The document discusses how museums can provide access, flexibility, experience, and community. It provides examples of museums that are accessible to people of all ages, abilities, and backgrounds. It also gives examples of museums that are flexible and co-produced with public participation, engagement and feedback. Museums can create memorable personal experiences for visitors and enhance their sense of community. The use of technology, public spaces, social media, and measuring feedback can further these goals.
6. access
for all
Turkish artist Esref Armagan touching sphinx at
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Saving the 70s' - a group of older people who
have co-curated the exhibition at Stevenage
Museum
Children in the Galleries of the Carnegie
Museum of Art
7. Common
good
The art is a result of a
collective work of many
participants, thus becomes a
common good. The art
projects become common
through the dialogue
(storytelling) with the
audience.
9. campus
Museum should be
interesting for all the visitors.
Art is just the one part. The
visitor may has several
choices (gardens, many
rooms, coffee, library) on how
to spend his time, so as
different needs can be
satisfied.
11. campus
National museum of china in 2017, will include
a national park also.
Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi in 2020. Several
mini museums so as to create a cultural
district.
12. Art creation and participation
is implemented with political
and social life, so as keep to
awake the public.
on time
22. Use of technology and digital
art (virtual reality, augmented
reality, virtual tours, haptic
user interfaces, eye tracking,
processing, mobile apps).
technology
45. flexibility
Co-produced with public
ideas, questions,
conversations, time, money
(crowdfunding), feedback.
Participate in many ways
(flexibility in use and bigger
target group). Be part of the
museum or make the
museum yours (personalized).
47. flexibility
Brooklyn museum. 17,500. That’s the number
of sticky notes we used during the run of
#KillerHeels. We created a “shoe closet” at the
end of the show where we posted Polaroids
(70 in total by the end) of visitors who had
rocked their killer heels for one of our
scheduled photo-ops. The Polaroids had a
word or short phrase describing how that
person felt wearing those heels. We then
invited visitors to write on a sticky note what
they thought those heels said about that
person and post it next to the photo.
53. MY Culture Museum is a statement of culture
as a common wealth, inviting you to contribute
your objects that represent your own culture.
community
54. community
“Towards Tomorrow,” a 2012 installation by Finnish artist Kaarina Kaikkonen in Rome’s MAXXI
National Museum of XXI Century Arts, is made from shirts.
55. community
Women Are Heroes by JR, 2008-2009.
His project took place around the globe, and
with the help of over 100 people.