Displaying Nimrud to the public: people and processes

How do museums take objects from their store rooms and turn them into public displays? Dr Paul Collins is a curator at the Ashmolean Museum TT , Oxford, and formerly at the British Museum TT , London. Here he explores the various roles and processes involved in creating displays.

Museum gallery with glass display cases containing a variety of small artefacts from Mesopotamia

Image 1: Room 56 at the British Museum, displaying small Mesopotamian artefacts dating from 6000-1500 BC. Source: British Museum blog, © Trustees of the British Museum.

People

Who are the people involved in producing the sort of displays we see in museums today (Image 1)?

So simply planning what might seem like a simple operation of laying out objects within a space becomes a very complex undertaking. As with any project involving many different people with a range of skills, it doesn't always run smoothly. It also can feel slightly like design by committee, but the end result can also be extremely good and spot-on. If it all works well it's a wonderful process to be involved with: a good project manager will lead projects to fruition on time and it's a pleasure to be part of the team effort.

Processes

In order to bring Nimrud to the public, we have to select the objects and decide what stories to tell about them.

Today we know that the ancient Near East was not one cultural and political entity any more than it is today. Yet many museum collections were brought together and managed in the nineteenth century when this vast region was considered as a single unit. One problem for a modern curator of this material is to select meaningful stories from the multitude of cultures across thousands of years of time that spoke different languages and had different ideas.

The text of this article is based on Dr Collins' talk given at the Nimrud: Mound to Museum study day in April 2013.

Content last modified: 18 Dec 2019.
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Paul Collins

Paul Collins, 'Displaying Nimrud to the public: people and processes', Nimrud: Materialities of Assyrian Knowledge Production, The Nimrud Project at Oracc.org, 2019 [http://oracc.museum.upenn.edu/nimrud/modernnimrud/atthemuseum/displayprocesses/]

 
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