Events

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.

The Art of Tyree Guyton: A Thirty-Year Journey

Detroit artist Tyree Guyton has been active in the Detroit community for 30 years.  His most well-known installations are the houses along two blocks of Detroit's Heidelberg Street, and Guyton's smaller works completed in his studio complement these outdoor installations.  A collection of his...

The Emperor’s New Ethnography: Debates at the Musée africain de Lyon

University of Michigan Museum of Art, First Floor, Multi-Purpose Room 525 South State Street, Ann Arbor, MI, United States

Abigail Celis (PhD candidate, French Language and Literature) How do you do new ethnography with old tools? Ethnographic museums, in the past two decades, have been dancing a funny limbo. The academic fields that shaped them have abandoned many of the methods and primary...

Michigan Museums Association Annual Conference

The annual Michigan Museums Association annual conference has come to a close, and many of our Museum Studies Program faculty and alumni participated throughout the event.  A full schedule of events and presentations that took place can be found at the MMA conference website,...

Gentrifiers or community anchors: are art museums good for urban neighborhood residents?

University of Michigan Museum of Art, First Floor, Multi-Purpose Room 525 South State Street, Ann Arbor, MI, United States

Justin Meyer (PhD candidate, Urban Planning) My dissertation research examines how urban art museums impact their adjacent neighborhoods to understand when they contribute to gentrification (and the subsequent isolation or displacement of ethnic minorities and poorer households) and when they might help ‘anchor’ or...

The “Calculated Frightfulness” of ISIS: Threats to Middle Eastern Cultural Heritage in Historical Perspective

U-M Museum of Art, Helmut Stern Auditorium 525 S. State St., Ann Arbor, MI, United States

Global Heritage at Risk University of Michigan Museum Studies Program Fall 2015 Lecture Series Speaker: Geoffrey Emberling, Assistant Research Scientist, Kelsey Museum of Archaeology, University of Michigan Co-sponsored by the U-M Kelsey Museum of Archaeology, Center for Middle East and North African Studies and...

“What Time Is It?’ – New Work by Tyree Guyton

Guyton’s new work builds on his well known Heidelberg Project addressing the social and economic adversities with which Detroit has struggled for the last fifty years. The exhibit marks a key moment of transition for Guyton as he shifts his attention from the Heidelberg...