“Art requires a delicate adjustment of the outer and inner worlds in such a way that, without changing their nature, they can be seen through each other.” - Flannery O’Connor, Collected Works
Across the country
historic house museums are having trouble. Trouble with the ‘gate’ as
attendance numbers are declining; due to a general (dis)interest in history and
the decrease in funds and time for school field trips. There is trouble with
collections care as the number and range of items, materials, and structures
can be staggering and funds to do right by them are in short supply. And, there
is trouble with relevancy (why poke around a historic site when you can play
real historical looking video games?). This is not new of course. Museum and
preservation ‘industry’ conferences have long had session titles like “Historic
House Museums Malaise” and there are books like “New Uses for Historic House
Museums” that acknowledge the risks in narrow interpretation bandwidths at
historic sites. The good news is there are very successful models for turning
historic sites inside out to engage visitors in ways that are relevant and
compelling. Adjusting the inner (past) and outer (new) worlds to see through
each other might now be a trope for connecting old stories to contemporary
issues. In the UK, the National Trust and English Heritage have teamed up with
Commissions East on a series “Contemporary Art in Historic Places.” Artist Fred
Wilson’s wildly popular 1993 installation “Mining the Museum,” at the Maryland
Historic Society, was a mash-up of collection items to provoke a rethinking of
traditional historical narrative, e.g. casework with ornate silver ware also
included a pair of iron slave shackles. The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in
Boston reeks with history and the bell jar ‘don’t-move-anything’ approach
stipulated by founder Mrs. Gardner in her will. While valued such stasis results
in a been-there-done-that visitation pattern that discourages people from
coming again and again, the lifeblood of healthy museums and historic sites.
But wait! Mrs. Gardner was an art patron in her day, supporting writers, visual
artists and musicians. In a conscious effort to bring in new audiences, museum
staff revitalized that kind of patronage at the museum through residencies,
changing exhibition space, and a concert hall that features the best and
brightest living artists. At Andalusia, we now have two installations of
contemporary art in underutilized rooms re-purposed as flexible program space.
The response so far has been terrific. Artist journals offer field notes in
memory mapping and a site specific piece celebrates the peafowl just outside the
window while commenting on the ephemeral. Flannery was a contemporary writer in
her day and she was fortunate to have a supportive environment in which to
pursue her art. Stay tuned as we continue to develop a program to showcase and
support the best and the brightest contemporary artists, to turn this old farm
inside out and make contemporary connections with the enduring themes in
Flannery’s writing.
-Elizabeth Wylie, Executive Director
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