Category Archives: Keynote

Borderless Museum Conference 2025 – Keynote Lecture – Sharon Macdonald

We are excited to announce, that as part of the Conference „Borderless Museums: Redefining Museum Narratives and Inclusivity“ starting this Sunday on International Museums Day, inherit director Sharon Macdonald will give another keynote lecture titled “Museums Across Borders: Connective Potentials”!

📍 EPICenter, Transalpina Square, Nova Gorica

📅 18 May 2025, 18:00

🎟 For registration, agenda updates, and inquiries: epic@go2025.eu

Starting on International Museums Day, the GO! Borderless Museum Conference will explore how museums can redefine narratives, foster inclusivity, and serve communities in today’s evolving world.

Further topics addressed by the conference will include how museums can become borderless platforms of knowledge, discussions on museum ethics, curatorial roles and dilemmas, community collaboration, as well as transnational and cross-border museum cooperation.

Invitation: https://www.go2025.eu/01.immagini/News/250204-konferenca-epic/Borderless%20Museums_invitation.pdf

Eventpage: https://www.go2025.eu/en/whats-up/news/borderless-museums-redefining-museum-narratives-and-inclusivity

Programm: https://icom-europe.mini.icom.museum/go-borderless-museum-conference-2025/

Borderless_Museums_Conference_2025
Borderless Museums Conference 2025

Anthropology Day 2025 – Keynote Lecture – Sharon Macdonald

We are delighted to announce that inherit director Sharon Macdonald will give the keynote lecture – Recentring and resocializing collections: connective potentials – this Friday at the Anthropology Day 2025, with the theme “Anthropology, Collections, Restitution“!

📍 Wereldmuseum Leiden

📅 16 May, 11:00

The past decades have witnessed growing concerns around collections in Western museums and archives. Amid broader post- and decolonial critiques of heritage institutions, objects and practices, museums were confronted with demands to look critically at, or investigate possibilities for the restitution of (parts of) their collections. While the focus has tended to be on ethnographic collections, other collections that include objects, human/ancestral remains, photographs, audiovisual material, botanical specimens, field notes, indigenous knowledge, etc. raise similar concerns. Anthropology and anthropologists are deeply involved in these developments. Anthropological collecting as a colonial and extractive method has played a significant role in the establishment of ethnographic and other collections. At the same time, anthropologists are also actively involved in finding ways to address this past and push for decolonial work, developing novel ways of doing ethnography as well as looking for alternative methods, epistemologies and forms of collaboration.

This year’s Anthropology Day provides an opportunity to reflect on past contributions and look ahead. What have anthropologists contributed to debates on restitution and the evolving practices of museums, archives, and the arts? How do anthropologists collaborate with scholars and professionals from other fields—such as art history, museum studies, archaeology, history, and law—as well as with activists, artists, and stakeholders, also from the Global South? What future directions do anthropologists envision? Can ethnographic fieldwork help reshape the history and practice of ethnography as a form of collecting? How can anthropologists contribute to research on (colonial) ethnographic collections, and how might these contributions reshape the way we do anthropology?

© Antropologen Beroepsvereniging (ABv)

Eventpage: https://antropologen.nl/anthropology-day-16-may-wereldmuseum-leiden-anthropology-collections-restitution/

Anthropology_Day_2025
Anthropology Day 2025