Pioneering international collaboration
International cooperation projects are now breaking new ground in museum work. Three years ago, the Uganda National Museum in Kampala, the Igongo Cultural Centre in Mbarara, and the Ethnographic Museum at the University of Zurich entered into a long-term partnership. Unlike many other cooperation projects, the objective is neither financial support nor a one-sided North-to-South advisory service. Instead, the project focuses on the partners’ interest in joint research and curatorship. “The advantages of such collaboration are clear. When viewing ideas from a different perspective, additional elements can be taken into account - or similar elements understood differently,” says Thomas Laely, curator of the exhibition and Vice Director of the Ethnographic Museum. The cooperation project has already produced two exhibitions in Uganda, and the Zurich exhibition, too, was developed with curators from Uganda; it documents and reflects on the innovative approach to collaborative museum work.
Participatory approach
Committed to the principle of collaboration among equals, the curators from Uganda and Switzerland co-developed exhibition concepts, conducted joint research, and maintained ongoing dialogue. Nonetheless, a joint project spanning cultural and geographic borders brings challenges, particularly as each museum is entangled in its own political, economic, structural, and cultural circumstances: Scope for different viewpoints must be made. “The great opportunity is that a more complex picture of reality can be drawn, and that we gain new insights not just into objects but also into practices of museums,” says Thomas Laely.
The various exhibits highlight the negotiation processes, transfer of knowledge, ways of dealing with multiple opinions and viewpoints, and the role of media use and communication culture in the collaboration; for instance, exhibition visitors can follow Skype discussions and WhatsApp threads. In addition, video recordings document the partnership from an external, independent point of view.
Virtueller Ausstellungsbesuch in Uganda
Two touchscreens at the Zurich exhibition allow visitors to virtually tour the Ugandan museums. The exhibitions Drink deeply - Milk Exhibition (in Kampala) and The Power of Milk (in Mbarara), which focus on Swiss and Ugandan dairy practices, opened to great success in September 2017. Since then, thousands of schoolchildren, milkproducers and other curious adults have not only explored the rich cultural heritage the two countries have in the dairy industry, but also engaged with the opportunities and challenges posed by current technological, global-economic, and ecological developments.
Mobile museum in Uganda
The Zurich exhibition, however, is not the end of the cooperation project. Besides a comprehensive publication on the topic to be released in June, plans include a mobile museum in Uganda that brings the milk exhibitions to people in rural areas. For the Ugandan curators, it is important that the mobile exhibition is adapted to address the various problems and needs of the country’s different regions: The exhibition should offer cattle farmers a platform for dialogue and share valuable know-how.
The exhibition is also not the end of collaborative projects for the Ethnographic Museum in Zurich. Indeed, cooperation projects with partner museums - particularly those from regions the artefacts of the Zurich collections originate from - will remain a core undertaking in the institution’s ethnologic museum work.
Exhibition Points of View: Visions of a Museum Partnership
13 April 2018 to 6 January 2019
Opening:
12 April 2018, 6:00pm
Three museums - the Uganda National Museum in Kampala, the Igongo Cultural Centre in Mbarara, and the Ethnographic Museum of the University of Zurich - are participating in an unusual project: Researchers in Uganda and Switzerland are undertaking joint research and co-developing exhibitions. The exhibition Points of View offers self-critical insights into the collaboration and enables visitors to take a virtual excursion to the Ugandan museums.
Ethnographic Museum of the University of Zurich
Pelikanstrasse 40
8001 Zurich
http://www.musethno.uzh.ch/en.html
http://www.musethno.uzh.ch/en/museum/news/Exhibition-opening-Points-of-View-.html
Opening Hours
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday 10:00am to 5:00pm
Thursday 10:00am to 7:00pm, Saturday 2:00 to 5:00pm, Sunday 11:00am to 5:00pm
Closed Monday, admission free