Introducing Partnered Collaboration into a Native American Gallery Renewal Project in a State Museum

TitleIntroducing Partnered Collaboration into a Native American Gallery Renewal Project in a State Museum
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsDuggan, BJ
JournalPracticing Anthropology
Volume33
Pagination28-34
KeywordsExhibition development, Native American, Partnered collaboration
Abstract

It is August 2007, and I am sitting a few rows up and to the side in a partially darkened auditorium, looking down on a rectangle of folding tables. Beside and behind me are perhaps a hundred museum staff members. Around the tables, men and women in business attire gather, arranging folders, notepads, and laptops. Two fiddle with the PowerPoint projector, while others wait, sitting quietly, or whispering to a neighbor. The meeting is called to order, introductions made, the printed agenda handed around, and protocols for commenting are laid out. With the two teams now facing each other, presentations by the contracted design firm begin, with points raised by and clarified for the museum team in between. Today's presentations explain the firm's general design plans, their own team leaders' duties and deadlines for exhibit content development and design production, and preparatory assignments and deadlines for Museum staff in its anthropology and history sections for their respective content development deadlines.

URLhttp://sfaa.metapress.com/link.asp?id=m01130g7550k6l71
DOI10.17730/praa.33.2.m01130g7550k6l71