Archive for the ‘Museum News’ Category

Berlin’s historic Bode Museum to reopen - China Post

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006

Spiegel Online
Berlin’s historic Bode Museum to reopen
China Post, Taiwan - 1 hour ago
Germany’s historic Bode Museum is set to reopen this week after more than five years of renovation, displaying its original collection of paintings, furniture
Berlin’s Bode Museum Opens in Next Step Toward `German Louvre’ Bloomberg
Berlin - After expensive facelift, Berlin reopens Kaiser-Era Europa Concorsi
‘Berlin’s Louvre’ opens to public BBC News
International Herald Tribune - Deutsche Welle
all 42 news articles

Cutting-edge art museum to be dedicated Oct. 25 - Washington University Record

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006
Cutting-edge art museum to be dedicated Oct. 25
Washington University Record, Washington - 9 hours ago
The southern facades of the Kemper Art Museum and Earl E. and Myrtle E. Walker Hall. Also pictured is the Dula Foundation Central Courtyard.
Kemper Art Museum to open inaugural exhibitions Oct. 25 Washington University Record
all 2 news articles

Museum to acquire Oswald autopsy files - United Press International

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006

KVUE (subscription)
Museum to acquire Oswald autopsy files
United Press International
18 (UPI) — Recently discovered documents from the 1981 exhumation and autopsy on Lee Harvey Oswald appear headed for Dallas’ Sixth Floor Museum archives.
Records of Oswald exhumation going to Kennedy museum Team 4 News
Records of Oswald exhumation going to Kennedy museum Fort Worth Star Telegram
Museum set to add Oswald documents Dallas Morning News (subscription)
all 16 news articles

Sheffield museum reopens - BBC News

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006
Sheffield museum reopens
BBC News, UK - 11 hours ago
Sheffield’s Weston Park Museum was due to reopen in autumn 2005, but work was delayed because of major structural problems. Finally

Sheffield museum reopens
Ceiling in Weston Park museum
Birch ceiling in Weston Park museum

Sheffield’s Weston Park Museum was due to reopen in autumn 2005, but work was delayed because of major structural problems. Finally after costs of £17 million the museum reopened on Saturday, 14th October. This report from BBC Sheffield:

Listen to the story

Since early 2005, Mivan PLC, the company responsible for the Imperial War Museum in Manchester, Dubai’s Islamic Art Museum and parts of Disneyland, have fitted out all of the museum’s six gallery spaces.

Many of the original features are in place. The building feels like it has been opened up. It is brighter, lighter and more spacious. There are some glass panels on the walls and new glass roofing, bringing more light into the rooms.

Each of the six rooms has a different theme. The Harold Cantor Gallery will contain temporary exhibitions. The first exhibition will be from photographer Faye Chamberlain, documenting the changes to the buildings in the Weston Park project.

Entering through a steel city gateway, you are into the Sheffield Life and Times room. This room shows the skills and the industry that have shaped the city. There are also portraits of some of Sheffield’s local heroes, by photographer Harry Borden.

“Sheffield’s people, without exception, have been incredibly generous with their time, going out of their way to provide information and photographs from their family archives as well as memories of their own experiences,” said Kim Streets, Curator of Social History. She is working on the Sheffield Life and Times display.

Arctic World is a place where children can explore life in a land of ice and snow, with the help of Snowy, the museum’s resident polar bear.

There is a curved ceiling with birch beams in the What on Earth room. Here you can find out about Sheffield’s changing wildlife, weather and landscape. There will also be two large glass cases: one with a colony of bees, the other with a colony of ants. Both displays are fitted with webcams to see into their world.

There are newly commissioned paintings and sculptures in the About Art room. And in Treasures there is a collection of unexpected, ancient and contemporary things that people have found, loved and saved.

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Chinese museum curators to be offered training residencies in US - People’s Daily Online

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006
Chinese museum curators to be offered training residencies in US
People’s Daily Online, China - 18 hours ago
a non-profit US cultural organization, pledged on Wednesday to resume and expand its study programs in the United States for Chinese museum curators in the
Foreign Curators Visit South Korea Korea Times
US Delays Rule on Limits to Chinese Art Imports New York Times
all 4 news articles

Chinese Museum Curators to Be Offered Training Residencies in US
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, a non-profit U.S. cultural organization, pledged on Wednesday to resume and expand its study programs in the United States for Chinese museum curators in the next two years.Angelica Zander Rudenstine, the foundation’s program officer for museum and art conservation, said at the 2006 Sino-American Museum Forum that the foundation would “help develop a new generation of museum leaders” by offering study programs for another six or seven Chinese curators in 2007 and 2008.

The New York-based foundation started the programs for Chinese curators in 2001 in cooperation with the State Administration of Cultural Heritage of China.

