5 ideas from “The Museum of the 21st century” talk between Directors of Tate & British
Yesterday in London, Neil MacGregor, director of the British Museum and Nicholas Serota, director of Tate, discussed about the Museum of the 21st Century in front of an audience of 500, at the London School of Economics. The event was coorganized with Thames & Hudson. While the announced podcast is not yet available, here are 5 ideas I’ve chosen from the excerpts publishes in Guardian and in Social media and Comunications:
- Museum’s future lies on the internet: the relationship between institutions and their audiences would be transformed by the internet. Museums would become more like multimedia organizations.
- The Museum will address audiences across the world and will be a place where people across the world will have a conversation. Those institutions which take up this notion fastest and furthest will be the ones which have the authority in the future.
- The future has to be the museum as a publisher and broadcaster: there will be a limited number of people working in galleries, and more effectively working as commissioning editors working on material online.
- The growing challenge will be to look for online capacity and encourage curatorial teams to work there as much as they do in the galleries.
- In the past, there has been an imperfect communication between visitors and curators. The possibility for a greater level of communication between curators and visitors is the challenge now.
Can’t wait to listen to the whole discussion. Podcast soon (update: it’s already available) in LSEvents.
Meanwhile you can read Guardian article and/or Social media and Communication blog.
Conxa Rodà
Project Manager



















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