'Shell is Proud to Present… The Spirit Sings’: Museum Sponsorship and Public Relations in Oil Country

Authors

  • Camille-Mary Sharp University of Toronto

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v20i2.3780

Keywords:

The Spirit Sings, oil, sponsorship, Glenbow Museum, protest, divestment, decolonization, extractivism

Abstract

This article re-examines the renowned Canadian exhibition, The Spirit Sings: Artistic Traditions of Canada’s First Peoples (1988) through a lens of corporate, national, and institutional interests. The author positions The Spirit Sings as a productive historical case study for contemporary questions of decolonization and divestment in museums. Using archival and interview findings from her doctoral research, the author highlights the sponsorship and public relations elements of the exhibition, which she argues have been missing from past analyses. Ultimately, the author uses this case study to question the relevance of current debates over oil sponsorship for museums that operate within extractive economies. The article concludes by calling for further critical research around the organizational processes of museums and their participation in corporate legitimation.

Author Biography

Camille-Mary Sharp, University of Toronto

Ph.D. Candidate, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto

 

Author Biography

 

Camille-Mary Sharp is a Ph.D. candidate at the Faculty of Information, University of Toronto. Bridging the fields of museum studies and political economy, her research explores the implications of sponsorship by the petroleum industry for museum practice in Canada. A graduate of the Museum Studies Master’s at the Faculty of Information, Camille-Mary studies the work of museum professionals and the ways they navigate and negotiate funding dynamics. She has published in the Journal of Curatorial Studies and the Blackwood Gallery’s Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, and has presented at several conferences in Canada, including the Canadian Communication Association and the Alberta Museums Association. Most recently, Camille-Mary developed the graduate course “Museums, Activism and Social Change”, which she will is teaching at the University of Toronto.

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Published

01.11.2022

How to Cite

Sharp, C.-M. (2022). ’Shell is Proud to Present… The Spirit Sings’: Museum Sponsorship and Public Relations in Oil Country. Museum & Society, 20(2), 172–189. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v20i2.3780

Issue

Section

Articles