Culture, Corona, Crisis: Best Practices and the Future of Dutch Museums

The consequences of the coronavirus and the physical limitations it imposes on museums and their visitors force museums to rethink cultural identity and to approach the exhibition of material artworks differently. Only a limited number of people are allowed to visit the museum at one time, booking t...

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Main Author: Liselore N. M. Tissen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2021-03-01
Series:Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/207
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spelling doaj-0465770bfd8e41d293322f7bc6f029c92021-04-27T07:18:00ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Conservation and Museum Studies1364-04292021-03-0119110.5334/jcms.207104Culture, Corona, Crisis: Best Practices and the Future of Dutch MuseumsLiselore N. M. Tissen0Universiteit Leiden & Delft University of TechnologyThe consequences of the coronavirus and the physical limitations it imposes on museums and their visitors force museums to rethink cultural identity and to approach the exhibition of material artworks differently. Only a limited number of people are allowed to visit the museum at one time, booking time slots is mandatory, making it difficult to welcome visitors. As most Dutch museums are largely self-funded, the lack of tourists, visitors, educational programmes that generate income, together with the insufficient financial support of the Dutch government, have greatly impacted their policies. This report analyses the coronavirus’ effects on the role of museums within the Dutch ‘'anderhalvemetersamenleving'’ (one and a half meter society). This report offers an overview of the changes that have taken place in Dutch society due to the limitations of physical interaction with artworks and the museum space as well as the way Dutch museums have reacted to these consequences. Lastly, this report offers an analysis of the success of these new developments and the challenges that still need to be overcome. Thus, ways will be proposed in which Dutch museums can learn from these actions in maintaining their critical function in society.https://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/207covid-19museumsthe netherlandscoronaviruspandemicexhibitions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liselore N. M. Tissen
spellingShingle Liselore N. M. Tissen
Culture, Corona, Crisis: Best Practices and the Future of Dutch Museums
Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
covid-19
museums
the netherlands
coronavirus
pandemic
exhibitions
author_facet Liselore N. M. Tissen
author_sort Liselore N. M. Tissen
title Culture, Corona, Crisis: Best Practices and the Future of Dutch Museums
title_short Culture, Corona, Crisis: Best Practices and the Future of Dutch Museums
title_full Culture, Corona, Crisis: Best Practices and the Future of Dutch Museums
title_fullStr Culture, Corona, Crisis: Best Practices and the Future of Dutch Museums
title_full_unstemmed Culture, Corona, Crisis: Best Practices and the Future of Dutch Museums
title_sort culture, corona, crisis: best practices and the future of dutch museums
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
issn 1364-0429
publishDate 2021-03-01
description The consequences of the coronavirus and the physical limitations it imposes on museums and their visitors force museums to rethink cultural identity and to approach the exhibition of material artworks differently. Only a limited number of people are allowed to visit the museum at one time, booking time slots is mandatory, making it difficult to welcome visitors. As most Dutch museums are largely self-funded, the lack of tourists, visitors, educational programmes that generate income, together with the insufficient financial support of the Dutch government, have greatly impacted their policies. This report analyses the coronavirus’ effects on the role of museums within the Dutch ‘'anderhalvemetersamenleving'’ (one and a half meter society). This report offers an overview of the changes that have taken place in Dutch society due to the limitations of physical interaction with artworks and the museum space as well as the way Dutch museums have reacted to these consequences. Lastly, this report offers an analysis of the success of these new developments and the challenges that still need to be overcome. Thus, ways will be proposed in which Dutch museums can learn from these actions in maintaining their critical function in society.
topic covid-19
museums
the netherlands
coronavirus
pandemic
exhibitions
url https://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/207
work_keys_str_mv AT liselorenmtissen culturecoronacrisisbestpracticesandthefutureofdutchmuseums
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