Good Morning everyone on the List

I would like to thank Mike Antonelli for his e-mail drawing attention to the 
situation at The Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh. The lack of 
a meteorite display there highlights one of the problems many museums have 
around the World in deciding what to exhibit and what not.

Can I first say that I have no particular insight into the museum's policies 
for exhibition, nor do I personally know any of the curators. However I know 
many, many curators from other museums around the World and I can draw on this 
knowledge to get a feel for the problems the Carnegie has.

The notion that museums are somehow divorced from the everyday World and that 
curators exist in tax-payer funded ivory towers trying to devise as many ways 
as we can possibly think of to avoid putting our collection on display to the 
public is one that bears no resemblance to reality. Museums around the World 
are under increasing pressure from their funding bodies, whether that be 
National Governments, local governments or town councils, to cut costs and to 
justify their dwindling expenditure by housing exhibitions that have some kind 
of "WOW" factor. These blockbuster exhibitions may indeed, as Steve Dunklee 
rightly points out, have little to do with Natural History. But it is likely to 
attract big sponsorship and media attention and this may have a trickle down 
benefit to the museum through increased visitor numbers and heightened 
awareness. This inevitably leads to hard decisions about the best (or most 
profitable) use of the limited space museums have. If a museum director has to 
choose between a high profile Andy Warhol exhibition that will attract major 
corporate sponsorship and generate a good deal of media interest or a much more 
worthy display of objects from the museum's own collections that will bring in 
no income and little media attention, then I am afraid that in today's world 
Warhol wins!

Other factors to consider here are that a museum's policies are largely decided 
by the Director (or equivalent - the Head Honcho in any case) who may not have 
any interest in meteorites, whether they have a good collection or not. Perhaps 
there is no dedicated meteorite curator to look after and promote the 
collection. This can be a serious problem for any collection. After all, I 
myself am a mineralogist who happens to have an interest in meteorites and have 
been active in promoting the collection whenever I can. Had I not had this 
interest, the collection would indeed be stored away and might never see the 
light of day. As it is we will have meteorites in our new galleries (not enough 
in my view) but this is something!

There are other ways to promote the collection other than by display. Taking 
the collection into the community is a vital role museums can and do play. This 
can be done by organising temporary or touring exhibitions, by school visits or 
talks and lectures to people of all ages and experiences. 

I agree with MikeG to some extent in that private collectors have a very 
important role in complementing the work that museums do. Most collectors I 
know have an enthusiasm, dedication and depth of knowledge in their particular 
field that museums often lack. Clearly co-operation and mutual appreciation is 
better than conflict and constant criticism. 

Please believe me when I tell you that as curators, we are trying to do our 
very best under difficult circumstances. Museums are often viewed by 
governments as an easy target for funding cuts - expensive white elephants is a 
phrase that often crops up - so the axe is often wielded here quickest and 
deepest than in other areas. Collectors and others should use every method 
available to highlight this problem and contributing to online blogs, forums, 
Twitter and Facebook are very useful weapons - use them. 

Thanks for listening

Peter Davidson
Curator of Minerals
 
Department of Natural Sciences
National Museums Collection Centre
242 West Granton Road
Edinburgh  EH5 1JA
Scotland
Tel: 00 44 131 247 4283
E-mail: [email protected]

New exhibition A Passion for Glass, National Museum of Scotland, Fri 20 May - 
Sun 11 September. Free entry. www.nms.ac.uk/glass

National Museums Scotland, Scottish Charity, No. SC 011130
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