A
museum is a building or institution which houses
a collection of
artifacts.
Museums collect and care for objects of scientific, artistic, or
historical importance and make them available for public viewing
through exhibits that may be permanent or temporary. Most large
museums are located in major cities throughout the world and more
local ones exist in smaller cities, towns and even the
countryside.
Early museums began as the private collections of wealthy
individuals, families or institutions of art and rare or curious
natural objects and
artifacts.
There are museums all over the world. The museums of ancient times,
such as the
Musaeum of Alexandria, would be
equivalent to a modern graduate institute. The modern meaning of
the word can be traced to the Museum of
Pergamon in Anatolia, which displayed
artwork.
History
Early museums began as the private collections of wealthy
individuals, families or institutions of art and rare or curious
natural objects and
artifacts. These were often displayed
in so-called wonder rooms or
cabinets of curiosities. Public
access was often possible for the "respectable", especially to
private art collections, but at the whim of the owner and his
staff.
The first public museums in the world opened in
Europe during the 18th century and the
Age of Enlightenment:
- the Amerbach Cabinet, originally a private collection, was
bought by the university and city of Basel in 1661 and opened to
the public in 1671.
- the
Royal Armouries in the Tower of London
is the oldest museum in the United Kingdom
. It opened to the public in 1660, though
there had been paying privileged visitors to the armouries displays
from 1592. Today the museum has three sites including
its new headquarters in Leeds
.
- the
Musée des Beaux-Arts et d'archéologie in Besançon
was established in 1694 after Jean-Baptiste Boisot,
an abbot, gave his personnal collection to the Benedictines of the
city in order to create a museum open to the public two days every
week.
- the
Museo
Sacro
, the first museum in the Vatican Museums
complex, was opened in Rome
in
1756
- the
British
Museum
in London
, was founded
in 1753 and opened to the public in 1759. Sir Hans Sloane's personal collection of curios
provided the initial foundation for the British Museum's
collection.
- the
Uffizi Gallery
in Florence
, which had been open to visitors on request since
the 16th century, was officially opened to the public
1765
- the
Belvedere
Palace
of the Habsburg
monarchs in Vienna
opened with
a collection of art in 1781
- Louvre
in Paris
France. The Mona Lisa Painting by
Leonardo Da Vinci resides in the
Louvre.

These "public" museums, however, were often accessible only by the
middle and upper classes. It could be difficult to gain entrance.
In London for example, prospective visitors to the British Museum
had to apply in writing for admission. Even by 1800 it was possible
to have to wait two weeks for an admission ticket. Visitors in
small groups were limited to stays of two hours. In
Victorian times in England it became popular
for museums to be open on a Sunday afternoon (the only such
facility allowed to do so) to enable the opportunity for "self
improvement" of the other - working - classes.
The first
truly public museum was the Louvre Museum
in Paris
, opened in
1793 during the French Revolution,
which enabled for the first time in history free access to the
former French royal collections for people of all stations and
status. The fabulous art treasures collected by the French
monarchy over centuries were accessible to the public three days
each "
décade" (the 10-day unit which had replaced the week
in the
French Republican
Calendar). The
Conservatoire du muséum national des
Arts (National Museum of Arts's Conservatory) was charged with
organizing the Louvre as a national public museum and the
centerpiece of a planned national museum system. As
Napoléon I conquered the great cities
of Europe, confiscating art objects as he went, the collections
grew and the organizational task became more and more complicated.
After Napoleon was defeated in 1815, many of the treasures he had
amassed were gradually returned to their owners (and many were
not). His plan was never fully realized, but his concept of a
museum as an agent of nationalistic fervor had a profound influence
throughout Europe.
American museums eventually joined European museums as the world's
leading centers for the production of new knowledge in their fields
of interest. A period of intense museum building, in both an
intellectual and physical sense was realized in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries (this is often called "The Museum Period" or
"The Museum Age"). While many American museums, both Natural
History museums and Art museums alike, were founded with the
intention of focusing on the scientific discoveries and artistic
developments in North America, many moved to emulate their European
counterparts in certain ways (including the development of
Classical collections from ancient Egypt, Greece, Mesopotamia and
Rome). Universities became the primary centers for innovative
research in the United States well before the start of the
Second World War. Nevertheless, museums to this
day contribute new knowledge to their fields and continue to build
collections that are useful for both research and display.
