Collected. Bought. Looted? Provenance Research at the Weltkulturenmuseum Frankfurt

The question of how objects arrived in a museum has by now become an integral part of academic discussion. For several years, ethnological museums have also placed greater emphasis on the history of their collections and investigated the paths of their items. German museums face a two-fold challenge...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vanessa von Gliszczynski, Julia Friedel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Forum Kunst und Markt 2018-05-01
Series:Journal for Art Market Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/39
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spelling doaj-d470d030a1084d2e8643341f9f195c582020-11-25T02:37:01ZengForum Kunst und MarktJournal for Art Market Studies2511-76022018-05-012210.23690/jams.v2i2.3933Collected. Bought. Looted? Provenance Research at the Weltkulturenmuseum FrankfurtVanessa von Gliszczynski0Julia Friedel1Curator, South-East AsiaWeltkulturen MuseumThe question of how objects arrived in a museum has by now become an integral part of academic discussion. For several years, ethnological museums have also placed greater emphasis on the history of their collections and investigated the paths of their items. German museums face a two-fold challenge in this endeavour, since both the acquisitions during colonial times and those during the Nazi period need to be critically questioned. Sometimes these areas overlap, for example when objects from colonial regions were purchased under conditions of Nazi occupation. The complexity of the subject is illustrated by the wealth of current research projects, conferences and publications about provenance research in ethnological collections. A critical reappraisal of the collection is also a major research focus at the Weltkulturen Museum in Frankfurt. Initial results will be presented in the exhibition entitled “Collected. Bought. Looted?”, due to open in the museum in August 2018. To emphasize the entanglement between the National Socialist era and the colonial period, the article will present case studies of acquisitions from both backgrounds.https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/39provenance researchAfricaSouth East AsiaColonialism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vanessa von Gliszczynski
Julia Friedel
spellingShingle Vanessa von Gliszczynski
Julia Friedel
Collected. Bought. Looted? Provenance Research at the Weltkulturenmuseum Frankfurt
Journal for Art Market Studies
provenance research
Africa
South East Asia
Colonialism
author_facet Vanessa von Gliszczynski
Julia Friedel
author_sort Vanessa von Gliszczynski
title Collected. Bought. Looted? Provenance Research at the Weltkulturenmuseum Frankfurt
title_short Collected. Bought. Looted? Provenance Research at the Weltkulturenmuseum Frankfurt
title_full Collected. Bought. Looted? Provenance Research at the Weltkulturenmuseum Frankfurt
title_fullStr Collected. Bought. Looted? Provenance Research at the Weltkulturenmuseum Frankfurt
title_full_unstemmed Collected. Bought. Looted? Provenance Research at the Weltkulturenmuseum Frankfurt
title_sort collected. bought. looted? provenance research at the weltkulturenmuseum frankfurt
publisher Forum Kunst und Markt
series Journal for Art Market Studies
issn 2511-7602
publishDate 2018-05-01
description The question of how objects arrived in a museum has by now become an integral part of academic discussion. For several years, ethnological museums have also placed greater emphasis on the history of their collections and investigated the paths of their items. German museums face a two-fold challenge in this endeavour, since both the acquisitions during colonial times and those during the Nazi period need to be critically questioned. Sometimes these areas overlap, for example when objects from colonial regions were purchased under conditions of Nazi occupation. The complexity of the subject is illustrated by the wealth of current research projects, conferences and publications about provenance research in ethnological collections. A critical reappraisal of the collection is also a major research focus at the Weltkulturen Museum in Frankfurt. Initial results will be presented in the exhibition entitled “Collected. Bought. Looted?”, due to open in the museum in August 2018. To emphasize the entanglement between the National Socialist era and the colonial period, the article will present case studies of acquisitions from both backgrounds.
topic provenance research
Africa
South East Asia
Colonialism
url https://fokum-jams.org/index.php/jams/article/view/39
work_keys_str_mv AT vanessavongliszczynski collectedboughtlootedprovenanceresearchattheweltkulturenmuseumfrankfurt
AT juliafriedel collectedboughtlootedprovenanceresearchattheweltkulturenmuseumfrankfurt
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