Fashion and clothing collection, exhibition and research in small and medium sized museums in Europe

Fashion and clothing collection, exhibition and research in small and medium sized museums in Europe

Veranstalter
Research Interest Group 'Appearances, Bodies and Societies' (Apparences, Corps et Sociétés); The Museum of Alsace, Strasbourg; The Museum of Alsace, Haguenau
Veranstaltungsort
Museum of Alsace Strasbourg
Ort
Straßburg
Land
France
Vom - Bis
17.05.2018 - 19.05.2018
Deadline
19.12.2017
Website
Von
Gabriele Mentges

CALL FOR PAPERS
Dead Line December 19th 2017

'Fashion and clothing collection, exhibition and research in small and
medium sized museums in Europe.'

Conference organised by the Research Interest Group 'Appearances, Bodies and Societies' (Apparences, Corps et Sociétés)

The Museum of Alsace, Strasbourg
The Museum of Alsace, Haguenau

(17-18-19 May 2018.)

This interdisciplinary international conference 'Fashion and dress collection, exhibition and research in small and medium sized museums in Europe' (17-18-19 May, 2018, in Strasbourg and Haguenau) will focus on the challenges and potentials that lie within museums considered small or medium sized in their national museum contexts. These museums often have to cater to a diverse range of interests including their public, regional and local authorities, state interests in national heritage issues, as well as academic concerns.

The first morning of the conference will be devoted to an account of the discussion of the recent revitalisation of dress and textile collections in the museums of Strasbourg, Haguenau, Bouxwiller and several others. This conference will then, over the next two days go on to probe the functions of museums of art, industry, fashion, ethnography and history which have collections of textiles and dress - whether these form their entire collections or just elements within them. The heritage that these museums carry relative to their size, their spheres of influence and their collecting policies, is often unique and very different from that of our larger museum institutions, raising specific issues which lie at the heart of debates which will be developed at this conference.

These small and medium size museum collections are often of an importance greater than the means available to tackle them. Their diverse heritages - commercially, touristically or politically focused at regional or national level - are of interest to the entire research world. Academic approaches to researching and interpreting collections stemming from the new museologies hold many ideas for potential museum development and many museums of all sizes have already absorbed and responded to these ideas. However these ideas are sometimes little known or ignored by small and middle sized museums, though they offer promising spaces for potential applications of new museology practices and for fresh research. Some traditional presentations of regional costumes, for example, still deliberately focus closely around specific localisms, choosing not to reflect issues such as cross border exchanges, in-coming cultural influences and wider economic settings. These three elements, however, all flood across frontiers, forming the basis of a trans-European heritage of appearances.

With the intent of reflecting the current musem landscape and of developing debate on future directions for small and medium sized museums of art, dress and textiles, ethnography and history, members of the Research Interest Group welcome papers that respond closely to the following issues :

- What rôle do these museums aim to play? What fundamental themes and debates have these musems already attached to their collections of textiles, dress and fashion?
- What ambitions have been attached to the development of dress, fashion and textile collections? How are these collections integrated within the global project of museums? - the museum itinerary?
- How can we overcome the status differences that exisit between (high) fashion and everyday and ethnographical dress and their museum display?
- Should the promulgators of the new museologies of the study of fashion and dress - (so far mostly applied to analysis of museums of internationaol standing or to specialised musems) - take an interest in the work of small and medium sized museums?
- In what ways is digitization a challenge or a potential to these museums?
- Where should small and medium sized museums seek professional advice? What professional skills are needed for these museums ? Is there a preferred work methodology ?
- What links to established research can these museums initiate and set in place, precisely because of their specificities? What has already been initiated?
- The situation of some of some small local museums with collections including dress, textiles and their related industries, is now so perilous that some have been, and are being, closed. What positive proposals have been set in place that have already addressed this problem or are currently dealing with it ?
- How important is the role of unpaid volunteers and research placement students in the work of small and medium-sized museums with collections of dress, textiles and related industries, including research work? How is this monitored and how it is disseminated?

The languages of the conference will be French, German and English.

The first morning of the conference will be devoted to an account of the revitalisation of dress and textile collections in the museums of Strasbourg, Haguenau, Bouxwiller and several others.

Submission Process:
In view of the transEuropean character of this conference, we ask you to submit your abstract in two languages - in any combination of French, German and English – (i.e. French and German; French and English; or English and German.) Your submission should be 300 words long, with the translation bringing it to a total of 600 words.
- Abstracts must be relevant to the issues detailed in this Call for Papers and should clearly highlight the specific themes your paper will address.
-We are interested in receiving discussion papers from colleagues working with collections, be they curators, collectors, researchers, managers, museographers, etc.

DEADLINE for submission: MONDAY December 19th. 2017. You will be informed by early January on the success or otherwise of your submission

Abstracts should be submitted to:

Lou Taylor, Prof. Emerita [lt73@brighton.ac.uk]
Dr. Charlotte Nicklas, [c.Nicklas@brighton.ac.uk]
School of Humanities, University of Brighton, 10/11, Pavilion Parade, Brighton, BN 2 1RA, UK

Jean-Pierre Lethuillier, [jean-pierre.lethuillier@univ-rennes2.fr]
Université Rennes 2, Département d’Histoire, Place du recteur Henri Le Moal, CS 24307, 35043 Rennes cedex, France

Programm

Kontakt

Gabriele Mentges
gabriele.mentges@tu-dortmund.de


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