Revealing the Silent Message of the Museum: The Legacies of Institutional Critique
Abstract
Joining reflections examining the legacies of institutional critique, this thesis focuses on the
transforming roles of its producers, consumers and targets. A theoretical thesis emerging from
desk-based research, it uses Pierre Bourdieu’s Field Theory to examine agents in the cultural
field. It argues that the public enactment of institutional critique contributed to the expansion of
the roles of artist, visitor and the institutions themselves. Examples of the practice are provided,
ranging from the contemporary artworks of Fred Wilson and Andrea Fraser, acts by the
Guerrilla Girls to internal, institutionally-produced critiques in the form of exhibitions and
display methods. By examining the forms it takes, it maps the reception and transformation of
the practice itself in the context of the changing museal landscape from the 1960’s to today.
Expanding from its original, largely external methods, contemporary institutional theory now
internalises institutional critique. This thesis argues that by drawing the public’s attention to the
museum’s framings (or ‘silent messages’), they can critically - and more independently - consider
the narratives they receive. In this sense, institutional critique is internalised once again with the
potential for use by visitor-agents. In doing so – and by holding museums accountable to their
ideologies - it offers a valuable tool for the benefit of agents within the museal field.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2012-07-06Author
King, Alexandra
Series/Report no.
International Museum Studies
2012:5
Language
eng