Spacing: Following negotiations in the process of exhibition dismantling

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v22i1.4370

Keywords:

Museum practice, space, Actor-Network Theory, spatial turn, architecture

Abstract

This paper is concerned with an Actor-Network Theory approach to museum space. It builds upon qualitative research at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, a museum and educational building in Norwich, England. Following the people who work with the building in the process of dismantling an exhibition, I examine the negotiations that emerge when a problem occurs with the handling of a specific artwork. Drawing on the concept of spacing by Bruno Latour, this paper highlights the multiplicity and complexity inherent in museum practices. I argue that space is not contained inside the building but is done with the building, exhibition objects, handling instructions, surfaces, and people. Analyzing this process of spacing, then, the work towardsand negotiation of stability and flux, of homogeneity and heterogeneity inherent to museum spaces become visible which allows for a rich and nuanced understanding of the relationship between people and physical stuff.

Author Biography

Sabine Hansmann, HafenCity Universität Hamburg

Sabine Hansmann is currently substitute professor for Architecture, Space and Society at the HafenCity University Hamburg. Her research focuses on architectural theory and the sociology of architecture, the theory of space, actor-network theory, as well as materiality and sustainability in everyday life. Her most recent books are Monospace and Multiverse: Exploring Space with Actor-Network-Theory (2021) and the co-edited Raummaschine: Exploring Manifold Spaces (2019).

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Published

04/24/2024

How to Cite

Hansmann, S. (2024). Spacing: Following negotiations in the process of exhibition dismantling. Museum & Society, 22(1), 94–109. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v22i1.4370

Issue

Section

Museums Refigured