Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 160
Trim: 8¾ x 11½
978-1-5381-0997-7 • Hardback • June 2019 • $60.00 • (£46.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-1-5381-0998-4 • eBook • June 2019 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Gail Lord is one of the world’s foremost museum, gallery, and cultural planners. Co-founder and President of Lord Cultural Resources, her clients include the Nanjing Museum, Beijing Association of Science and Technology, the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, the Louvre, Tate Modern, and the Museo Guggenheim Bilbao, just to name a few. She is an art critic, feature writer, frequent commentator, public speaker, and the co-author of several books including Cities, Museums, and Soft Power and Manual of Strategic Planning for Cultural Organizations. Gail is a Member of the Order of Canada and an Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters in the French Ministry of Culture. In 2016, she was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Letters, by McMaster University.Guan Qiang is currently Deputy Administrator of the National Cultural Heritage Administration of China, in charge of Chinese Museums Association and ICOM China. He has been working in the field of archaeological research, exhibition curating, cultural heritage protection and museum management over the past 30 years and including extensive experience at China’s renowned Palace Museum. An Laishun holds Ph.D. in Chinese history and Masters in museology. He is the Vice President of the International Council of Museums, Vice President and Secretary General of the Chinese Museums Association. For 34 years, Dr. An has served the museum sector in various positions at the national, regional and international levels. Working closely with colleagues around the world, he has concentrated his efforts on increasing regional and international cooperation between museums by contributing to the success of a number of programs and projects, and on internationalizing Chinese museums.Javier Jimenez is a museum and cultural planner with project experience in more than 20 countries. Since joining Lord Cultural Resources in 2008, Javier has been involved in consulting projects for renowned institutions including the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, the King Abdulaziz Center in Saudi Arabia, the Ayala Museum, the Nanjing Museum, and the V&A Museum in London. Javier collaborates regularly with the academic sector. He is an invited professor at the Masters of Cultural Diplomacy from the Universittá Catolica di Roma and has delivered speeches and training sessions for the Chinese Museum Association, ICOM, CAMOC, and UNESCO.
Preface - The Chinese Museum Boom in Broad Strokes
Guan Qiang
Introduction- Understanding China’s Museum Boom
Gail Lord
Part 1: China’s Museum Boom in Context
1.1 Lively Places Throbbing With Life
An Laishun
1.2 A Global Perspective on Museum Growth Cycles
Javier Jimenez and Gail Lord
1.3 A Brief History of Chineses Museums to 1949
Duan Yong
1.4 A Brief History of Chinese Museums 1949-1995
Song Xiangguang
1.5 The Musealization of China
Sofia Bollo and Yu Zhang
1.6 The Dichotomy of Relic Preservation Policies and the Social Role of Museums
Han Yong
Part 2: Museum Building in China’s New Urban Culture
2.1 The Urban Boom Meets Museums
Doug Saunders
2.2 A Museum Born of Real Estate
Gao Peng
2.3 From Desification to Place-making in Urban Planning
Phil Enquist
2.4 Character Building and Genius Loci in Museum Arhitecture
He Jingtang
2.5 Creating Bridges Between Contemporary Art and Life
Rebecca Catching
Part 3: Opening Up to the World
3.1 Cultural Diplomacy and Soft Power
An Laishun
3.2 Exhibitions as Tools of Diplomacy
Zhou Ming
3.3 Navigating Cross-cultural Collaborations—a Curatorial Perspective
Chen Shen
3.4 Changing Concepts and Strategies for Public Engagement
Tomislav Sola
3.5 From Hermetic and Inward Looking to Outward Reaching and International Museums
Tian Kai
3.6 The V&A’s Partnership with the Design Society in Shenzhen: An Ongoing Legacy of Cultural Diplomacy
Tim Reeve
Part 4: Case Studies in Innovation
4.1 Shanghai Museum: “A History of the World in 100 Objects”—Growing a Capacity for Institutional Change
Yang Zhigang
4.2 Guangdong Museum: The Dawn of the Smart Museum
Wei Jun
4.3 Palace Museum: Museum Fever—Keeping Up With Public Demands for New Experiences
Shan Jixiang
4.4 Natural History Museums: Underappreciated, Yet Wildly Popular
Jian Guan
4.5 Suzhou Musuem: Harnessing the Power of the People, Products and Place
Chen Ruijin
4.6 Jingdezhen Imperial Kiln Museum: Embers of Memory
Zhu Pei
Conclusion: Toward a Sustainable Future: “Feeling the Stones as We Cross the River”
Gail Lord, Javier Jimenez and Rebecca Catching
[T]his excellent, well-researched set of case studies will serve as a useful reference for practitioners and researchers in the museum field.
— Museum Works: Advances in Research