Extinction Voices, Extinction Silences: Reflecting on a Decolonial Role for Natural History Exhibits in Promoting Thinking about Global Ecological Crisis, Using a Case Study from Bristol Museums

Authors

  • Isla Gladstone Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, Queens Road, Bristol, BS8 1RL
  • Persephone Pearl ONCA, 14 St George’s Place, Brighton BN1 4GB

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v20i1.3806

Keywords:

Museums, extinction, structural racism, decolonization, environmental justice

Abstract

Between August-December 2019, Bristol Museum & Art Gallery covered 32 animals in its World Wildlife Gallery with transparent black veils, to highlight the global ecological crisis. Each veiled animal represented a species extinct or at high to extreme risk of extinction. The intervention, called Extinction Voices, responded to calls from local schoolchildren and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) for transformative change in addressing this critical challenge. It gained international recognition, and generated conversation and action by visitors and the museum sector. This article explores the motivations and curatorial choices behind the intervention and how audiences responded. Its focus is a journey of critical reflection – on the intervention’s mainstream environmental framing, the institution’s colonial roots and their impact on its contemporary narratives. In turn, the article considers the possibilities that open exploration of silenced colonial histories brings for museums and the global ecological crisis.

Author Biographies

Isla Gladstone, Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, Queens Road, Bristol, BS8 1RL

Isla Gladstone is a white British museum curator, currently Senior Curator for the Natural Science collections at Bristol Museum & Art Gallery. Isla has worked with natural science collections in UK regional museums for over a decade. She is also current Chair of the UK subject specialist network the Natural Sciences Collections Association (NatSCA). Isla was lead curator for the Extinction Voices intervention, and is now leading a programme of work exploring the intersection of decolonisation and environmental work at Bristol Museums. 

Persephone Pearl, ONCA, 14 St George’s Place, Brighton BN1 4GB

Persephone Pearl is a white British artist and producer who uses colourful, accessible work to approach big questions. Collaboration is at the heart of her practice. She is committed to the role of creativity and the arts in social and environmental justice and regeneration. Persephone is a co-director of Brighton-based arts and environment charity ONCA, with a core aim of supporting young people’s empowerment, resilience and wellbeing around climate and environmental change. She co-founded Feral Theatre and Remembrance Day for Lost Species (RDLS) - a chance each year to explore the stories of extinct and critically endangered species, cultures and ecological communities. 

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Published

27.06.2022

How to Cite

Gladstone, I., & Pearl, P. (2022). Extinction Voices, Extinction Silences: Reflecting on a Decolonial Role for Natural History Exhibits in Promoting Thinking about Global Ecological Crisis, Using a Case Study from Bristol Museums. Museum & Society, 20(1), 50–70. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v20i1.3806