Next up for the world鈥檚 museums: Social responsibility
Post-Hurricane Dorian,聽the National Art Gallery of The Bahamas聽offers an example聽of an evolving art world.聽
Post-Hurricane Dorian,聽the National Art Gallery of The Bahamas聽offers an example聽of an evolving art world.聽
In the days after Hurricane Dorian last fall, the National Art Gallery of The Bahamas (NAGB) in Nassau immediately suspended the temporary exhibition it was preparing and instead asked Bahamian artists to create work that contemplated the storm.
It was part of the museum鈥檚 effort to explore 鈥渨hat it means to be a socially responsible institution in the age of climate crisis,鈥 the call for art read. The outcome is 鈥淩efuge,鈥 a haunting exhibit on display through March that traces Bahamian experience before and after the storm.
Besides helping the nation heal, the NAGB鈥檚 outreach also reflects a changing mindset about the role of museums in sustainability efforts 鈥 and issues of the day. Numbering 55,000 globally, according to the International Council of Museums, these trusted institutions have reached a point in their evolution where such participation is both needed and possible, experts say.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no other institution like them,鈥 says Robert Janes, founder of the Canadian Coalition of Museums for Climate Justice. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e grounded in their communities. And they are at the top of social institutions in terms of how much they鈥檙e trusted. Governments aren鈥檛. Corporations aren鈥檛. The media aren鈥檛. But museums still are.鈥 And, he adds, 鈥渢he lightbulb is going on for a variety of institutions.鈥
Over the years many museums evolved, says Dr. Janes, from 鈥渨arehouses of imperial loot鈥 into educational institutions, but ones that occupied a neutral stance. In the past 20 years, a third wave began, he says, where museums have become 鈥渕alls鈥 and success is measured in visitors and sales from gift stores and restaurants. He argues it鈥檚 time for the next phase: social responsibility, community well-being, and even outright activism.聽
The Bahamas offers an example. Among the works included in 鈥淩efuge鈥 is 鈥淓verybody and Dey Grammy #hurricanedorian,鈥 a painting by Bahamian artist Christina Wong. It captures the waiting 鈥 and overwhelming social media 鈥 people dealt with.聽
鈥淭his was a new thing,鈥 says NAGB executive director Amanda Coulson of the Category 5 storm. 鈥淎nd we have to really rethink all of our actions.鈥
The Commonwealth Association of Museums, a Canada-based international nongovernmental organization, focuses on encouraging museums in Commonwealth countries, like the Bahamas, to use resources聽to address the United Nations鈥 sustainable development goals. That includes everything from indigenous and women鈥檚 rights to migration, according to Catherine Cole, secretary-general of CAM.聽
In some cases, NGOs and activists are creating learning spaces to mobilize the public. Heifer International, which aims to end global hunger and poverty, created Heifer Village in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 2009. There, the public can experience realities in developing countries. We 鈥渞ealized to end hunger and poverty internationally and in our own backyard we must educate the masses about the issues,鈥 says Jessica Ford, who spoke as director of marketing and engagement before leaving the group recently.聽
Climate change has been a natural subject for museums to tackle as the sense of urgency about global warming has moved from fringe to mainstream. Some of that work includes institutions reviewing their own often heavy carbon footprints, from printed catalogs to traveling exhibits to climate control. A study by Joyce Lee, president of IndigoJLD, concluded that many museums consume as much energy as hospitals.
Today there are museums dedicated exclusively to the subject, like the Climate Museum in New York City, which launched in 2015. Its aim is to 鈥渋nspire action on the climate crisis with programming across the arts and sciences that deepens understanding, builds connections, and advances just solutions,鈥 the mission statement on its website reads.
Not all institutions have the luxury of contemplation. Hurricane Dorian hit the Abaco Islands on Sept. 1 and then Grand Bahama, decimating entire communities and forcing the evacuation of thousands of survivors. No place was more affected by the influx of people than the dense capital, where resources 鈥 and in some cases patience 鈥 were strained. The NAGB staff, like all Bahamians, is used to hurricanes 鈥 but not of this magnitude. Housed in a pretty yellow mansion on a hill above downtown Nassau, the museum was not physically struck. But part of its immediate relief response turned the institution into a de facto distribution center, with boxes of toiletries and bags brimming with toys stacked in galleries. The museum also sent art supplies to schools whose enrollments swelled with evacuee children, and established art therapy programs.
To date, it has served at least 3,500 survivors and their families. But staff members see a role for the institution long after recovery 鈥 and they grasp an opportunity to engage the public in new ways.
鈥淲e鈥檙e really not doing anything different than we鈥檝e ever done, because the whole point of art is to help people express themselves, to see the world in a different way,鈥 Ms. Coulson says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just that the hurricane has highlighted why it鈥檚 necessary. Because I think maybe six months ago, people were like, does art really help anyone? I think now people are actually beginning to realize, yes, it does.鈥