Filter by
Chau Chak Wing Museum

Creating Space for Truth and Understanding

Where
Chau Chak Wing Museum
Chau Chak Wing Museum
University Place, University of Sydney, Camperdown NSW 2006
Nelson Meers Foundation Auditorium
When

Wednesday 19 March from 1pm to 2pm

Join us for a series of presentations which explore the evolution of Australia's museums and galleries over the past nine decades.

In 1933 the Carnegie Corporation commissioned A Report on the Museums & Art Galleries of Australia. It offers a comprehensive post-Federation snapshot of the sector documenting funding models, collection development, resourcing, staffing and audience engagement. Ninety years on, many of the challenges it identified remain pertinent. Hindsight has revealed, however, some glaring omissions: including the absence of diversity and First Nations perspectives. As such it is a timely moment to consider how the sector has developed, what work still needs to be done, and the issues that the Carnegie Report failed to foresee.

This series of talks will explore the original context and themes of the Carnegie Report, to learn from the past and assess the challenges of the next 90 years of museum practice in Australia.

Creating Space for Truth and Understanding

How can we invite audiences to engage with histories that might be uncomfortable or challenging, especially those shaped by settler colonialism? Wiradjuri librarian and museum educator Nathan mudyi Sentance has been exploring this question for over ten years. In this talk, he reflects on his work supporting First Nations representation and truth-telling in galleries, libraries, archives, and museums, sharing the small but complex steps toward creating spaces that might spark change.

About the Speaker

Nathan “mudyi” Sentance is a cis Wiradjuri librarian and museum collections worker who grew up on Darkinjung Country. Nathan currently works at the Powerhouse Museum as Head of Collections, First Nations and writes about history, critical librarianship and critical museology from a First Nations perspective. His writing has been previously published in The Guardian, British Art Studies, Cordite Poetry, and Sydney Review of Books and on his own blog The Archival Decolonist.

Contact event organiser

Chau Chak Wing Museum

Advertisement

Other events at Chau Chak Wing Museum

Consuelo Cavaniglia: seeing through you

Consuelo Cavaniglia: seeing through you

Consuelo Cavaniglia develops a contemporary art project to engage with the Chau Chak Wing Museum’s collections.
Tomorrow
Instrumental: Collections from Science

Instrumental: Collections from Science

This is the 4th display in our ongoing series showcasing a range of tools used by physiologists and university students.
Tomorrow
Kerameikos the potters' quarter

Kerameikos the potters' quarter

This exhibition offers new ways of understanding Australia's oldest collections, pushing the boundaries of ceramics.
Tomorrow
Micro:Macro – models of insight and inspiration

Micro:Macro – models of insight and inspiration

Micro:Macro explores the role of models in understanding and exploring our world.
Tomorrow
Student Life: Max Dupain at the University of Sydney

Student Life: Max Dupain at the University of Sydney

This exhibition introduces Dupain’s modernist approach to photography in a series of candid shots.
Tomorrow
The trace is not a presence ...

The trace is not a presence ...

5 Australian artists from Chinese diasporic communities embrace their histories to celebrate the process of becoming.
Tomorrow
Understanding the ocean that connects us

Understanding the ocean that connects us

An afternoon conversation on academic research about maritime culture between India and Australia
Tomorrow
Union Made: Art from the University of Sydney Union 

Union Made: Art from the University of Sydney Union 

This dazzling exhibition showcases rare European works, contemporary Indigenous art and Australian modernism.
Tomorrow