Curating Action: Rethinking Ethnographic Collections and the Role/Place of Performing Arts in the Museum

Dance involves a set of movements that embody social memory. Such forms of intangible heritage have presented emerging challenges for curatorship. This paper draws from the experience of the Musées de la civilisation (Quebec City, Canada) to address ideas of collecting and curating in the performing...

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Main Authors: Hélène Bernier, Mathieu Viau-Courville
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Leicester 2017-06-01
Series:Museum & Society
Online Access:https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/641
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spelling doaj-5c5e77d36d404c8481d44d91210927cd2020-11-24T21:13:33ZengUniversity of LeicesterMuseum & Society1479-83602017-06-0114223725210.29311/mas.v14i2.641595Curating Action: Rethinking Ethnographic Collections and the Role/Place of Performing Arts in the MuseumHélène BernierMathieu Viau-CourvilleDance involves a set of movements that embody social memory. Such forms of intangible heritage have presented emerging challenges for curatorship. This paper draws from the experience of the Musées de la civilisation (Quebec City, Canada) to address ideas of collecting and curating in the performing arts. By presenting the travelling exhibition Rebel Bodies, an international collaborative project that highlights contemporary dance and movement as universal modes of creativity and expression, the paper reflects on the social role of the museum in sustaining creativity within the community as well as on the use of ethnographic material to collectively (through museums and artists) curate the intangible. In treating notions of natural, virtuoso, urban, multi, political, and atypical bodies, this exhibition brings together performers and creative artists as well as industries in the museum setting. Such interplays, it is argued, encourage the sustainable participation of artistic communities/industries and further highlight museums as dynamic loci for the promotion of social change. Keywords: performing arts, intangible cultural heritage, museum, dance, performance, participation, reenactment, artistshttps://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/641
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hélène Bernier
Mathieu Viau-Courville
spellingShingle Hélène Bernier
Mathieu Viau-Courville
Curating Action: Rethinking Ethnographic Collections and the Role/Place of Performing Arts in the Museum
Museum & Society
author_facet Hélène Bernier
Mathieu Viau-Courville
author_sort Hélène Bernier
title Curating Action: Rethinking Ethnographic Collections and the Role/Place of Performing Arts in the Museum
title_short Curating Action: Rethinking Ethnographic Collections and the Role/Place of Performing Arts in the Museum
title_full Curating Action: Rethinking Ethnographic Collections and the Role/Place of Performing Arts in the Museum
title_fullStr Curating Action: Rethinking Ethnographic Collections and the Role/Place of Performing Arts in the Museum
title_full_unstemmed Curating Action: Rethinking Ethnographic Collections and the Role/Place of Performing Arts in the Museum
title_sort curating action: rethinking ethnographic collections and the role/place of performing arts in the museum
publisher University of Leicester
series Museum & Society
issn 1479-8360
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Dance involves a set of movements that embody social memory. Such forms of intangible heritage have presented emerging challenges for curatorship. This paper draws from the experience of the Musées de la civilisation (Quebec City, Canada) to address ideas of collecting and curating in the performing arts. By presenting the travelling exhibition Rebel Bodies, an international collaborative project that highlights contemporary dance and movement as universal modes of creativity and expression, the paper reflects on the social role of the museum in sustaining creativity within the community as well as on the use of ethnographic material to collectively (through museums and artists) curate the intangible. In treating notions of natural, virtuoso, urban, multi, political, and atypical bodies, this exhibition brings together performers and creative artists as well as industries in the museum setting. Such interplays, it is argued, encourage the sustainable participation of artistic communities/industries and further highlight museums as dynamic loci for the promotion of social change. Keywords: performing arts, intangible cultural heritage, museum, dance, performance, participation, reenactment, artists
url https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/641
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