We meant to link to this last week, but
Rudolph Weingartner, former dean of arts and sciences at Northwestern, wrote a column for Inside Higher Ed on the deaccessioning at the Rose Museum that presents the other side of the issue. Weingartner makes no bones about where he's coming from, even early in the piece:
Understand that my print collection went to Northwestern because I had been dean of arts and sciences there for thirteen years. Understand also that regarding this issue, my experience as dean trumps my love of art and that is why I disagree with the views expressed in numerous articles in The New York Times and one this month in Inside Higher Ed called “Avoiding the Next Brandeis."
He argues that university museums do little to promote relationships with the rest of campus, writing
But why should they be so regarded when, by my admittedly not systematic observations, most of those museums do nothing or very little to deserve to be so regarded? As dean, I had to bludgeon the Block Gallery to present an exhibit of the work of Northwestern’s prize painters, William Conger, Ed Paschke and James Valerio. (This was before the Gallery was transformed into a Museum and long before its current director, David Robertson, came to Northwestern.) Art history departments are mostly held at arm's length by campus museums who prize their (inappropriate) autonomy. Mostly, the museums don’t even know how to communicate with other than art faculty on campus.
But should deans have such an influence over what the university museum presents? Doesn't that tread on curatorial independence? Weingartner's other major argument is that these museums need not own the works they present, that temporary exhibitions would do just as well to promote the study of works of art:
It is excellent, therefore, that this cluster of issues is being looked at. In my view, however, the goals sought by the task force for campus art museums are not likely to be realized by means of works of arts owned by museums, but rather by means of exhibits brought in and often locally curated for specific pedagogic purposes.
But having works on display for a limited time and inaccessible after that period by necessity limits their study. A permanent collection is a huge asset to a campus, not to mention that the acquisitions of university museums are naturally different in intent than the acquisitions of private institutions, private collectors or galleries. We understand where Weingartner is coming from, and, again, he admits his bias early on, but we also respectfully disagree with many aspects of his argument.
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