The Museum of Everyday Life

Abstract

The Museum of Everyday Life is a theoretical project and an actual museum in rural Vermont. This paper first provides a poetic rendering of the philosophical underpinnings of the project, exploring the special powers of everyday objects to respond to the contingencies of the body, to remember human activity, to record personal histories, and to chronicle the realities of ordinary people. The study then, in a second section, details the ways in which the museum’s Collections, Philosophy, and Performance departments work to re-imagine the role of museums via intense focus on the quotidian. Examining strategies that undermine the traditional curatorial voice of authority, the article explores how the museum is able to reposition the visitor at the center, inviting him/her to re-interpret and overlay new narratives onto and into the objects on display. It also explores the ways that the architecture, setting, and spatial configurations of the museum create an in-between space of possibility, and encourage affective engagement in those who visit. Finally, the research articulates the vision of “grassroots museums” as meaningful, ever-shifting public spaces that can play a central role in nourishing the creative life of communities.

Presenters

Clare Dolan
Founder/Director, Museum of Everyday Life, Vermont, United States

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

2025 Special Focus—Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums: Engines of Innovation and Social Participation

KEYWORDS

Museum,Grassroots,Participatory Curation,Curatorial Voice,Quotidian,Mundanity,Everyday, Affect