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Creative
Space: An International Conference exploring museum and
gallery space
as a creative medium
Department of Museum Studies, University of Leicester
April
5th - 7th 2004
What
kind of museum spaces do we need at the beginning of the
21st century? Creative Space is the Department's 6th International conference.
Through an exploration of recent museum
developments and a focus on the practices
and decision-making processes of museum building and exhibition design,
Creative Space will focus on the nature, character and possibilities
for museum space. By bringing together the voices of museum professionals,
architects, designers and academics, this conference will provide
a dynamic forum for thinking about museum space, recognising
the significance and malleability of museum
space and reflecting strategically upon
recent developments in museum space.
SPEAKERS - Rafael Vinoly (Rafael Vinoly Architects)
- Michael Wilford (Michael Wilford and Partners, Architects)
- Professor Tony Bennett (Open University)
- Dr David Fleming, (Director, National Museums Liverpool)
- Elaine Heumann Gurian (Museum Consultant, Arlington, VA,
USA)
- Professor Eilean Hooper-Greenhill, (Research Centre for
Museums and
- Galleries, University of Leicester)
- Suzanne MacLeod, (Department of Museum Studies, University
of Leicester)
- Dr Ross Parry (Department of Museum Studies, University
of Leicester) and
- Dr Andrew Sawyer (mwr Ltd)
- Richard Sandell, (Department of Museum Studies, University
of Leicester)
- Stephen Greenberg (Metaphor)
- Peter Higgins (Land Design)
- Richard Toon (Education and Research Director, Arizona
Science Centre, USA)
- Jon Wood (Henry Moore Institute)
- Sophia Psarra (Welsh School of Architecture)
- Kali Tzortzi (Bartlett School of Architecture)
- Christopher Marshall (University of Melbourne, Australia)
- Sandra Bicknell (Lord Cultural Resources)
- Lawrence Fitzgerald (Glasgow Museums Service)
- Moira Stevenson (Deputy Director, Manchester Art Gallery)
- Alisdair Hinshelwood (Director, Haley Sharpe Design)
- Dr Helen Rees Leahy (Centre for Museology, University of
Manchester)
- Professor Christian Heath (Kings College London)
SESSION CHAIRS
- Mark O'Neill (Head, Glasgow Museums
Service)
- Sandro Goppion (Goppion)
- Dinah Casson (Casson Mann)
- Stuart Davies (Resource)
CONFERENCE VISIT
The visit is to The Public (formerly Jubilee Arts) in West
Bromwich, close
to the site of The Public Building, due to open in 2005.
The Public will
host a reception for Creative Space delegates at Re-location,
a disused X-
Ray factory which has been transformed into a dynamic artistic
community.
Delegates will be given the opportunity to view the progress
of The Public
Building, designed by Will Alsop, through a site tour and
presentation.
FEES
Full residential delegate (includes all meals and on-site,
en-suite
accommodation) from Sunday evening - Wednesday afternoon
tea, including
conference dinner) - £300 ($554 approx)
For further information, please contact:
Barbara Lloyd
Department of Museum Studies
University of Leicester
105 Princess Road East
Leicester
LE1 7LG
Tel: +44(0)116 252 3962
Fax: +44(0)116 252 3960
Email: bl5@le.ac.uk
FURTHER INFORMATION
Speakers from around
the world will contribute under the following overlapping themes.
On the nature of museum space
What do we mean by and how can we understand
the space of the museum? Has the nature
of museum space shifted in recent years and if so how? How
can we describe the broad architectural
and spatial developments museums have undergone
in recent years? How can we understand these shifts in relation to
the changing social fabric? What do visitors want from museums
and what are the implications of this
knowledge? What kinds of museum spaces do we need
at the beginning of the 21st century? Speakers
grouped together under this theme will explore the nature
of museum space and recent architectural and spatial shifts
in museums.
Architectural reshaping
How have architects engaged with the
problem of the museum? What traditions and
visions of the museum have architects utilised and how have
architects expanded the possibilities
of what a museum might be? What do architects think
about when designing a new museum? How do architects work
with the museum and how does the museum's
own vision of itself and its visitors find its
way into the final design? What other research has helped
to shape recent museum building projects?
'Architectural reshaping' groups together a series of speakers
broadly concerned with the architectural
structure and physical space of the museum.
The papers here will take an in-depth look at specific building projects
introducing innovative contemporary architectural developments from
a range of perspectives.
Inside spaces
How have the inside spaces of museums
been reshaped in recent years and upon
what knowledge and understanding is this reshaping based?
How are museum professionals rethinking
the space of the museum in order to achieve a
new vision of museum space and respond to the needs of contemporary society?
What is the role of the designer in the reshaping process
and how have museum designers created
new possibilities for museum space? Are specific
spatial solutions preferred by museum architects and designers
at the present time and upon what thinking
are these solutions based?
'Inside spaces' pulls together a series of speakers who share
a common interest in exploring the redefinition
and redesign of the inside spaces of museums.
Papers here will explore and assess a range of spatial solutions employed
to rethink and create new possibilities for museum space
with a particular focus on museum design.
Exploring renewed museum spaces: towards a vision for the
future
How can we think strategically about
the space of the museum at the beginning
of the 21st century? Have recent developments in museum architecture
and exhibition design resulted in effective museum spaces? What
research has been undertaken into the usability of new museum
spaces or the link between the architecture,
its contents and the visitor? What are
the key lessons that have been learnt? What issues and challenges
can be identified for museums through a consideration of recent
architectural
and spatial developments? Do specific spatial solutions enable
or constrain learning and social interaction?
Through a series of papers exploring renewed museum spaces,
and building upon the papers grouped under
the preceding themes, this final theme enables
us to begin to move towards visions of museum spaces for
the future.
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