Announcement from H-ASIA:
One Day Meeting, Leicester, Saturday March 2nd 2013
Museums and Galleries History Group/Photographic History Research Centre,
De Montfort University
      The status of photographs in the history of museum collections is a
 complex one. From the inception of the medium its double capacity as an
 aesthetic form and as a recording medium created tensions about its 
place in the hierarchy of museum objects.  While museums had been 
amassing photographs since about 1850, it was, for instance, only in the
 1970s that the first senior curators of photographs were appointed in 
UK museums. On the one hand major collections of ‘art’ photography have 
grown in status and visibility, while photographs not designated  ‘art’ 
are often invisible in museums. On the other hand almost every museum 
has photographs as part of its ecosystem, gathered as information, 
corroboration or documentation, shaping the understanding of other 
classes of objects. Many of these collections remain uncatalogued and 
their significance unrecognised. However recent years have seen an 
increasing interest in the histories of these humble objects, both their
 role in collections histories and their histories in their own right.  
    
      This one-day meeting, a collaboration between MGHG and the 
Photographic History Research Centre at De Montfort University, 
Leicester, will explore the substantive and historiographical questions 
around museum collections of photographs. How do categories of the 
aesthetic and evidential shape the history of collecting photographs? 
What are the implications of shifts in these categories? What has been 
the work of photographs in museums? What does an understanding of 
photograph collections add to our understanding of collections history 
more broadly? What are the methodological demands of research on 
photograph collections? 
For more information: http://www.dmu.ac.uk/research/research-faculties-and-institutes/art-design-humanities/phrc/news/2012/between-art-and-information-collecting-photographs-call-for-papers.aspx 
 
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