Museum Ethnographers Group
Annual Conference Thu 6th-Fri 7th April 2017 
The Hunterian & Centre for Textile Conservation and Technical Art History, 
University of Glasgow

Call for Papers:
Cloth & Costume in Ethnographic Museums: New Directions in Research, Care & 
Interpretation

The 2017 conference theme addresses cloth and costume. Cloth is a unique 
technology: Light and flexible but presenting large surfaces and capable of 
taking innumerable colours and structures, it covers and divides things, 
reveals and connects them. Clothing and costuming the body - to protect and 
conceal it, to make it beautiful or terrifying, to transform or display its 
many identities - bring persons and statuses into the performed social world. 
Since remote prehistory, cloth and costume have both created demands and 
opportunities for humans to devise many of our most ingenious, delicate and 
technically complicated artefacts.

>From Inuit gut parka to ancient Nazca textiles, traditional West African grand 
>boubou costume to Maasai beadwork, Scottish plaid to Italian tapestries, 
>Persian rugs to Indian sari to Balinese dance masks, Bismarck Archipelago 
>masquerade puppets to Samoan barkcloth lavalava; the cloth and costume in our 
>World Cultures collections are immensely rich, diverse and culturally 
>significant. In recent centuries, cloth and costume have also become important 
>material sites for the contestation of identities and moralities, economic 
>globalisation and colonial acculturation. From the worldwide trade in European 
>mill-woven, chemically dyed and printed textiles, to the battles of Christian 
>missionaries with imagined states of immoral native undress, to the recent 
>conflict between the French government and wearers of hijab and burkini, the 
>globalisation of Western dress conventions has powerfully impacted on the 
>world's other material cultures.

How, then, do we weave together these many strands in the ethnographic museum? 
What is the current state of research into world cultures cloth and costume 
collections, and what new approaches are we developing to understand them 
better? How are historical textiles and costume being curated in the world's 
museums, and reimagined in the world's contemporary art scenes? Are we engaging 
with contemporary world fashion, or trapped in perpetuating stereotypical 
imaginings of an 'authentically dressed' ethnographic past that may never have 
existed? How can we collections manage these challenging objects better? What 
are the particular conservation problems of ethnographic textiles and costume, 
and how can we better care for them in the future? How are we exhibiting cloth 
and clothing in 2017? Are we capitalising on costume's universal appeal in our 
displays and education programmes?

Titles and 200-word abstracts for papers addressing these and other questions 
are warmly welcomed from all. Two standard formats are offered to presenters: A 
full Conference Paper to last twenty minutes, and a shorter ten minute Work in 
Progress presentation. Please email your proposed title, abstract and format 
choice (or any queries) to [email protected], to arrive by Monday 6th 
February. Full details on registration, accommodation and the programme will be 
published in the New Year.

Frances Lennard 
Professor of Textile Conservation       
Director, Centre for Textile Conservation and Technical Art History School of 
Culture and Creative Arts University of Glasgow Robertson Building, level 5
56 Dumbarton Road
Glasgow G11 6AQ
United Kingdom

Direct line: Tel: +44 (0) 141 330 7607
Email: [email protected]
www.gla.ac.uk/textileconservation
Textile Conservation blog: http://textileconservation.academicblogs.co.uk
Situating Pacific Barkcloth Production in Time and Place: www.tapa.gla.ac.uk  
Find us on Facebook
 








******
Unsubscribe by sending a message to [email protected]
Archives through August 2016 at 
http://cool.conservation-us.org/byform/mailing-lists/cdl/
Archives from September 2016 onward at 
https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

Reply via email to