Tuesday 28 April 2015

Åland Maritime Museum: An ethos to aspire too!

Is it possible to love a museum that you’ve never actually been too? Well that was how I felt after hearing the director of Åland Maritime Museum, Hanna Hagmark-Cooper, speak at the recent Rhul Public History Alumni Seminar. I found her talk completely fascinating and decided I’d take the time to share a summary of it and its key themes with you.

Maritime industry is a key part of the island’s history and both national and cultural identity are tied to this historic relationship with sailing ships. The Museum began in the 1920s as a private collection, and as a reaction to a decline in the maritime industry. Soon after, a club emerged to support this private collection, the purpose of which was to create a dedicated museum to preserve the maritime industry and its part in the Island’s history. Exhibits were collected through donations, but club members also petitioned for donations – there was, and still is, a strong level of personal investment in the museum. It was run as a private enterprise until the 1980s when it became a charitable trust as it remains today.
Now when the decision was made to rebuild the museum, I was surprised to learn that it faced no opposition – I can’t imagine a similar attitude necessarily being adopted here in the UK, for I don’t think a single museum is seen as that important to our national or cultural identity. But people from the Åland Islands wanted this redevelopment and were happy for investment to be diverted from other sectors towards the museum project.
Hanna began work at the museum in 2004 at which time the focus was very much on the display of sailing ships. However, since it’s re-opening in 2012 and under the instruction of Hanna, the museum has now introduced topics which broaden its scope, including the impact of steam engines, ship building and safety at sea. From what was described, it is no longer just a showcase for old boats, but has more substance and narrative for visitors to experience. 
It was this element that originally caused slight resistance, for there was a fear of what modernism might mean for the museum. Museum staff and supporters were aware of the need for a new approach to draw in new visitors, however at the same time they didn’t want to alienate the core visitor group. This led to what I have to admit finding most fascinating – the strong sense of shared authority between museum staff and specialist groups invested in museum. Huge emphasis appears to have been placed on consultation, staff being acutely aware of the ‘strong local commitment’ to seeing the museum be a success, both in terms of its original goals and what would draw in visitors.
With only a core staff of 5, this emphasis on shared authority has also been beneficial in other ways. Museum staff have been able to call on specialist groups, those with expertise in ship building, mechanical engineers and sail makers for example, for help during the redevelopment. Hanna described how a sense of mutual respect has developed between museum staff and specialist groups, because they each have knowledge of their own ‘trade’ and appreciate the limits to their own abilities. By working together, sharing ideas and exchanging information, they’ve created a productive and effective environment in which the redevelopment has been able to prosper. And amazingly this relationship continues, currently three years on, with no sign of that ending soon. The community spirit and shared investment in what is clearly such an important part of their shared heritage, is something I found really inspiration and evocative.
Also particularly interesting, and in fact the intended main focus of the talk, was the museum’s use of social media to create and research new and interesting exhibitions. In this case Hanna referred to a Facebook exhibition, which successfully broadened the museum’s reach by presenting a topic of greater interest to people beyond the core group of visitors.
Hanna recalled how she had first been invited to a closed group on Facebook where people involved with the maritime industry, exchanged photos and stories of their experiences. I’m sure we are all part of a similar group, perhaps a school reunion group, or local history? Anyway, Hanna described her interest in watching this develop over time and the end result was a temporary exhibition. The Museum took just 14 of the thousands of images uploaded to the group, and displayed them, together with accompanying comments, in a temporary exhibition in the museum. The group was consulted throughout this process and was involved in, from what it sounds like, most decisions. It had the community element right at its heart and I just think it’s such a fantastic idea. Again, the museum is enacting the principle of shared authority and I just think a lot could, and should be learnt from this example and it's methods adopted by other museums.
Hanna speaks with a degree of pride about how this exhibition made marginal histories central to the narrative told by the museum, if only temporarily, and drew in a new audience demographic. We were told how usually objects are what survive from ships and therefore are displayed, not the stories of the people who served and sailed upon them; and in fact thinking of examples of ships I’ve visited, at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard and the  S.S Great Britain, this is true. I can remember clearly some of the objects, but nothing particularly about the people. And so as you would expect, by displaying these stories, interest in the museum increased and people’s perceptions of the museum were dramatically altered.
I came away from this talk with two key phrases in my mind – community collaboration and shared authority and I just so impressed to hear how well the Åland Maritime Museum has invoked these principles. Hearing of how this one temporary exhibition has changed the museum’s outlook and opened up further opportunities for collaborative projects, including the collection of items and inclusion of photos and comments from Facebook in the archive, reinforced my belief in the importance of Public History and the emphasis that should be placed on community/visitor involvement.
Having been so UK-centric in my studies, it was really interesting to hear how the Public history philosophy is carried out in a European context and I think it would be really interesting to see some of the UK’s museums adopt some of these approaches and the resulting impact it might have on their appeal and level of visitor engagement.
Trip to the Åland Islands anyone?

