable museum
interpretation. Many museums retain their Period Room displays, but the recent
changes in the perspectives on Period Rooms have also led a number of museums
in the UK, Europe and the USA to reconsider their continued relevance as museum
objects. This may include dismantling or de-accessioning the displays, and in
some cases, repatriating the Period Rooms to their places of origin (if they
still exist).
This
conference, jointly organised by the University of Leeds and The Bowes Museum,
and supported by the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art, considers
the Period Room, and the historic interior, from a wide variety of perspectives
in order to address some key questions about the history and practice of Period
Room displays in Museums.
The conference has an interdisciplinary framework
incorporating theoretical and practice-based perspectives. It brings together leading
academics and museum professionals from a wide range of institutions in the UK,
Europe and the USA, to discuss, debate and share perspectives on history and
interpretation of Period Rooms and historic interiors in museums.
For conference delegates there is also a chance for
wider participation in the debates through the mid-conference ‘Sandpit’. We
hope that the conference will have wide appeal and that it will have a
significant impact on future museum practice and museum theory.
Conference highlights include:
Keynote talks from Thomas Michie, (Senior Curator,
Decorative Art and Sculpture at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston) and Giles
Waterfield, (Former Director, Dulwich Picture Gallery).
Closing conference address from Professor Helen Rees
Leahy (Professor of Museology at the University of Manchester).
Conference speakers include museum professionals from
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Minneapolis Institute of Art; New
Orleans Museum of Art; National Museums, Scotland; Historic Royal Palaces; The
Science Museum, London; The Jewish Museum, Vienna, and the Universalmuseum
Joannneum, Graz. As well as academics from University of Cambridge; University
of Ghent; KTH Royal Institute, Stockholm; De Montfort University; University of
Durham; Open University; University of Potsdam; University of Southampton.
Included in the conference fees are:
Presentations on the innovative methods of display and
interpretation of the English Interiors Galleries at The Bowes Museum, led by
senior curators.
An organised field trip to Auckland Castle.
Evening wine receptions at both The Bowes Museum and
Auckland Castle.
The full conference programme and costs are available via The Bowes
Museum website: www.thebowesmuseum.org.uk
For further
information, or to request a booking form please contact Rosie Bradford at The
Bowes Museum by email: ThePeriodRoom@thebowesmuseum.org.uk or by telephone: 01833
694615.
We expect high demand
for Conference Tickets so we advise booking early.
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