Museum Transformations. Группа авторов
entrance, Tropenmuseum
6.2 Introductory panel to “Oceania” section of “Eastward Bound!” at the Tropenmuseum
6.3 Colonial Theater, Tropenmuseum
6.4 Yinka Shonibare, Planets in My Head, Literature, 2011
7.1 The color bar as reflected in urban form and architecture, Royal Museum for Central Africa
7.2 Main interface of interactive display on the city of Boma, Royal Museum for Central Africa
7.3 Title page of interactive display on Boma
7.4 “Society” menu of the interactive display on Boma
7.5 “Violence” menu of the interactive display on Boma
8.1 Museum of Memory and Human Rights, Santiago de Chile
8.2 Jorge Tacla, Al mismo tiempo, en el mismo lugar, Museum of Memory and Human Rights
8.3 Museum of Memory, Rosario
8.4 Former concentration camp at Police Headquarters, Plaza Cívica, Rosario
9.1 Monument to the Women of South Africa, by Wilma Cruise and Marcus Holme, 2000
9.2 Ground plan of a cell, Women’s Jail, Johannesburg
9.3 Installations across the atrium, Women’s Jail
9.4 Nikiwe Deborah Matshoba’s wedding dress, Women’s Jail
10.1 Erromangan women ready to perform at Vanuatu’s Third National Arts Festival, Port Vila
10.2 Women in south Erromango studying photographs of barkcloth held by the British Museum
11.1 Shield, Trobriand Islands, British Museum
11.2 Workroom at British Museum ethnograph store
11.3 Ralph Regenvanu, The Melanesia Project, 2006
12.1 Blackfoot shirts on display at the Glenbow Museum
12.2 Discussing leggings and shirts at the Pitt Rivers Museum
12.3 Students from Red Crow Community College, Kainai Nation, during a visit to the Glenbow Museum
12.4 Teacher training session at the Glenbow Museum
13.1 Yucca workshop, A:shiwi A:wan Museum and Heritage Center
13.2 Zuni waffle gardens
14.1 Photo of Jacob Odawo and Archdeacon W. E. Owen by E. E. Evans‐Pritchard, 1936, Pitt Rivers Museum
14.2 Pupils at Rakombe Primary School view the Paro Manene exhibition
14.3 Two of Chief Owuor’s surviving wives, Dorina Owuor and Turfosa Omari, holding his framed portraits
14.4 Framed portraits in the home of a surviving wife of Chief Owuor
15.1 The sierraleoneheritage.org digital resource
15.2 Frames from the sowei video documentation
15.3 Mural promoting sierraleoneheritage.org on a wall of the Sierra Leone National Museum
15.4 Visual repatriation of history at Rotata
15.5 The Reanimating Cultural Heritage project
16.1 Warumungu women watching and editing videos for the DDAC website
16.2 Home page of the DDAC website
16.3 Recreation on DDAC website of Aboriginal community’s covering over of images of the deceased in museum spaces
16.4 Inuvialuit Living History Project team examine engraved wooden plaques
16.5 Inuvialuit Pitqusit Inuuniarutait/Inuvialuit Living History homepage
18.1 Watching films on the lecterns/little houses in Towards the Other
18.2 Watching Nothing Is Missing in Towards the Other
19.1 Hotel Yeoville visitor in the Photo Booth
19.2 Comments left in the Photo Booth by Hotel Yeoville visitors
19.3 Hotel Yeoville participant adds his story to the Journey Booth
19.4 Hotel Yeoville visitor making a YouTube video in the Video Booth
19.5 Hotel Yeoville exhibition layout
19.6 Installation view of Hotel Yeoville main thoroughfare
20.1 WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution homepage
20.2 elles@centrepompidou homepage
20.3 Shifting the Gaze: Painting and Feminism homepage
21.1 Kwakwaka’wakw area, Multiversity Galleries, UBC Museum of Anthropology
21.2 Nuxalk raven rattles, UBC Museum of Anthropology
22.1 National Museum of the American Indian, Washington, DC
22.2 Mr. and Mrs. Ike, Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation, Oregon, at the National Museum of the American Indian
22.3 Installation of guns and Bibles, National Museum of the American Indian
23.1 Victoria Memorial Museum, Kolkata
23.2 Vivan Sundaram, The History Project, 1998
23.3 Vivan Sundaram, “Traces of the Queen,” The History Project, 1998
23.4 Railway car, The History Project, 1998
24.1 Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Winnipeg
24.2 “Canadian Residential Schools” module, Canadian Museum of Civilization
24.3 “Canadian Residential Schools” module (detail)
24.4 “Aboriginal Peoples of Canada” section (artist’s rendering), Canadian Museum for Human Rights
EDITORS
Annie E. Coombes teaches museum studies and art and cultural history at Birkbeck, University of London. She is Director of the Peltz Gallery and author of award‐winning books on museums, memorialization, and the legacy of colonialism including Reinventing Africa: Museums, Material Culture and Popular Imagination in Late Victorian and Edwardian England (Yale University Press, 1994); History After Apartheid: Visual Culture and Public Memory in a Democratic South Africa (Duke University Press, 2003); and Managing Heritage, Making Peace: History, Identity and Memory in Contemporary Kenya (with L. Hughes and Karega‐Munene; I. B. Tauris, 2013). She has also edited the collection Rethinking Settler Colonialism: History and Memory in Australia, Canada, Aotearoa New Zealand and South Africa (Manchester University Press, 2006).
Professor Annie E. Coombes Professor of Material and Visual Culture
Department of History of Art Birkbeck, University of London
London, UK
Ruth B. Phillips teaches in the graduate program in Cultural Mediations at Carleton University and is a former director of the University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology. Her research and publications span African art, indigenous North American art and critical museology, and include Representing Woman: Sande Society Masquerades of the Mende of Sierra Leone (Fowler Museum of Cultural History, 1995); Trading Identities: The Souvenir in Native North American Art from the Northeast, 1700‐1900 (University of Washington Press, 1998); Museum Pieces: Toward the Indigenization of Canadian Museums (McGill Queen’s University Press, 2011); and, with Janet Catherine Berlo, Native North American Art (Oxford University Press, revised edition, 2014). She is a fellow