Museum structure and operations
Building design and function
Establishing a new museum or refurbishing an old one is normally a prestigious event with a high public profile. Its design is expected to reflect this, whether involving an existing building—probably preserved for its own historic or architectural significance—or new premises. As a building that houses items of excellence, it is expected to match the quality and distinction that the exhibits bring to it. Today’s museum building is multifunctional in character, providing open space to accommodate exhibits and visitors but with high security and stringent environmental controls to protect the collections. Public facilities such as shops and restaurants figure prominently. Less obvious is the storage for reserve collections, laboratory and workshop space for exhibit conservation and preparation, facilities for teaching and studying, and offices.
For the architect and designer, meeting contemporary public expectations of museums and the changes to their function in society brings considerable challenge. The concept of the museum as a “seat of the Muses” is much diminished, although hints of this still linger; for example, the classical portico so common in earlier museums is still to be found in vestigial form in Josef Paul Kleihues’s design (1996) for the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. The concept of the museum as a cathedral, seen among some 19th-century museums and typified in London’s Natural History Museum, also lingers: the massive cylindrical light at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s original building (1995), designed by Mario Botta, reflects the architect’s belief that a museum has a role analogous to a cathedral. In contrast, the designs of Kisho Kurokawa for the Ehime Prefectural Science Museum in Niihama and the Shiga Kogen Roman Art Museum in Nagano reflect the implicit awareness of Japanese culture to its impermanence and perpetual change. Both of these museums have a glazed conical structure to house service functions.
The best-known glazed structure built to service a museum is the pyramid in the Cour Napoléon of the historic Louvre Museum in Paris. The pyramid is the only external feature of the massive refurbishment and expansion of the principal museum of France during the 1990s. It acts as the hub linking old with new, establishing new circulation patterns within the museum as well as a variety of commercial and other facilities underground. Across the river from the Louvre is another example of the adaptation of a historic building—a major railway terminus—that serves as a museum of the 19th century, the Musée d’Orsay. In London, Tate Modern, which opened in 2000, is also housed in an enormous industrial building, the Bankside Power Station.
The long-held belief that the container should not usurp the collection was challenged by a number of museums built around the turn of the 21st century. Preeminent among these was Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain. Opened in 1997, it has a metal-clad curvaceous sculptural form that places it among the masterpieces of 20th-century architecture. Internally, the museum is no less spectacular, and the design of the vast open spaces presents potential conflict with the exhibits. Another building that exploited a new architectural paradigm is Daniel Libeskind’s Jewish Museum in Berlin, built to create an aesthetic and emotional experience appropriate to the subject. The Groninger Museum in Groningen, Netherlands, is another building that challenged traditional museum and architectural values. It features a series of pavilions that were built for each collection by a different designer to create a varied visitor experience. The search continues to find the extent to which a stage set is required to enhance the museum experience.
Museum organization
Administration
There is no consistent pattern for the general administration of museums throughout the world. In part, the lack of such a pattern reflects the diversity of museums’ collections, but it also reflects an ambivalence in the understanding of the role of museums in society—i.e., whether museums are guardians and interpreters of the cultural heritage, repositories for the study of primary evidence relating to human and natural history, social instruments in community development, or facilities for leisure and recreation.
On the most general level, museums may be either privately or publicly administered. Since 1970 there has been a marked increase in the number of private-sector museums, yet even some of these have corporate standing under general legislation and receive public moneys. In addition, private patronage has become important for public museums, which often find themselves competing with private museums for additional funding from individual and corporate sources. In the public sector, national museums may be overseen by such diverse ministries as education, tourism, defense, environment, national heritage, culture, and leisure. The situation can be even more complicated at the local level.
The level of state control varies from country to country. In France, for instance, the state has traditionally exercised greater control over museums. A number of the national museums in Paris operate under a semiautonomous administrative council, with an executive chairman who has a dual responsibility for policy and executive matters. In addition, there are a number of national museums located outside Paris, and some technical control over the country’s municipal museums is exercised by the central administration. In the United Kingdom, on the other hand, public museums have traditionally enjoyed greater autonomy. Britain’s national museums—located mainly in the capital cities of London, Edinburgh, Cardiff, and Belfast—receive funds from the national government, but each museum has been established by its own specific legislation, which empowers a board of trustees (nominally independent of the government) to administer and raise funds and to guide the museum’s policies. British municipal museums, however, are provided under general legislation, and representatives from local government form the management committees by law. The British model can be found in other European and English-speaking countries. In the United States only the dependent museums of the Smithsonian Institution and the National Park Service have national status and are financed by the federal government.