Air Date: 
Wednesday, February 23rd, 2022

Removing Collector Names from Museum Legacy Collections: A Case Study and Discussion Panel with the Global Museum at SF State

Panel Discussion: ARF Brownbag | February 23 | 12:10-1 p.m. | Virtual event
Sponsor: Archaeological Research Facility

Panelists: Lissette M. Jiménez, Assistant Professor, Museum Studies Program, San Francisco State University; Edward M. Luby, Professor and Director of the Museum Studies Program in the School of Art at San Francisco State University & Interim Director and Chief Curator of the Global Museum, San Francisco State University; Christine A. Fogarty, Associate Director of the Global Museum & Lecturer in the Museum Studies Program, San Francisco State University; Gina Caprari, Registrar of the Global Museum & Lecturer in the Museum Studies Program, San Francisco State University

About: Museum legacy collections often comprise archaeological objects and human remains purchased from the antiquities market. From a 21st century museum and archaeological perspective, these collections require a level of care and research that necessitates examining their legacy, meaning, and use. Acknowledging these inherited histories and reevaluating these legacies often means museums must address the loss of object context, the problematic practices of colonial collecting, and the traumatic histories of racial bias and racist narratives often presented to the public. This talk examines the case study of removing a collector’s name from the title of a collection of Egyptian antiquities formerly known as the Sutro Egyptian Collection stewarded by the Global Museum at San Francisco State University. By examining this case study through a diversity, equity, accessibility, and inclusion lens, this brief lecture will explore how the Global Museum is reckoning with the legacy of this collection that was formed in the late 19th c. and publicly displayed throughout the 20th c. in an institution (the Sutro Baths) that was the site of racial discrimination in the 1890s. A panel of speakers comprising Global Museum staff and Museum Studies faculty from SF State will discuss some of the practical steps taken by the Global Museum to address problematic issues of ownership and the colonial history of this collection while also being more transparent and providing public access to the collection. Together, we will advocate for a self-reflective curatorial and educational process that explores past legacies and creates more inclusive legacies in the Global Museum.