Together with international experts, we want to look at museums as globally networked institutions. They are embedded in and help shape multi-layered political, economic and epistemic power and ownership relations. How can museums be thought of differently as hubs of global museum, curatorial and artistic cooperation? How can participation and access and ownership of cultural heritage be shaped differently? Even beyond questions of colonial heritage, the global action of cultural institutions is up for debate in the face of climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic, rising commodity prices and intensifying geopolitical conflicts. What kind of collaboration – local and global, physical and digital – is possible and desirable in the museum of the future?

We would like to discuss these questions with you and are pleased to welcome Shuddabrata Sengupta, Luiza Proença, Flower Manase and Chao Tayiana Maina as participants in the discussion. The discussion will be moderated by Julian Fuchs, Head of Cultural Programmes for the Goethe-Institut São Paulo and Southern America.

This panel discussion is part of a larger series of talks on the future of the museum organised by the Goethe-Institut. This series accompanies the eponymous publication „Museum Futures“, the result of the Goethe-Institut’s worldwide work in the museum context. The book has been published by Turia + Kant in 2021.

Bio notes:

Luiza Proença is a transdisciplinary researcher, writer and curator. Currently she is a societal/communal-based work fellow at Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart. She was a curator at the São Paulo Art Museum and at the 31st São Paulo Biennial, and editor of publications of the 9th Mercosul Biennial in Porto Alegre, among other institutions. From 2017 to 2019, she worked as curatorial researcher for bauhaus imaginista at Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin and Sesc Pompeia, São Paulo.

Chao Tayiana Maina is a Kenyan digital heritage specialist and digital humanities scholar working at the intersection of culture and technology. Her work primarily focuses on the application of technology within African heritage. She is the founder of African Digital Heritage, a co-founder of the Museum of British Colonialism and a co-founder of the Open Restitution Africa project.

Shuddhabrata Sengupta is an artist and curator with the Raqs Media Collective, Delhi.

Flower Manase is a senior curator of History at the National Museum of Tanzania with a Bachelor degree in History and Archaeology. Ms. Manase is currently engaged in provenance research of colonial collections in Germany (Ethnological Museum Berlin) and Tanzania (Museum and House of Culture-Dar es Salaam) under a collaborative research project funded by Gerda Henkel Foundation. She is a PhD-candidate at the Humboldt University, Berlin funded by Gerda Henkel Foundation, and member of the steering committee of the Museum Future project coordinated by the Goethe-Institut South Africa.

Production: Lion Bischof

More information: https://www.lenbachhaus.de/

Abonniere unseren Newsletter