Sunday 26 April 2015

Museum of London Docklands: A Trip to Sailor Town

London Docklands
I’ve tried to let some time pass between writing this blog and my visit to the Museum of London Docklands to see if my initial disappointment would subside and I could gain some objectivity. However, on this occasion that logic doesn’t appear to have worked because I still feel quite disappointed by my recent visit and am left feeling that the museum has so much potential, but that has yet to be fully realised.

Traveling out to the Docks is not something I get to do very often and my first impressions were really good. I was excited to be there and excited to visit one of the major London museums that I hadn’t visit before. The sense of atmosphere was striking. The juxtaposition of old against new and the character of the former warehouse building, where the museum is located, was exactly as I’d envisaged. It didn’t matter that the warehouse now houses a museum and various restaurants and bars; you could just imagine it once bustling with industry, as ships were unloaded and produce from around the world was moved into storage. It still has that Victorian age vibe and it felt as if things had happened there.

Museum Location
I think the trouble is I went with an agenda. My fascination with the docks ties in with 19th century imperialism and… wait for it…. the exotic animal trade. That’s why I’m interested in the docks and surrounding area - for the role they fulfilled in the trade. So I was quite disappointed at how little this topic featured in the narrative told within the museum. There were limited references - the odd twentieth century photograph, whale jaw bones from the late 1700s found in the Thames; a cabinet of curiosities featuring animal products bought in from around the world, ostrich feathers, eggs, shells and ivory; while I also honed in on a reference to the gifting of turtles. It’s there I suppose, but in fleeting references and I just feel so much more could have been made of it – as a hook, to capture people’s interest who might not otherwise find the docks of interest. Perhaps I had hoped for too much.
However, that lack of substance didn’t just apply to the animal trading side of things. I’m fortunate to be aware of how much trade was being done in London across the Victorian period and preceding that, but as a visitor I didn’t really get a sense of that from the museum. I mean it’s there within the narrative, but the impact and sheer scale of it just gets lost. I’m not entirely sure how you would convey it, but it just felt very flat. I can’t really explain it. Even galleries that you would think could have bought in some emotion, like the London, Sugar & Slavery and Docklands at War, didn’t really do so.
Animal Related Items
Don’t get me wrong the topics covered are fascinating; they were just not presented very well. Well that, or, they’ve struggled to stand the test of time. Perhaps my view on this is sort of like the struggle I had with the IWM before its refurbishment? Times have changed and as visitors, we’ve begun to expect something different now. We don’t want a “book on the wall” approach, we want to be engaged, enticed and intrigued. We want to be able to control our “learning journey”, by reading more about the bits we are interested in and leaving the rest and to do that the information needs to be presented in a particular way. Small chunks, with “sign post” headings, images, eye catching quotes, directionality, and a strong narrative.  The museum has the content; the design is just somewhat outdated.
There is part of me that feels I am being overly critical and I probably am because there were people clearly engaging with the exhibits, I just felt disappointed. And perhaps that’s the risk of going with a preconceived idea of what you’ll find, or hope to find.
The nearest we got to anything particularly strong in terms of the animal trade was in Sailortown, which features the ‘Animal Emporium’ of George Bignold. Great, we have a recreation of his shop with accompanying sound effects and objects such as skulls and shells, but there was no information and it just felt like there was a missed opportunity to really entice people’s interest. I mean a group of 40+ schools kids just strolled past it without stopping to engage and yet, I know it’s something people find interesting when they know a little more about.
Advert in Sailor Town
Now hands up, this is my area of expertise and one I want to tell everyone about it, but it need not have been this element that captured peoples interest, it could have been barrel making or knot tying – I don’t know, but there was nothing really to interact with, no single industry that left an overriding impression. You had to read and observe, occasionally watch (if the screen wasn’t being affected by technical issues, as most were on this visit) – it wasn’t a very forceful transmission of knowledge and I think actually it needed it to drive the museum narrative home. It needed a wow factor.
It’s a shame because the history of the docks is so colourful and multicultural, with interesting events and characters, but none of that really came across. Social history is the hook for me, I like to know about people and their stories and how that fits into the historical narrative, but the museum seem to have opted for themes within chronology and I don’t think that particularly works. One of my favourite bits was the small exhibit on East End identity, looking at both historic and modern perceptions, because it took a different approach and linked the two different periods together, making direct cultural references. It also used a range of tools to transmit that, from audio-visual to objects and texts. That had the “wow factor” I was looking for.
I am glad that I went and got to experience the Museum, it was interesting and I did take some nuggets of information away, the overall experience just felt flat. I know that isn’t a useful term to come back too, but I can’t think of how to describe it any other way. It just needs shaking up – making it more interactive with some wow factor, if it wants to keep pace with the other London museums. I mean in the Museum of London itself can achieve that, why not its sister branch?

