Dresden Summer - International Academy for the Arts 2016

Dresden Summer - International Academy for the Arts 2016

Veranstalter
Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden
Veranstaltungsort
Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden
Ort
Dresden
Land
Deutschland
Vom - Bis
27.08.2016 - 03.09.2016
Deadline
30.04.2016
Von
Sibylle Gluch

DRESDEN SUMMER – INTERNATIONAL ACADEMY FOR THE ARTS
27 August – 03 September 2016

The Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden (Dresden State Art Collections) is one of the world’s oldest and most renowned museum institutions. Its origins go back to the 16th century. Over time the Dresden collections developed into a magnificent and broad assembly of outstanding objects. Today the institution comprises 14 museums together holding more than two million objects.

Museums and institution consider it their duty to preserve their outstanding traditions while at the same time paying attention to the interplay of society, time, and objects. The Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden advocates the creation of new concepts in preserving, understanding, and presenting their collections, thus linking past, present and future.

In 2010, on the occasion of the 450th anniversary of the founding of the Kunstkammer, the Dresden State Art Collections established the ‘Dresden Summer – International Academy for the Arts’. Intended as a specialized and intensive study course this weeklong summer program addresses both senior and junior museum professionals, as well as those seeking to get to know the magnificent Dresden collections from behind the scenes, to explore topics relevant to contemporary international museum and exhibition practice, and to share ideas with colleagues from all over the world. By mutual exchange of knowledge, notions and visions the Dresden State Art Collections seek to foster the fascinating and at times difficult work of museums and similar institutions today.

The Dresden State Art Collections: 500 Years of Collecting the World

For 2016, the focus for the ‘Dresden Summer – International Academy for the Arts’ will be ‘collecting’: Who collects what, when, and why? How do different approaches towards and/or different reasons for collecting affect the presentation and observation of objects of study or on display? Participants will explore these topics by intensively studying the world-renowned Dresden collections. Guided tours with the curators and directors of the SKD museums, close examination of selected objects, and expert talks will deliver insight into different modes of collecting and thus provide the basis for further discussion.

The Dresden collections are particularly apt for investigating this theme. Created over five centuries, they exemplify very different approaches towards collecting, which in fact mirror very different views of the world. The early collections, particularly the Kunstkammer, were intimately tied to the princely court. Elector August (1526-1586) collected not only what was expected of a sovereign of his station, but also according to his personal interests, most notably for tools and scientific instruments. His successors opened the Kunstkammer for selected visitors and created an institution which also served as a dynastic memorial. The late 17th and early 18th centuries brought radical change, as Elector Friedrich August I (1670-1733, called ‘August the Strong’) re-organized the princely collections and established several of the major Dresden museums. New and rather systematic approaches toward collecting and display continued to emerge throughout the 18th century. Their impact can be particularly well studied in the development of the porcelain collection and in the formation of the picture gallery, today known as the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister (Old Masters Picture Gallery). The 19th century with its specific societal challenges of industrialization and intense exploration of the world saw the appearance of entirely new types of museums. Thus, in 1876 the Dresden Kunstgewerbemuseum (Museum of Decorative Arts) was founded to serve as a model collection for artisanry and industrial arts. In addition, ethnological museums emerged in the cities of Dresden (Museum für Völkerkunde) and Leipzig (Grassi Museum für Völkerkunde) – the latter being the result of the initiative and commitment of the Leipzig citizenry.

The Dresden State Art Collections thus offer exciting opportunities to study the history of collecting from the 16th to the 21st century. By exploring objects and the special buildings which house them, participants will analyze ideas of collecting and presentation over the course of 500 years. The discussion of these developments, however, aims not only at understanding the past, but at shaping today’s and tomorrow’s museum practice.

Programm

The Study Program 2016 includes:
- specialized guided tours of the museums of the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden with curators and directors of the museums
-behind-the-scenes visits with experts from the conservation and the curatorial departments
- hands-on-sessions in the Mathematisch-Physikalischer Salon and in the Coin Cabinet (including an introduction to collecting practices and object groups)
- a half-day excursion to Leipzig including a curatorially guided visit to the Grassi Museum für Völkerkunde (Grassi Ethnological Museum)
- a study visit to the Deutsches Hygiene-Museum Dresden
- a visit to the Deutsche Werkstätten and the garden-city of Hellerau

Kontakt

Sibyle Gluch

Mathematisch-Physikalischer Salon, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden
Zwinger, 01067 Dresden
+49(0)35149146501

sibylle.gluch@skd.museum

http://www.skd.museum/en/research/dresden-summer0/index.html