Purpose
Museums collect and care for objects of scientific, artistic, or
historical importance and make them available for public viewing
through exhibits that may be permanent or temporary. Most large
museums are located in major cities throughout the world and more
local ones exist in smaller cities, towns and even the countryside.
Many museums offer programs and activities for a range of
audiences, including adults, children, and families, as well as
those for more specific professions. Programs for the public may
consist of
lectures or tutorials by the
museum faculty or field experts, films, musical or dance
performances, and technology demonstrations. Many times, museums
concentrate on the host region's
culture.
Although most museums do not allow physical contact with the
associated artifacts, there are some that are interactive and
encourage a more hands-on approach. Modern trends in
museology have broadened the range of subject
matter and introduced many
interactive
exhibit, which give the public the opportunity to make choices
and engage in activities that may vary the experience from person
to person. With the advent of the
internet,
there are growing numbers of
virtual
exhibits, i.e. web versions of exhibits showing images and
playing recorded sound.
Museums are usually open to the general public, sometimes charging
an
admission fee. Some museums are publicly
funded and have free entrance, either permanently or on special
days, e.g. once per week or year.
Museums are usually not run for the purpose of making a
profit, unlike private
galleries which more often engage in the sale of
objects. There are governmental museums, non-governmental or
non-profit museums, and
privately owned or family museums. Museums can be a reputable and
generally trusted source of information about cultures and
history.
Definitions include: "permanent institution
in the service of society and of its development, open to the
public, which acquires, conserves, researches, communicates and
exhibits the tangible and intangible heritage of humanity
and its environment, for the purposes of education, study, and enjoyment", by the International Council of
Museums
; and "Museums enable people to explore collections
for inspiration, learning and enjoyment. They are
institutions that collect, safeguard and make accessible artifacts
and specimens, which they hold in trust for society," by the UK
Museums Association.
Types
There are many types of museums, from very large collections in
major cities, covering many of the categories below, to very small
museums covering either a particular location in a general way, or
a particular subject, such an individual notable person. Categories
include:
fine arts,
applied arts,
craft,
archaeology,
anthropology and
ethnology,
history,
cultural history,
military history,
science,
technology,
children's museums,
natural history,
numismatics,
botanical and
zoological
garden and
philately. Within these
categories many museums specialize further, e.g. museums of
modern art, local history,
aviation history,
agriculture or
geology. A
museum normally houses a core collection of important selected
objects in its field. Objects are formally
accessioned by being registered in the museum's
collection with an artifact number and details recorded about their
provenance. The persons in charge of the
collection and of the exhibits are known as
curators.
Archaeology museums
Archaeology museums specialize in the display of archaeological
artifacts.
Many are in the open air, such as the
Acropolis of
Athens
and the Roman Forum
. Others display artifacts found in
archaeological sites inside buildings.
Art museums
An
Art museum, also known as an art
gallery, is a space for the exhibition of art, usually in the form
of
art objectsfrom the
visual arts, primarily
paintings,
illustrations, and
sculpture. Collections of
drawings and
old master
prints are often not displayed on the walls, but kept in a
print room. There may be collections of
applied art, including
ceramics,
metalwork,
furniture,
artist's books and other
types of object.
Video art is often
screened.
The first
publicly owned museum in Europe was the
Amerbach-Cabinet in Basel
, originally
a private collection sold to the city in 1661 and public since 1671
(now Kunstmuseum
Basel
). The Uffizi
Gallery in
Florence
was initially conceived as a palace for the offices
of Florentian magistrates (hence the name), it later evolved into a
display place for many of the paintings and sculpture collected by
the Medici family or commissioned by
them. After the house of Medici was extinguished, the art
treasures remained in Florence, forming one of the first modern
museums. The gallery had been open to visitors by request since the
sixteenth century, and in 1765 it was officially opened to the
public.
Another early public museum was the British Museum
in London, which opened to the public in
1759. It was a "universal museum" with very varied
collections covering art, applied art, archaeology, anthropology,
history, and science, and a library. The science collections,
library, paintings and modern sculpture have since been found
separate homes, leaving history, archaeology, non-European and
pre-Renaissance art, and prints and drawings.
The
specialised art museum is considered a fairly modern invention, the first being the Hermitage
in Saint Petersburg
which was established in 1764.
The
Louvre
in Paris
was
established in 1793, soon after the French Revolution when the
royal treasures were declared for the people. The Czartoryski
Museum
in Kraków
was
established in 1796 by Princess Izabela
Czartoryska. This showed the beginnings of removing art
collections from the private domain of aristocracy and the wealthy
into the public sphere, where they were seen as sites for educating
the masses in taste and cultural refinement.
