We present a hitherto unresearched part of a shared Danish and American cultural heritage: Native American objects in Danish regional museum collections. Thus far, we have identified more than 200 Native American artefacts in 27 local museums, largely a result of Danes abroad privately collecting in the late 1800s and 1950s–70s. The majority of these artefacts, many of which are prehistoric in age, have never been displayed and have lingered in storage since they were accessioned, understudied and often unrecognised for what they are. Recent deaccessioning pressures from the Danish Agency for Culture and Palaces potentially place these objects at risk of destruction, making the discussions presented here a timely issue. These Native America...
ABSTRACT While the history of Norwegian museum acquisitions and collection formation has long been a...
International audienceFollowing the repatriation of the Potlatch Collection confiscated by the Cana...
The Roots 2 Share project, a collaboration between two Dutch and two Greenlandic museums, was establ...
In 1851, during his stay in what was then Russian America, Finnish scientist Henrik Johan Holmberg (...
The Sámi are the only Indigenous people living in the European Union. During the last 15 years, thr...
March 31, 2017 marked the centenary of the transfer of the Danish colony—the Danish West Indies (tod...
In the 1980s and 1990s, museum artefacts originating in Greenland were being sorted, cleaned, photog...
This article concerns collections, acquired by Swedes in the Congo State (1885-1908), and housed tod...
This master’s thesis focuses on how the former Danish colony, the Danish West Indies (1671-1917) has...
Museums have several means of communicating with their audiences. The problems discussed here concer...
In recognition of altered global relations since colonial times, the Ethnographic Collections at the...
Museums are places of contest and revelation. Ethnographic objects have been too simply perceived a...
In the past, Native American objects vital to tradition and ritual were removed and\ud housed in mus...
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, anthropologists, archaeologists, and hobbyists remo...
Saami, Danish archaeology and the origin of the DanesWith the Romantic Movement came a need for the ...
ABSTRACT While the history of Norwegian museum acquisitions and collection formation has long been a...
International audienceFollowing the repatriation of the Potlatch Collection confiscated by the Cana...
The Roots 2 Share project, a collaboration between two Dutch and two Greenlandic museums, was establ...
In 1851, during his stay in what was then Russian America, Finnish scientist Henrik Johan Holmberg (...
The Sámi are the only Indigenous people living in the European Union. During the last 15 years, thr...
March 31, 2017 marked the centenary of the transfer of the Danish colony—the Danish West Indies (tod...
In the 1980s and 1990s, museum artefacts originating in Greenland were being sorted, cleaned, photog...
This article concerns collections, acquired by Swedes in the Congo State (1885-1908), and housed tod...
This master’s thesis focuses on how the former Danish colony, the Danish West Indies (1671-1917) has...
Museums have several means of communicating with their audiences. The problems discussed here concer...
In recognition of altered global relations since colonial times, the Ethnographic Collections at the...
Museums are places of contest and revelation. Ethnographic objects have been too simply perceived a...
In the past, Native American objects vital to tradition and ritual were removed and\ud housed in mus...
In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, anthropologists, archaeologists, and hobbyists remo...
Saami, Danish archaeology and the origin of the DanesWith the Romantic Movement came a need for the ...
ABSTRACT While the history of Norwegian museum acquisitions and collection formation has long been a...
International audienceFollowing the repatriation of the Potlatch Collection confiscated by the Cana...
The Roots 2 Share project, a collaboration between two Dutch and two Greenlandic museums, was establ...