Dream keepers : collection and display of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander material culture in three European museums
Abstract
Museums are places of contest and revelation. Ethnographic objects have been too
simply perceived as the trophies of colonial conquest, appropriated from Indigenous
makers and owners and kept in European museums. Through a detailed examination
of three European museums’ collections of Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander holdings, the thesis argues that a multi-dimensional reading of the museums
and their collections offers a more nuanced understanding for both museums and
Indigenous source communities. It shows that colonial power alone is insufficient to
explain the variations found between these museum collections. Nor does a singular
colonial view describe the complexities of exchange that occurred in the process of
making the collections, nor the diversity of influences and motivations that inspired
both museums and collectors. This thesis outlines how many of the collectors,
including government officials, missionaries and social scientists, worked with
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people towards the understanding, recognition
and preservation of their culture. They often acted with mixed motivations, at times
regardless of perceived colonial interests.
This study focuses on cultural material in three European museums: Musee du quai
Branly, Paris; The British Museum, London; and Ethnologisches Museum, Berlin. It
has two key themes. One theme explores similarities and differences between
respective museums with reference to the nature and development of their
collections. The other theme examines the classification and treatment of objects by
museums. It does so by researching the histories of the collections, their collectors,
their displays, and the role of art and ideas in the museums’ development.
The thesis traces developments from the nineteenth century, when Aboriginal
people were classified as a society with the most 'prim itive' of cultures, to more
recent times, where Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art is displayed in major
art galleries around the world as fine art. This metamorphosis is followed through
these three European museums and reveals each country’s significantly different
approaches, which have transformed over time. A more multi-faceted understanding
of cultural material and the museums that house it offers new opportunities for both
Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.
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