The Natural History Museum
The mission of The Natural History Museum is to affirm the truth of science. / 7 projects
In Summary
The Natural History Museum is a new museum that offers exhibitions, expeditions, educational workshops, and public programming. Unlike traditional natural history museums, it makes a point to include and highlight the socio-political forces that shape nature. These forces include those affecting the atmospheric climate on Earth, as well as the political /funding climate within museums of science and natural history.
The museum’s programs appear within existing institutions, in its 15-passenger mobile museum bus, and online at http://thenaturalhistorymuseum.org. As of September 2014, The Natural History Museum is an official dues-paying member of the American Alliance of Museums.
The mission of The Natural History Museum is to affirm the truth of science. By looking at the presentation of natural history, the museum demonstrates principles fundamental to scientific inquiry, principles such as the commonality of knowledge and the unavoidability of the unknown. The Museum inquires into what we see, how we see, and what remains excluded from our seeing. It invites visitors to take the perspective of museum anthropologists attuned to the social and political forces inseparable from the natural world.
Occupy
Occupy was powerful not where consensus worked but in instances where groups and individuals showed a commitment to a collective idea even when they disagreed. / 14 projects
In Summary
Occupy was powerful not where consensus worked but in instances where groups and individuals showed a commitment to a collective idea even when they disagreed.
The Contested City
Experimenting with the potential and limits of spatial politics in work produced between 2004 and 2011. / 14 projects
In Summary
Folk
Engaging the tourist industry and the “folk-ification” of the population of Nova Scotia. / 3 projects