This thesis analyses acquisitions of art from Brazil by public museums in the UK. The aim is to understand the motivations behind museums’ decisions to permanently invest in artworks from that country and to reflect on museums’ agency in producing knowledge and defining art canons and art historical narratives through the objects they collect. Both acquisitions and museums’ agency are analysed through the lenses of Actor-Network Theory (ANT) and Decolonial Theory, paying attention to the actors and networks that contribute to both collecting practices and canon formation. This research was based on three premises: that museums are colonial institutions, that the objects in their holdings are the material culture used for art historical rese...
<p>This dissertation investigates how non-academic agents (i.e. artists, curators, and institutions)...
This dissertation presents a comparative analysis of institutional policy towards Latin American art...
This thesis examines how contemporary art institutions use commissioning to fashion their identities...
This thesis analyses acquisitions of art from Brazil by public museums in the UK. The aim is to unde...
In the 21st century, public museums who are collecting contemporary art has simultaneously begun to ...
Museum collections are often perceived as static entities hidden away in storerooms or trapped behin...
This paper explores the subject of how identity and difference are constructed in and by museums. Sp...
The monumental museums that this thesis is concerned with are the ones with an acknowledged role in ...
Museum collections are often perceived as static entities hidden away in storerooms or trapped behin...
This paper examines the virtual invisibility of colonial art in British art museums today, despite a...
The destruction of the collections at the Museu Nacional in Rio de Janeiro, which had hosted indigen...
Grounded in case studies at the nexus of socially engaged art, curatorship and education, each ancho...
This dissertation considers the processes of removal and return of the cultural objects of occupied ...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
Between 1945 and 1980, UK museums and their collections of art and artefacts from Africa, Asia, Ocea...
<p>This dissertation investigates how non-academic agents (i.e. artists, curators, and institutions)...
This dissertation presents a comparative analysis of institutional policy towards Latin American art...
This thesis examines how contemporary art institutions use commissioning to fashion their identities...
This thesis analyses acquisitions of art from Brazil by public museums in the UK. The aim is to unde...
In the 21st century, public museums who are collecting contemporary art has simultaneously begun to ...
Museum collections are often perceived as static entities hidden away in storerooms or trapped behin...
This paper explores the subject of how identity and difference are constructed in and by museums. Sp...
The monumental museums that this thesis is concerned with are the ones with an acknowledged role in ...
Museum collections are often perceived as static entities hidden away in storerooms or trapped behin...
This paper examines the virtual invisibility of colonial art in British art museums today, despite a...
The destruction of the collections at the Museu Nacional in Rio de Janeiro, which had hosted indigen...
Grounded in case studies at the nexus of socially engaged art, curatorship and education, each ancho...
This dissertation considers the processes of removal and return of the cultural objects of occupied ...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
Between 1945 and 1980, UK museums and their collections of art and artefacts from Africa, Asia, Ocea...
<p>This dissertation investigates how non-academic agents (i.e. artists, curators, and institutions)...
This dissertation presents a comparative analysis of institutional policy towards Latin American art...
This thesis examines how contemporary art institutions use commissioning to fashion their identities...