‘Permanent Displays’ as Unsettling Layers of Epistemologies, Politics and Aesthetics

Authors

  • Sigrid Lien University of Bergen, Department of Linguistic, Literary and Aesthetic Studies Bergen
  • Hilde Wallem Nielssen NLA University College, Bergen, Norway Hilde Wallem Nielssen is a social anthropologist and associate professor at NLA University College, Bergen, Norway. Her research ranges from to spirit possession rituals in Madagascar to photography, museums and colonial culture. Her publications range from spirit possession rituals in Madagascar to museums and colonial culture, and her publications include Ritual Imagination. Tromba possession among the Betsimisaraka of Eastern Madagascar (Brill 2012), and Protestant Missions - Local Encounters in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century, co-edited with Inger Marie Okkenhaug and Karina Hestad Skeie (Brill 2011), and Museumsforteljingar. Vi og dei andre i kulturhistoriske museer (2016). Associate Professor Hilde Wallem Nielssen, Intercultural Studies, NLA University College, Bergen, Norway. E-mail: Hilde.Nielssen@nla.no

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v17i3.2802

Keywords:

Museology, ‘permanent displays’, exhibition aesthetics, politics, epistemologies, exhibitionary layers, curatorial practice, National history, ethnographic exhibitions

Abstract

This article argues that museum exhibitions often are formed through multiple layers. It presents readings of two contrasting exhibition narratives, the ethnographic display at the Museum of Cultural History in Oslo and the national history exhibition at Lillehammer Museum. While the latter speaks about the national self, the museum in Oslo addresses the nation’s radical other. In spite of this contrasting thematic focus, they have much in common. As centres for research and dissemination of knowledge, they are connected to the development of the academic disciplines history and anthropology. This evolution with its shifts and ruptures are visible as traces, or layers, in the exhibitions. We argue that such multi-layered museum stories may be understood as intersections of shifting disciplinary knowledge regimes, curatorial practices, and concrete political agendas. Such layers may appear as unintended subtexts that often create a sense of ‘unsettlement’ within museum exhibitions.

Author Biographies

Sigrid Lien, University of Bergen, Department of Linguistic, Literary and Aesthetic Studies Bergen

Sigrid Lien (b. 1958) is professor in art history and photography studies at the University of Bergen, Norway. Project leader for the Norwegian team in the HERA-project PhotoClec (Museums, Colonial past and Photography) 2010-2012, and for the project Negotiating History: Photography in Sámi Culture», funded by the Norwegian Research Council (2014-2017). Recent publications include: Uncertain Images: Museums and the Work of Photographs,2014, (with Elizabeth Edwards), Museumsforteljinger. Vi og dei andre i kulturhistoriske museer. (Museums Stories: We and the others in Cultural History Museums) (with Hilde W. Nielssen), 2016, and Pictures of Longing. Photography and the History of the Norwegian U.S.-migration (2018).

 

Professor Sigrid Lien, Department of Linguistic, Literary and Aesthetic Studies, LLE, University of Bergen, Norway. E-mail: Sigrid.Lien@uib.no

 

 

Hilde Wallem Nielssen, NLA University College, Bergen, Norway Hilde Wallem Nielssen is a social anthropologist and associate professor at NLA University College, Bergen, Norway. Her research ranges from to spirit possession rituals in Madagascar to photography, museums and colonial culture. Her publications range from spirit possession rituals in Madagascar to museums and colonial culture, and her publications include Ritual Imagination. Tromba possession among the Betsimisaraka of Eastern Madagascar (Brill 2012), and Protestant Missions - Local Encounters in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century, co-edited with Inger Marie Okkenhaug and Karina Hestad Skeie (Brill 2011), and Museumsforteljingar. Vi og dei andre i kulturhistoriske museer (2016). Associate Professor Hilde Wallem Nielssen, Intercultural Studies, NLA University College, Bergen, Norway. E-mail: Hilde.Nielssen@nla.no

Department of Intercultural Studies, NLA University College

Associate Professor

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Published

11/29/2019

How to Cite

Lien, S., & Nielssen, H. W. (2019). ‘Permanent Displays’ as Unsettling Layers of Epistemologies, Politics and Aesthetics. Museum & Society, 17(3), 453–471. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v17i3.2802