History museums cover the
knowledge of
history and its relevance to
the present and future. Some cover specialized curatorial aspects
of history or a particular locality; others are more general. Such
museums contain a wide range of objects, including documents,
artifacts of all kinds, art, archaeological objects.
Antiquities museum specialize
in more archaeological findings.
A common type of history museum is a
historic house. A historic house may be a
building of special architectural interest, the birthplace or home
of a famous person, or a house with an interesting history.
Historic sites can also become museums,
particularly those that mark public
crimes, such as Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum
or Robben
Island
. Another type of history museum is a
living museum. A living museum is
where people recreate a time period to the fullest extent,
including buildings, clothes and language. It is similar to
historical reenactment.
Maritime museums
Maritime museums specialize in the
display of objects relating to
ships and travel
on
seas and
lakes. They may
include a historic ship (or a replica) made accessible as a
museum ship.
Military and war museums
Military museums specialize in military histories; they are often
organized from a national point of view, where a museum in a
particular country will have displays organized around conflicts in
which that country has taken part. They typically include displays
of
weapons and other military equipment,
uniforms, wartime
propaganda and exhibits on civilian life during
wartime, and
decorations, among
others.
A
military museum may be dedicated to a particular service or area,
such as the Imperial War Museum Duxford
for military aircraft or
the Deutsches
Panzermuseum
for tanks, or more generalist,
such as the Canadian
War Museum
or the Musée de l'Armée
.
Mobile museums
Mobile museum is a term applied to museums that
make exhibitions from a vehicle, such as a van.
Some institutions,
such as St. Vital
Historical Society and the Walker Art Center
, use the term to refer to a portion of their
collection that travels to sites away from the museum for
educational purposes. Other mobile museums have no "home
site", and use travel as their exclusive means of
presentation.
Natural history museums
Museums of
natural history and
natural science typically exhibit
work of the natural world. The focus lies on nature and culture.
Exhibitions may educate the masses about dinosaurs, ancient
history, and anthropology. Evolution, environmental issues, and
biodiversity are major areas in natural science museums.
Notable
museums of this type include the Natural History Museum
in London
, the
Oxford University Museum of Natural
History
in Oxford
, the
Muséum national d'histoire
naturelle
in Paris
, the
Smithsonian
Institution
's National Museum of Natural
History
in Washington, D.C.
, the American Museum of Natural
History
in New York
City
, the Royal
Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology
in Drumheller, Alberta
, Denver Museum of Nature and
Science
and the Field Museum of Natural
History
in Chicago
.
Open air museums
Open air museums collect and
re-erect old buildings at large outdoor sites, usually in settings
of re-created landscapes of the past.
The first one was
King Oscar II's collection near
Oslo
in Norway
, opened in
1881 and is now the Norsk Folkemuseum
. In 1891 Artur
Hazelius founded the Skansen
in Stockholm
, which became the model for subsequent open air
museums in Northern and Eastern Europe, and eventually in other parts
of the world. Most open air museums are located in regions
where wooden architecture prevail, as wooden structures may be
translocated without substantial loss of authenticity.
A more recent but
related idea is realized in ecomuseums,
which originated in France
.
Science museums
Science museums and technology
centers revolve around scientific achievements, and marvels and
their history. To explain complicated inventions, a combination of
demonstrations, interactive programs and thought-provoking media
are used. Some museums may have exhibits on topics such as
computers,
aviation,
railway museums,
physics,
astronomy, and the
animal kingdom.
Science museums, in particular, may consist of
planetaria, or large theatre usually built
around a dome. Museums may have
IMAX feature
films, which may provide
3-D viewing or
higher quality picture. As a result, IMAX content provides a more
immersive experience for people of all ages.
Also new virtual museums, known as
Net Museums, have
recently been created. These are usually web sites belonging to
real museums and containing photo galleries of items found in those
real museums. This new presentation is very useful for people
living far away who wish to see the contents of these
museums.
Specialized museums
A number of different museums exist to demonstrate a variety of
topics.
Music museums may celebrate the life and
work of composers or musicians, such as the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame
in Cleveland, Ohio
. Other music museums include live music
recitals such as the Handel House Museum
in London
. In
Glendale, Arizona, The Bead Museum fosters the appreciation and
understanding of the global historical, cultural and artistic
significance of beads and related artifacts. The permanent
collection includes beads from around the globe including a 15,000
year old bead. Temporary exhibits are also available.
