By Franklin Vagnone, Museum Maverick for the Long Island SessionAs I wandered the, at times, confusing hallways & rooms of the Raynham Hall Museum in Oyster Bay I first took notice of the typical reproduction carpets and wallcoverings. I was taken upstairs into the third-floor collections spaces which is where I found core of this site. I asked Jessica Pearl, the Collections Manager what her favorite item was in the collection, and she searched to find a pair of very sexy shoes. The shoes were wrapped in acid-free paper and encased within an acid free box. As she pulled them out, I could see why she loved them. We admired them and returned them back to their mausoleum. This experience perfectly symbolized why these “Creativity Incubators” are so needed and successful. We are all given the chance to find, see, and use collections items in new and compelling ways. Things that have been hidden behind a screen of professional stewardship, or relegated to a stage set within a period room, can now be pulled aside and made more substantive by collaborative context with other items. This is the stuff that curators are made of, and often find it hard to do; that is to use their incredible knowledge base to expand a narrative and tell more powerful stories.
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By Franklin Vagnone, Museum Maverick for the Hudson Valley SessionNot many people know this about me, but if the data suggests – and the situation allows, I am not afraid to change my mind. Going in another direction (either literally or figuratively) provides me with more possibilities. One of the reasons why I consider myself a “museum anarchist” is that I shy away from narrow mission statements or highly curated environments. Situations like these only constrain decision-making, solidify stasis and repress innovation and experimentation. After the daylong “Creativity Incubator,’ organized by the Greater Hudson Heritage Network with the New York State Council on the Arts, someone told me that my words of the day were “grit” and “foil”. It came as a surprise to me because I am usually so in the moment that I don’t have time to be so immediately self-reflective. These two words speak to the need for flexibility in museum process. This gathering was attended by museum, cultural organization staff and board members. Its purpose was to provide a safe and open space to experiment with collections items and play with ideas on how to innovate, re-combine, and expand visitor interactions with them. |
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