Redefining Successful Interpretation in Art Museums

by Nancy on July 25, 2010

by Daryl Fischer and Lisa Levinson

Abstract

This article aims to capture the spirit and content of a lively exchange among museum staff members at the Denver Art Museum. It began as a conference call and continued as an online dialogue about how definitions of success have evolved with advances in technology and changing expectations of visitors. Together we explored how DAM staff encourage more active participation in the museum and the creative tension that ensues between visitor co-creation and institutional control. Woven throughout this conversation are examples that demonstrate the need to move fluidly between high tech and low tech interpretives, onsite and online experiences, and the impact of environments that break down museum stereotypes. It is our hope that this discussion will spark similar dialogues among colleagues in individual institutions and in the profession at large. Readers are encouraged to respond through the blog at Curator’s new website: http://www.curatorjournal.org.

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All photos in this article are courtesy of the Denver Art Museum.

Copyright © 2010 The California Academy of Sciences

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)

10.1111/j.2151-6952.2010.00031.x About DOI

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