Final Thoughts:
  • I was surprised to learn…. That the Romans built the first timber bridges across the Thames in 110AD and were only replaced by stone c.1176-1209.
  • I hadn’t realised that…. There was an African Community in Seven Dials that pre-dates 1778.
  • I was left wondering… what on earth a Hogshead was. We narrowed it down to a measurement of some sort but it’s taken some post-visit research to discover that it is in fact a measurement, usually for beer and ale, that in the UK (after 124 adoption of the imperial system) was equal to 54 imperial gallons or approximately 245.49 litres. 

Sunday 19 April 2015

Crowd-Funding an Exhibition – Please show your support



We only have 2 weeks left to raise the money to stage Mark Fairnington’s exhibition at the Horniman Museum and every pound counts. To find out more, make a donation and get wonderful rewards visit http://www.artfund.org/get-involved/art-happens/mark-fairnington-the-hornimans-hidden-world

This week I received the above email asking me to help support the crowdfunding efforts of the Horniman Museum to stage the exhibition Mark Fairnington: The Horniman’s hidden world and rather than just tweet or flag it on Facebook I thought I’d quickly mention it here.
The idea of the exhibition is to stage Mark Fairnington’s paintings alongside their inspiration, the Horniman’s hidden taxidermy treasures. The objects will be presented as they are in storage, the aim being to ‘evok[e] the wonder Mark experienced when he found them for the first time’.

Now, I’ve never heard of museums or galleries crowdfunding before, but a quick scan of www.artfund.org show’s me to be rather naïve in that view. So I guess it’s just never appeared on my radar before – but what a fantastic idea! We all know of the growing pressures museum face, especially with regards to funding cuts and this to me just seems like an imaginative way to get an exhibition up and running.  It’s placing emphasis on public engagement and asking the public to get involved and support institutions and culture they value.
I donated – why? Because of my interest in natural history, taxidermy and fondness for the Museum, but also because of my curiosity about how Mark has taken something so ‘of its time’ and made it relevant. I’m really interested to see how the specimens will be represented in his modern art and how he has used the collection. It will bring modern art and natural history together and show that natural history collections are relevant and continue to provide inspiration, outside of a scientific context (my thoughts not the museum’s!!!). It will also enable the museum to show a more extensive selection of its holdings, that it could not otherwise display, which again can only be a good thing, for us curious members of the public!
Anyway, I didn’t intend to review the museums fundraising technique, I just wanted to say what a fantastic idea I think it is and hope that maybe some of you who read this, might also feel as impassioned about this idea and offer a donation to help it become a reality.
Thanks!