What Do Museums Do? (Best of OLLI)

Museums are unique spaces that shape stories around resonant objects. This course explores the evolution of museum archetypes: from private collections of ancient relics to magnificent public buildings filled with art, scientific specimens, and historical archives. How and why have they evolved? Who really owns the artifacts on display? Is everything you see in a museum authentic and/or priceless? What is it about museums that compels us to visit and enjoy them? We will look at a variety of noteworthy institutions and installations, from the Louvre in Paris to New York MoMA to the POLIN Museum in Warsaw; from the earliest habitat dioramas in Milwaukee and Pittsburgh to displays of repatriated looted antiquities in Rome.
Faculty Bios
Mitchell Schwarzer is Professor Emeritus of Art and Architectural History at California College of the Arts. He has written extensively on modern European and American architecture, memorialization, and urban history.
Marjorie Schwarzer is the author of Riches, Rivals, and Radicals: A History of Museums in the United States. In addition to her professional museum work around the world, she has taught museum studies at the graduate level at JFK University and University of San Francisco.
This is a Best of OLLI Course
- Best of OLLI courses are popular courses recorded a previous term
- Videos are available to watch the moment you sign up through Dec. 31
- Please note: The first half of class 3 was recorded on a handheld device
- Accessible to Annual Plus, Premium Plus, Best of OLLI and Fee Assistance members. Learn about membership.
- Current Annual and Premium members can upgrade to Annual Plus or Premium Plus for an additional $10