The program benefited 11 Chinese curators until 2005, when the foundation decided to suspend the program for two years in order to arrange the Sino-American Museum Forum.

The three-month program would enable Chinese curators to undertake “residencies” in U.S. museums, where they could learn how “American museums are structured and administered, and how they organize their scholarly, curatorial and educational activities”, said Rudenstine.

The New York-based Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Washington-based Freer and Sackler Galleries, and the Ohio-based Cleveland Museum of Art would assist in the program.

“Previous programs have proved to be effective and successful,” she said.

Zheng Xinmiao, China’s Vice Minister of Culture, said China had more than 2,000 museums, 80 percent of them set up in the last two decades.

“These museums face a lack of qualified leaders, and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation program could help improve the situation.”

(Xinhua News Agency October 19, 2006)

Boards juggle wide range of crucial duties - Centre Daily Times

Sunday, October 15th, 2006
Boards juggle wide range of crucial duties
Centre Daily Times, PA - Oct 14, 2006
down with prospective board members, we tell them, besides governance — because you board must make a $100 donation and sell four museum memberships annually.

CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS

Boards juggle wide range of crucial duties

BY CHRIS SHULL
The Wichita Eagle

The boards of some of Wichita’s cultural institutions have come under scrutiny lately — and the attention has not always been flattering.

At Old Cowtown Museum, the board has been at the center of a contentious debate over the history museum’s future, how best to repair shopworn facilities and how to overcome a financial shortfall. Last month, some city and county officials said they wanted the board to disband.

At the Kansas African American Museum, the board faces a December deadline to present designs for a new museum building, or perhaps risk losing the riverfront land the city offered to donate more than a year ago.

At Exploration Place, the board grappled with stagnating attendance and financial woes before reaching agreement last year with Sedgwick County for a four-year, $7 million bailout.

At the Mid-America All-Indian Center, the board was forced to relinquish control to the city in 2004 to deal with mounting debt and managerial problems.

The experiences of these cultural groups illustrate the challenges faced by all who agree to sit on the boards of nonprofit groups.

And they raise questions about the duties of boards, and to what extent they should be involved in a group’s day-to-day operations.

For Mitchell Berman, executive director of the Wichita Symphony, a board’s responsibility is clear.

“The board is responsible for all aspects of the institution,” Berman said. “If there is a problem, it is their problem.”

Board members have to have general oversight of their organization. “They must react quickly with changing times,” said Eric Engstrom, an attorney and the president of Wichita Art Museum’s board of trustees.

The leaders of several of Wichita’s cultural institutions agreed that boards have three important duties:

To raise money

To chart a long-term course for the institution

To oversee its budget and day-to-day operations.

They also talked about what they think makes a board successful and highlighted challenges that can cripple an institution.

Who’s who?

Board membership can require substantial effort.

Members must attend meetings, usually at least once a month, and prepare beforehand. They organize special events and undertake fundraising campaigns.

They typically contribute money to the institution — sometimes thousands of dollars a year — and ask others to contribute, too.

Most local boards have nominating committees responsible for identifying and recruiting new members.

Board sizes vary: The Wichita Art Museum board has 29 members, the Center for the Arts, 19, and the Wichita Symphony, 63.

“It is made up of corporate representatives, it is made up of people who love the orchestra,” Berman said of the symphony board.

“As candidates are suggested we look at their level of activity with us — do they buy tickets? Do they contribute? What is their company’s role with us? And is that industry represented on our board?”

There is no consensus on what board size is effective, said Vernetta Walker, a consultant at Washington, D.C.-based BoardSource, which conducts seminars on how to build effective boards.

On smaller boards, it may be easier to reach a consensus. But a large board can provide greater reach into a community.

“Our board is out raising money, so if we don’t have enough firepower in a particular industry, that hurts us,” Berman said.

Board members are recruited as much for their passion for art and music as for their wealth and connections, local leaders said.

“We don’t just put people on the board because they are good businesspeople,” said Howard Ellington, director of the Wichita Center for the Arts. “We make sure that if you are asked to be on our board you have a passion about one of the disciplines we teach. Otherwise, they have no clue when you start talking about why you need money. They just become bottom-line people, and that’s deadly.”

Show me the money

One of the most important and visible duties of a board is fundraising.

“When we sit down with prospective board members, we tell them, besides governance — because you are the legal entity — we expect you to raise money,” Berman said.

The Wichita Center for the Arts requires a yearly minimum contribution to serve on a board. (Ellington declined to name the amount.)

Others expect board members to give some amount annually, and then to take the lead in communitywide fundraising drives.

At the Mid-America All-Indian Center, members of its 11-person board must make a $100 donation and sell four museum memberships annually. At the African American Museum, each board member is asked to raise $1,000 annually.

