‘Aimless and Absurd Wanderings’? Children at the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona)

Authors

  • Adrian Franklin University of South Australia
  • Michelle Sansom School of Social Sciences, University of Tasmania

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v16i1.2679

Keywords:

Children, art museums, art publics, , ethnography, museology.

Abstract

Abstract

This article reports on the experience of children at the Museum of New and Old Art (Mona) in Hobart, Tasmania.  Referred to by its innovative owner as a ‘subversive adult Disneyland’, Mona went further than most new contemporary art galleries in designing a radically new experience of art.  It captured the imagination of people new to art in its own locality as well as a global art public.  Favoured by leading international contemporary artists for the freedom it gave art unmediated by art history, Mona also seemingly captured the imagination of children. Through an ethnographic approach in which five young children’s visits were documented in great detail, the article considers these in the light of children’s experiences of previous exhibitionary platforms and the relevance of Mona’s museological interventions for building their dispositions to art and broadening art publics.

Author Biography

Adrian Franklin, University of South Australia

School of Creative Industry

Professor of Creativity and Cultural Policy

Downloads

Published

03/31/2018

How to Cite

Franklin, A., & Sansom, M. (2018). ‘Aimless and Absurd Wanderings’? Children at the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona). Museum & Society, 16(1), 28–40. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v16i1.2679

Issue

Section

Articles