ABSTRACT
Museums with historical art collections present the history of their art in different ways. This article distinguishes five typologies, based on the methods used by history teachers and the educational model of George E. Hein ([1998]. Learning in the Museum. London: Routledge). The past-oriented presentation concentrates on the history of the artworks and opts for a didactic, explanatory educational model. The present-oriented presentation uses old artworks to illuminate present-day issues. A variant is the ideological presentation, which aims not only to explain art like the present-oriented strategy but also to propagate a particular ideology. These politics of display use behaviorist stimulus-response methods. Postmodern presentations concentrate on the history of the artworks’ reception over time, and emphasize the difference between the art objects from the past and the objects’ history. Their favorite educational form is constructivism. This is also the case for the metamodern presentation, which makes inter-historical connections between old and new art works possible.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Anne Hodgkinson for the English translation.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Brigitte Dekeyzer
Brigitte Dekeyzer (b. 1966) teaches art history and art education at the University of Leuven (Belgium). She develops models for art education at school and in the museum. She also concentrates on notions such as museum narratives, multiple voices, multimodality of the senses, and meditation.