Stories of Denmark and The White Busses
There was a very interesting discussion taking place at our last course session. We were talking about two very different exhibitions at the National Museum in Copenhagen, namely 'Stories of Denmark 1660-2000' and 'The White Busses'. I am going to revisit this topic, because I think it’s worth it. In my critique, I am going to use the readings I discussed in my two previous posts.
We visited the National Museum together within the instructor and other participants of the course ‘Digital Museology ‘. First we saw the permanent exhibition 'Stories of Denmark 1660-2000'. I admit, I couldn’t concentrate very well on what I had seen. The exhibition seemed quite boring from the start – there were big wooden cabinets with glass front, inside of which were the objects that make up the museum. They were clearly labeled with text usually placed right in front of them.
I would have to agree with Sandra E. Dudley’s text, that this sort of presentation doesn’t exactly leave much to the imagination. All I was thinking was: “I had seen this before.” and I couldn’t help but feel a bit uncomfortable. I was being that kind of museum visitor, who comes with too much baggage and little patience. I was definitely also influenced by the social context – I had actually witnessed a member of the museum staff cleaning one of the glass cabinets, which made the experience even more bizarre.
Our group wasn’t very big, I can’t remember exactly, but we were six to eight people all together. But even such a small number of people, we still had to accustom to the museums narrow way through the exhibition (the physical context). We also stopped only at certain spots, which made my experience hazier. Our concentration was focused on the exhibition design and architecture more than on the content, so we were not the typical kind of visitors.
I have to say though, the exhibition design got better in the next rooms as we went further. There were rooms that were supposed to represent some era, with wax figures. I didn’t think that was especially better, but I still appreciated the lack of glass cabinets. There is something about cabinets, that make the museum look like an old storage with stuff that you’re too afraid to throw out, because it’s old and hence it acquired some sort of time value.
My other objection is against the labels, which were present everywhere. Not only they make it harder to form your own idea, but the amount of them is just plain discouraging. I know that we can always choose what we want to read, but when you choose a couple of times and learn nothing substantial, it makes you automatically disregard the other objects. I think that museum curators should take in account the information overload we are all facing every day, and maybe try to value quality over quantity.
I know I am probably being overly critical of this sort of traditional way of presenting museum objects, but I can’t help my own background and history (the personal context). It’s still just my own opinion. I think that the theory of “the interactive experience model” (Falk, J. H., Dierking, L., 1992) proves to be quite valuable in this context: I think that the museum could benefit in doing a sociological research based on this model, ask certain questions to the willing visitors and maybe gain a very telling statistic. Of course, I have no idea if museums do this or not, but I think it would be a good idea to do this kind of research regularly from time to time, especially when dealing with the permanent exhibition design. If you have data to prove your point, it should be easier to try to change things a bit, even in a very traditional educational environment.
The other exhibition that we visited - 'The White Busses' – was very different. Even though I was much more tired and hungry at that moment, I felt very interested and invested in what I’ve seen. I think this temporary exhibition is a very nice example of latest trends in exhibition design. That said, I’m not all enthusiastic about it, because it’s ‘modern’ and ‘cool’.
Yes, people like new media: sound and light installations, videos and interactive devices. It’s easy to be captured by them. But I think there’s nothing wrong with that as long as it has its purpose, as long as it’s not self-serving. In my case, I became more invested in the topic. I actually took the time to stop several times and listen to the audio in the headphones spots, which seemed to me quite intimate. There was a lot of people, and when I sat down and put on the headphones, suddenly everybody disappeared and I just listened to what I was hearing.
In the class we were discussing, whether the sound was manipulative. I think the sound and light is always manipulative, no matter where you go. Light is pure information. I understand the word ‘medium’ in Marshall McLuhan’s sense as the extension of man. If we would take in account Martin Heidegger’s theory, modern technology makes us see the world in a certain way, which also speaks about its manipulative nature. I wouldn’t necessary claim, that new media are all that different from the old media. The glass cabinet is as much manipulative as the light and sound installation to me. But it’s of subtler nature, I guess. We are used to it.
If I would go back to the theory of Sandra E. Dudley, I think that possibly the first, more conservative exhibition, gave the objects more value than the modern one. But it’s more because of the stories that the exhibitions were dealing with. The “White Busses” was more sentimental, it tried to make you empathize with the victims of the regime and appreciate the effort of the good-doers. For its purpose, I think it worked wonderfully.