The Wichita Art Museum does not require a minimum gift, although board members are asked to make an annual contribution. “That varies from $35 to several thousand dollars, very large and generous gifts,” said Charles Steiner, the museum’s director.

Some members of nonprofit boards might consider their service as their contribution; others think monetary gifts are vital to the organization’s health.

“In my mind, if they can’t give a thousand dollars, they should give $25 — and then agree to go out and try to raise additional money,” Engstrom said.

“It just seems to follow — if you are not willing to give $25 to that organization, are you going to be out there trying to raise additional money for it? Are you really interested? Should you be on that board?”

Boards are responsible for the financial vitality of their groups; they should address budgetary shortfalls caused by missed projections, unforeseen circumstances or poor management, the directors agreed.

“The financial part is huge,” said Carol Wilson, a board member at the Center for the Arts. “No one should be a part of any board unless he or she wants to take on that fiduciary responsibility.”

Governing

Though museums typically hire a professional director to oversee day-to-day operations and to create programming, a volunteer board of directors shoulders ultimate responsibility for the museum’s well-being.

BoardSource’s Walker said the board is legally responsible for its organization. The board must ensure that its collection is safe, its mission is fulfilled and government regulations are met.

“By accepting the responsibility of being a board member, you are essentially saying you will exercise a certain ‘duty of care,’ ” Walker explained.

“That means you need to be at least somewhat informed. That means you are going to show up to meetings, you are going to read the materials, you’re going to be prepared and you’re going to exercise your independent judgment.”

Ellington at the Center for the Arts expects his board to direct all aspects of the institution.

“They own the place,” he said. “They establish and approve the budget, they approve all programs, they approve all fundraising events, they approve any updating to the facilities.”

Many directors said they expect board members to critically analyze their organization’s programs and operations, and to implement improvements if standards are slipping.

In 2003, the board at Exploration Place responded to a drastic decline in attendance by changing leadership and turning to Sedgwick County for $7 million in aid.

A new director, Alberto Meloni, took over at the science center in July and immediately booked the popular touring exhibit “A T. rex Named Sue.” So far, more than 17,900 people have seen the exhibit, generating nearly $130,000 in revenue — a 400 percent increase over the same month last year.

Even if it’s difficult to do, board members need to take significant steps to deal with significant problems. And because of their backgrounds, many board members are suited for such work.

“Boards are typically populated by highly successful, highly driven individuals who are successful in their own businesses,” Berman said. “We want them to bring those same standards to our institution.”

At the same time, successful people usually have busy schedules, noted Carolyn McGinn, interim president of the board at the Kansas African American Museum and a state senator.

“The biggest challenge is the demand on everyone’s time,” she said. “Our society has us involved in so many things that it is sometimes hard to dedicate the needed time to one organization.”

The big picture

Though fundraising and overseeing operations occupy a large part of a board’s focus and energy, Walker thinks that defining the mission and purpose of the organization should be the top priority of every nonprofit board.

A board not in agreement with the big picture will be less likely to reach consensus regarding programming and the organizations direction.

Boards should keep their institutions’ best interests at heart, but should not be afraid to take chances and try new things to ensure the long-term health of the organization.

“The board has to be a little visionary,” Ellington said. “They have to understand that because it has been done one way that they can’t just continue to do it forever.”

Negotiating the maze of demands and responsibilities can seem daunting to those who decide to sit on boards.

But the work can be ultimately gratifying.

“The relationships that you form with people who work at the organization and with other board members,” Wilson said.

“The feeling of ownership that you get, and the pride that you feel for being a part of something that is making a difference in this world — that’s why I do it.”


Reach Chris Shull at 316-268-6264 or cshull@wichitaeagle.com.

Nigeria: Neglect of War Museum - AllAfrica.com

Monday, October 9th, 2006
Nigeria: Neglect of War Museum
AllAfrica.com, Washington - Oct 9, 2006
the nation into their hands begins to see politics, governance and development National War Museum, Umuahia, is an important national institution, and for the

Disputed Iowa report sobering - Stockton Record

Friday, October 6th, 2006
Disputed Iowa report sobering
Stockton Record, CA - Oct 6, 2006
On the whole, though, “There is a lack of supportive attractions in Stockton, unlike many other maritime museums that were used for comparative purposes,” the

New Denver museum wing opening - Wilkes Barre Times-Leader

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006
New Denver museum wing opening
Wilkes Barre Times-Leader, PA - 10 minutes ago
AP. DENVER - Architect Daniel Libeskind has upstaged the Rockies with his new wing of the Denver Art Museum, as jagged as the nearby peaks that inspired it.

Aspers hopeful Human Rights Museum will go ahead - CJOB

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006
Aspers hopeful Human Rights Museum will go ahead
CJOB, Canada - 1 hour ago
Recent spending cuts announced by the Stephen Harper government may have an impact on the proposed Canadian Human Rights Museum at the Forks.