Symposium: Atlas Versus the Cherry Tree - Museums, the Nation, and the World
How are cutting-edge museums around the world coping with immigration and globalization. If museums in the past were about creating national citizens, in this global world, to what extent do they now see themselves as creating global citizens too?
Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Cambridge, UK, April 14, 2011
This panel activity will focus on analyzing how cutting-edge museums around the world are coping with immigration and globalization. If museums in the past were about creating national citizens, in this global world, to what extent do they now see themselves as creating global citizens too? What is it about how museums are funded, organized, and administered that makes them more or less outward-looking? How do art and ethnographic museums do this differently? What is it about the history and culture of particular cities and regions that helps explain their stance?
Panelists
Kim Kanatani
Deputy Director and Gail Engelberg Director of Education
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
Suzanne Cotter
Curator, Abu Dhabi Project
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
Melissa Chiu
Museum Director and Curator for Contemporary Asian and Asian-American
Asia Society and Museum, New York
Jette Sandahl
Director
Københavns Museum/Museum of Copenhagen, Denmark
Irene Hirano
Japanese American National Museum, Los Angeles
Discussant
Thomas W. Lentz
Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director
Harvard Art Museums
Moderator
Peggy Levitt
Professor, Wellesley College and Co-Director,
Transnational Studies Initiative, Harvard University
Venue
Weil Town Hall, Belfer Building (Lobby Level)
Harvard Kennedy School of Government
Cambridge
This activity is free of charge and open to the public
Supported by
Transnational Studies Initiative (TSI)
The Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations
Weatherhead Center for International Affairs
Harvard Art Museums
Office for the Arts at Harvard
Museologie /