Creative responses to Australian material culture in the Pitt Rivers Museum collection : parallels between 'We Bury Our Own' and 'Mining the Museum'

This theoretical dissertation is a comparative assessment of two exhibitions responding to a museum archive: the work of African-American artist Fred Wilson (b. 1954), Mining the Museum, at the Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore, 1993, and my own exhibition We Bury Our Own at the Pitt Rivers Mus...

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Main Author: Thompson, Christian
Other Authors: Catling, Brian ; Warr, Tracey
Published: University of Oxford 2017
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.729866
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7298662018-04-04T03:32:47ZCreative responses to Australian material culture in the Pitt Rivers Museum collection : parallels between 'We Bury Our Own' and 'Mining the Museum'Thompson, ChristianCatling, Brian ; Warr, Tracey2017This theoretical dissertation is a comparative assessment of two exhibitions responding to a museum archive: the work of African-American artist Fred Wilson (b. 1954), Mining the Museum, at the Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore, 1993, and my own exhibition We Bury Our Own at the Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford, 2012. I explore the emergence of the museum as a context and medium for artists as institutional critique. The following research outlines a range of artistic practices and engages a process of ekphrasis to give detailed comprehensive accounts of both exhibitions, demonstrating how studio-based research is able to reveal hidden or previously unseen histories obscured by the imperial gaze. I discuss the differences between my own and Wilson's approaches in order to expose how the work might shift in significance or meaning when it is placed inside and outside the museum context. This thesis introduces the idea of spiritual repatriation, outlines how museum collections are able to contribute to artistic practice and how artists can contribute to the ongoing exhibition, critique and appreciation of museum collections. This thesis also elaborates on the Pitt Rivers Museum Collection and its subsequent influence on recent work, and redefines the title We Bury Our Own as a metaphor applied to a wider picture.University of Oxfordhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.729866https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:0a206e9d-c6f1-46c1-9a48-d301fcb50c44Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
description This theoretical dissertation is a comparative assessment of two exhibitions responding to a museum archive: the work of African-American artist Fred Wilson (b. 1954), Mining the Museum, at the Maryland Historical Society, Baltimore, 1993, and my own exhibition We Bury Our Own at the Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford, 2012. I explore the emergence of the museum as a context and medium for artists as institutional critique. The following research outlines a range of artistic practices and engages a process of ekphrasis to give detailed comprehensive accounts of both exhibitions, demonstrating how studio-based research is able to reveal hidden or previously unseen histories obscured by the imperial gaze. I discuss the differences between my own and Wilson's approaches in order to expose how the work might shift in significance or meaning when it is placed inside and outside the museum context. This thesis introduces the idea of spiritual repatriation, outlines how museum collections are able to contribute to artistic practice and how artists can contribute to the ongoing exhibition, critique and appreciation of museum collections. This thesis also elaborates on the Pitt Rivers Museum Collection and its subsequent influence on recent work, and redefines the title We Bury Our Own as a metaphor applied to a wider picture.
author2 Catling, Brian ; Warr, Tracey
author_facet Catling, Brian ; Warr, Tracey
Thompson, Christian
author Thompson, Christian
spellingShingle Thompson, Christian
Creative responses to Australian material culture in the Pitt Rivers Museum collection : parallels between 'We Bury Our Own' and 'Mining the Museum'
author_sort Thompson, Christian
title Creative responses to Australian material culture in the Pitt Rivers Museum collection : parallels between 'We Bury Our Own' and 'Mining the Museum'
title_short Creative responses to Australian material culture in the Pitt Rivers Museum collection : parallels between 'We Bury Our Own' and 'Mining the Museum'
title_full Creative responses to Australian material culture in the Pitt Rivers Museum collection : parallels between 'We Bury Our Own' and 'Mining the Museum'
title_fullStr Creative responses to Australian material culture in the Pitt Rivers Museum collection : parallels between 'We Bury Our Own' and 'Mining the Museum'
title_full_unstemmed Creative responses to Australian material culture in the Pitt Rivers Museum collection : parallels between 'We Bury Our Own' and 'Mining the Museum'
title_sort creative responses to australian material culture in the pitt rivers museum collection : parallels between 'we bury our own' and 'mining the museum'
publisher University of Oxford
publishDate 2017
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.729866
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