This paper examines the virtual invisibility of colonial art in British art museums today, despite a wealth of recent scholarship calling for 'empire' to be understood as central to British art history. While history museums tend to take a broadly inclusive view of the subject, fine art institutions such as Tate continue to define British art in its narrowest geographic sense, despite Britain ruling over what at its peak was the world's largest global empire. The art of colonial Britain is more likely to be seen in such institutions as the National Maritime Museum, where the grand oils of such artists as John Webber and William Hodges sit comfortably within a narrative about British exploration and Empire. The exhibitions and collection dis...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
In Pieter Wonder’s oil painting, Patrons and Lovers of Art (1830), considered to be an idealised pre...
Between 1945 and 1980, UK museums and their collections of art and artefacts from Africa, Asia, Ocea...
Based on research in a range of UK museums, this paper explores the visibility and invisibility of t...
Book review. While discussions of the relations between museums and empire are now well developed, t...
Based on research in a range of UK museums, this paper explores the visibility and invisibility of t...
This article examines the British Museum’s imperialist attitudes towards classical heritage. Despite...
Based on research in a range of UK museums, this paper explores the visibility and invisibility of ...
Curating empire explores the diverse roles played by museums and their curators in moulding and repr...
Exhibiting the empire considers how a whole range of cultural products - from paintings, prints, pho...
Book synopsis: This pioneering study argues that the concept of 'empire' belongs at the centre, rath...
Museums were both produced by and producers of the ideals that drove the growth of European empires....
In recent times a number of major exhibitions have been mounted in Australian drawing from the deep ...
The British Museum has a long and complex relationship with the British Colonial project. Applying ...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
In Pieter Wonder’s oil painting, Patrons and Lovers of Art (1830), considered to be an idealised pre...
Between 1945 and 1980, UK museums and their collections of art and artefacts from Africa, Asia, Ocea...
Based on research in a range of UK museums, this paper explores the visibility and invisibility of t...
Book review. While discussions of the relations between museums and empire are now well developed, t...
Based on research in a range of UK museums, this paper explores the visibility and invisibility of t...
This article examines the British Museum’s imperialist attitudes towards classical heritage. Despite...
Based on research in a range of UK museums, this paper explores the visibility and invisibility of ...
Curating empire explores the diverse roles played by museums and their curators in moulding and repr...
Exhibiting the empire considers how a whole range of cultural products - from paintings, prints, pho...
Book synopsis: This pioneering study argues that the concept of 'empire' belongs at the centre, rath...
Museums were both produced by and producers of the ideals that drove the growth of European empires....
In recent times a number of major exhibitions have been mounted in Australian drawing from the deep ...
The British Museum has a long and complex relationship with the British Colonial project. Applying ...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
This thesis explores the collecting and exhibiting of colonial art (before 1908) by New Zealand's st...
In Pieter Wonder’s oil painting, Patrons and Lovers of Art (1830), considered to be an idealised pre...
Between 1945 and 1980, UK museums and their collections of art and artefacts from Africa, Asia, Ocea...