ABSTRACT

Few institutions are warier of copies than museums. Few fields of knowledge are more prone to denounce copies as fake than the heritage field. Few discourses are as concerned with authenticity, aura, originals and provenance as those concerning exhibiting and collecting. So why is it that these are institutions, fields and discourses where copies proliferate and copying techniques have thrived for hundreds of years? Museums as Cultures of Copies aims to make the copying practices of museums visible and to discuss, from a range of interrelated perspectives, precisely what function copies fulfil in the heritage field and in museums today.

With contributions from Europe and Canada, the book interrogates the meaning of copies and presents copying as a fully integrated part of museum work. Including chapters on ethnographic mannequins, digitalized photos, death masks, museum documentation and mechanical models, contributors consider how copying as a cultural form changes according to time and place and how new forms of copying and copy technologies challenge and expand museum work today. Arguing that copying is at the basis of museum practice and that new technologies and practices have been taken up and developed in museums since their inception, the book presents both heritage work and copies in a new light.

Museums as Cultures of Copies should be of great interest to academics, scholars and postgraduate students working in the fields of museum and heritage studies, as well as visual studies, cultural history and archaeology. It should also be essential reading for museum practitioners.

part I|4 pages

Copying and modelling

chapter 1|14 pages

The art and science of replication

Copies and copying in the multi-disciplinary museum

chapter 3|13 pages

Documentation, representation, restoration 1

Copying practises at Norsk Teknisk Museum

chapter 4|14 pages

Mainly making models

The scientific use of natural heritage collections

part II|4 pages

Copying

chapter 5|12 pages

Lost continents, projective objects

chapter 7|18 pages

Replica knowledge

Travelling thrones

chapter 8|13 pages

Looking for originals in a museum of copies?

The ambivalence of the Thorvaldsens Museum

chapter 9|13 pages

Copying as museum branding

Souvenirs with Edvard Munch’s bedspread pattern

part III|4 pages

Copying

chapter 10|14 pages

Ethnographic mannequins

Copying as artefactualisation of human difference

chapter 11|14 pages

Constructing museum nature

Photography and specimens in natural history museums around 1900

chapter 12|14 pages

Faces of death

Death masks in the museum

part IV|4 pages

Copying

chapter 13|13 pages

Commonplaces, copies and copiousness

chapter 14|13 pages

The proof of the original is in the copying

Heavenly chain letters

chapter 15|13 pages

Documenting museum objects

A practice of copying and a ‘copious’ practice?

chapter 16|14 pages

Breaking the frames?

The creation of digital curatorial agency at Swedish cultural history museums

chapter 17|14 pages

Towards a future museum of copying