Museums
targeted for the youth, such as children's museums or toy museums in many parts of the world, often
exhibit interactive and educational material on a wide array of
topics, for example, the Museum of Toys and Automata
in Spain. The National
Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum
is an institution of the sports category.
The
Corning
Museum of Glass
is devoted to the art, history, and science of
glass. The National
Museum of Crime & Punishment
explores the science of solving crimes. The
Great American Dollhouse Museum depicts American social history in
miniature.
Interpretation
centres are modern museums or visitors centres that often use
new means of communication with the public.
Virtual museums
A recent development, with the expansion of the
web, is the establishment of
virtual museums. Online initiatives like the
Virtual Museum of Canada
provide physical museums with a web presence, as well as online
curatorial platforms such as
Rhizome.
Some virtual museums have no counterpart in the real world, such as
LIMAC (Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Lima), which has no physical
location and might be confused with the city's own museum. The art
historian
Griselda Pollock
elaborated a virtual
feminist museum,
spreading between classical art to contemporary art.
Zoological parks and botanic gardens

Zoos are considered "living
museums"
Although zoos and
botanic gardens
are not often thought of as museums, they are in fact "living
museums". They exist for the same purpose as other museums: to
educate, inspire action, and to study, develop and manage
collections. They are also managed much like other museums and face
the same challenges.
Notable zoos include the Bronx Zoo
in New
York
, the London
Zoo
, the San Diego Zoo
, Berlin Zoological Garden
, the Taronga Zoo
in Sydney
, Frankfurt
Zoological Garden
, Jardin des Plantes
in Paris
, and
Zürich
Zoologischer Garten
in Switzerland
. Notable botanic gardens include Royal
Botanic Gardens Kew
, Missouri Botanical Garden
, Brooklyn Botanic Garden
, Chicago Botanic Garden
and Royal
Botanical Gardens
.
Controversies
There have been controversies recently regarding artifacts being
damaged or being exposed to high risk of damage whilst on loan. For
example, an ancient
Egyptian stone
lion on loan from the British Museum was being
manually carried down a flight of stairs (as shown in a
BBC Television documentary 2007). The supervisor in
charge advised the people carrying it
if it starts to fall, let
it drop. The irony is that these artifacts have been carefully
excavated and transported, often thousands of miles, without
damage. Once arriving at a museum the artifact usually does not
receive the same level of care and attention that it received
whilst being excavated and transported.
Another example of
this is the recent return of a Terracotta Army
horse on loan from a museum in Rome
, which
showed the item to be damaged on return. As yet, there is no
internationally agreed protocol for a level or standard of care of
artifacts on display or on loan from museums.
Like any institution dedicated to the memorialization of the past,
museums play a substantial role in the construction of ideologies
and identities, which is accomplished through a variety of means,
though these typically pertain to the particular ways in which the
past is put on public display.
Museums serve to standardize our views of the past by the following
means:
- failing to account for matters of historical (or more
accurately, historiographical) dispute; by not providing
alternative viewpoints
- by presenting the past in terms of a coherent, linear, unified
narrative
- by creating complex audio, visual and textual experiences, in
which the observer is overwhelmingly confronted by the massive
weight of all the physical evidence: the photos, the facts, the
personal vignettes—after being penetrated in such an intimate way
by a holistic bodily experience, observers are then typically
directed to gift shops, where they are likely encouraged to
purchase books which can help to further reinforce the desired
indoctrination of the museum's particular ideology
- they present a view of history based entirely upon the
romanticization of the achievements of great men, brilliant
thinkers, cultural or scientific innovators, war heroes (and their
technologies)
As is self-evident to the seasoned traveler, most national museums
around the world adhere to the same basic structural patterns,
whereby the past is divided up into a series of epochs, beginning
with "prehistory," then passing through the ancient and medieval
worlds until finally arriving at the nation's present. This view of
the history is plainly teleological, which is to say that the past
is depicted as a series of trends and developments aiming at the
present condition.
The point is often under-emphasized by those who love museums that
a sizable percentage of museum artifacts have been acquired
unethically (if ethics are defined in a Kantian sense at least).
The government of Egypt for instance has consistently pressed the
British Museum in London to return the enormous hordes of pharaonic
objects plundered by British (though not exclusively British)
archaeologists during Britain's period of colonial administration
in Egypt, which began officially in 1882 (while the end is just a
matter of opinion).
