… Curators want to ‘tell a story’ rather than just have a lot of artifacts in glass cases.
Very much so, and we’ve lost something in the process. An enthusiast started my local museum in an ex-farmyard and showed many artifacts covering a wide range of local history. Plenty of interesting insights, but no coherent story, always assuming there ever was one! The Home Guard snippet consisted of a dull log-book, but it was spiced up by a Mills Bomb, WW2 Field Dressing, and Gas-Mask. On the whole, the curio approach worked well and was popular.
After getting lottery funding the whole lot was moved to the town centre and sanitised by a professional curator. Now tells a very narrow story, and most of the exhibits are in the cellar! I find it dull and patronising and suspect the coherent story only shows an unrepresentative slice. Children aren’t excited either, unless they like colouring in! They enjoyed the old museum because it was stuffed with exciting “what’s that” bygones like a school cane and ink-pots. Every artifact was a conversation piece.
A major problem with high-end models is how long it takes to appreciate them. You have to know a lot about modelling and Landing Craft to appreciate Mr Barrow’s model. Too much for a passing glance – I could easily spend an hour on it. Curators prefer to keep people moving past dumbed down presentations, and they may be right! I buy books and spend hours re-reading them whilst my family prefer an excellent CGI imitation of the Titanic sinking! Hard for museums to compete with Hollywood.
At ME exhibitions, I wanted to discuss models with the builder. Rarely happened, either the bloke on duty knew nothing, or I was pressured to move on by the queue. Life is difficult!
Dave