Public programs facilitate dialogue between academics and professionals, informing scholarship and strengthening practice.
Multiple day conferences, year-long colloquia, individual lectures, “conversations” between individuals, hands-on workshops, and Museums at Noon talks featuring our graduate students all contribute to the remarkable richness of MSP offerings.
Video recordings of some MSP lectures are archived for viewing in our Media Gallery.
Other
The Image Reframed: Visions of Instability
The Museum Studies Program is proud to co-sponsor the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures 21st Charles F. Fraker conference. The two-day conference, The Image Reframed: Visions of Instability, will run from Friday, February 10 to Saturday, February 11. The conference will take place in the Michigan...
Endangered Heritage conference
War, climate change, globalization, and economic development pose significant threats to the world’s natural and cultural heritage. Societies around the world share many of the same concerns, even as specific regions, countries, and communities face unique challenges. The symposium seeks to establish a dialogue...
Aspiration/Obligation? Imagining Intellectual Freedom in Museums
Rackham Graduate School 915 E. Washington Street, Ann Arbor, MI, United StatesAspiration/Obligation? Imagining Intellectual Freedom in Museums How Do Museums Respond to Public Challenges to Their Exhibitions? What Would a National “Bill of Rights” for Museum Visitors Look Like? Should Museums Limit Access to Potentially Controversial Materials? Since the 1930s, American libraries have organized their...
Art for Sale? Public Trust, Public Debt: The Detroit Institute of Arts and the City of Detroit Bankruptcy
In the two years since the City of Detroit came out of bankruptcy, it has not been uncommon to read in mainstream media and the blogosphere “how close the city of Detroit came to selling its art collection.” Such was never the case and,...
MSP16 Student Capstone Presentations – April 12
Haven Hall, Eldersveld Room 505 S. State Street, Ann ArborHaven Hall, Eldersveld Room Presentations for this evening are as follows: 6:00 pm: Home Galleries and Dialogue: Re-contextualizing West African Art in the Toledo Museum of Art Presented by Timothy Hart, Mariane Stanev, Felix Zamora-Gomez Host institution: Toledo Museum of Art 7:00 pm:...
MSP16 Student Capstone Presentations – April 17
Haven Hall, Eldersveld Room 505 S. State Street, Ann ArborPresentations at 6:00 and 7:00. Haven Hall, Eldersveld Room Presentations for this evening are as follows: 6:00 pm: Beyond the Stars: Re-imagining Space at MSU’s Abrams Planetarium Presented by Carolyn Clayton, Christina DiFabio, Rebecca Kon Host institution: Abrams Planetarium (Michigan State University) ...
Book Signing: Object Lessons and the Formation of Knowledge
Kelsey Museum of Archaeology 434 South State Street, Ann Arbor, MIAuthors and UM professors Kerstin Barndt and Carla Sinopoli will be at the Kelsey Museum signing copies of their new book, 'Object Lessons & the Formation of Knowledge.' Learn about the dynamic history of the museums at the University of Michigan as part of the...
Bicentennial book launch/panel discussion
Hatcher Graduate LibraryThe book Object Lessons and the Formation of Knowledge: The University of Michigan Museums, Libraries, and Collections 1817–2017 presents a full color journey through the treasures of the University’s collections. A panel discussion with a focus on items from library collections will occur on Sept 26...
Object Lessons: Recollecting Museum Histories at Michigan
Curated by Kerstin Barndt in collaboration with Richard Barnes and Amanda Krugliak, with original commissioned artwork by Richard Barnes The history of the modern research university is unthinkable without collecting. At the University Michigan, the first objects brought to campus in the late 1830s...
Exhibition – Excavating Archaeology at U-M: 1817‐2017
Kelsey Museum of Archaeology 434 South State Street, Ann Arbor, MIThis exhibition explores the history of archaeology and museums at the University of Michigan for the past 200 years and looks forward to the future of archaeology and museums at Michigan in the coming century. The exhibition relies on carefully chosen objects, archival documents...