The
National
Museum of Iraq
was created during the British Mandate period
through the efforts of colonial officer and Oriental Secretary of
the short-lived British Mandate, Gertrude
Bell.
Management
The museum is usually run by a
director, who has a
curatorial staff that cares for the objects and
arranges their display. Large museums often will have a research
division or institute, which are frequently involved with studies
related to the museum's items, as well as an education department,
in charge of providing interpretation of the materials to the
general public. The director usually reports to a higher body, such
as a governmental department or a
board of
trustees.
Objects come to the collection through a variety of means. Either
the museum itself or an associated institute may organize
expeditions to acquire more items or documentation for the museum.
More typically, however, museums will purchase or trade for
artifacts or receive them as donations or bequests.
For instance, a museum featuring
Impressionist art may receive a donation of a
Cubist work which simply cannot be fit into
the museum's exhibits, but it can be used to help acquire a
painting more central to the museum's focus. However, this process
of acquiring objects outside the museum's purview in order to
acquire more desirable objects is considered unethical by many
museum professionals. Larger museums may have an "Acquisitions
Department" whose staff is engaged full time for this purpose. Most
museums have a
collections policy
to help guide what is and is not included in the collection.
Museums often cooperate to sponsor joint, often traveling, exhibits
on particular subjects when one museum may not by itself have a
collection sufficiently large or important. These exhibits have
limited engagements and often depend upon an additional entry fee
from the public to cover costs.
Museum planning and exhibition design
The design of museums has evolved throughout history. Interpretive
museums, as opposed to art museums, have missions reflecting
curatorial guidance through the subject matter which now include
content in the form of images, audio and visual effects, and
interactive exhibits. Museum creation begins with a museum plan,
created through a
museum planning
process.
Some of
these experiences have very few or no artifacts and do not
necessarily call themselves museums; the Griffith
Observatory
in Los
Angeles
and the National Constitution Center
in Philadelphia
, being notable examples where there are few
artifacts, but strong, memorable stories are told or information is
interpreted. In contrast, the United
States Holocaust Memorial Museum
in Washington, D.C.
uses many artifacts in their memorable
exhibitions. Notably, despite their varying styles, the
latter two were designed by
Ralph Appelbaum Associates.
Most mid-size and large museums employ design staff for graphic and
environmental design projects, including exhibitions. In addition
to traditional 2-D and 3-D designers and architects, these staff
departments may include audio-visual specialists, software
designers, audience research and evaluation specialists, writers,
editors, and preparators or art handlers. These staff specialists
may also be charged with supervising contract design or production
services.
Etymology
The English "museum" comes from the
Latin
word, and is pluralized as "museums" (or rarely, "musea").
It is
originally from the Greek
Μουσεῖον (Mouseion), which denotes a place or
temple dedicated to the Muses (the patron
divinities in Greek mythology of the
arts), and hence a building set apart for study and the arts,
especially the Musaeum (institute) for
philosophy and research at Alexandria
by Ptolemy I Soter
about 280 BCE. The first museum/library is considered to be the one of Plato in Athens
.
However, Pausanias gives another place called "Museum", namely a
small hill in Classical Athens opposite the
Akropolis. The hill was called Mouseion after
Mousaious, a man who used to sing on the hill and died there of old
age and was subsequently buried there as well.
See also
References
- Edward Porter Alexander, Mary Alexander;
- Royal Armouries Museum
-
http://www.musee-arts-besancon.org/pages.php?idMenu=1&idPage=0&langue=1]
- (Definition adopted 1998)
- H.C. Ackermann, The Basle Cabinets of Art and Curiosities
in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, in: O. Impey &
A. MacGregor (edd.), The Origins of Museums: The cabinet of
curiosities in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe, 2nd
edition, London: House of Stratus 2001, pp. 81-90, quoted in Marta
C. Lourenço, A Contribution to the History of University
Museums and Collections in Europe, presentation at the UMAC
2002 Conference, Sydney/Canberra, Australia, 29/9-4/10/2002,
available at
http://publicus.culture.hu-berlin.de/umac/2002/lourenco.html.
- The Bead
Museum
- The
Great American Dollhouse Museum
- Mouseion, def. 3, Henry George Liddell, Robert
Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, at Perseus
- Peter Levi, Pausanias Guide to Greece 1: Central
Greece, p. 72-73 (Paus. 1.25.2)
Further reading
External links