1st Edition

Judging Exhibitions A Framework for Assessing Excellence

By Beverly Serrell Copyright 2006
    198 Pages
    by Routledge

    198 Pages
    by Routledge

    Renowned museum consultant and researcher Beverly Serrell and a group of museum professionals from the Chicago area have developed a generalizable framework by which the quality of museum exhibitions can be judged from a visitor-centered perspective. Using criteria such as comfort, engagement, reinforcement, and meaningfulness, they have produced a useful tool for other museum professionals to better assess the effectiveness of museum exhibitions and thereby to improve their quality. The downloadable resources include a brief video demonstrating the Excellent Judges process and provides additional illustrations and information for the reader. Tested in a dozen institutions by the research team, this step-by-step approach to judging exhibitions will be of great value to museum directors, exhibit developers, and other museum professionals.

    Part I. Introduction Part II. What Is the Framework? Part III. How to Use the Framework Part IV. Theoretical Underpinnings, Part V. Future of the framework

    Biography

    Beverly Serrell

    "Judging Exhibitions is the result of a collaboration between some of the most well respected professionals in the field.... Serrell has provided a useful professional development tool that can help to organize the language and thoughts of individuals who design and develop exhibits." - Sonal Bhatt, Jessica Bicknell and Richard Orlosky (Wildlife Conservation Society) in Visitor Studies Today

    "Taking part in the Excellent Judges process has been the most effective, least expensive (in time or money) professional development I have ever done. It provides the framework for me to visit other shows I would probably miss, critique them in a predictable and repeatable way so that I can develop criteria for excellence, and generate conversation with colleagues from whom I learn different perspectives." - Kitty Connolly, Huntington Library

    "Throughout her thirty-plus years of working in and for museums, Beverly Serrell has focused on making exhibitions more visitor-accessible. Now, with this book, Serrell takes us on an invigorating journey into the process of thinking deeply about the exhibition medium and the complexities of striving for exhibition excellence. This is a must-read for anyone interested in creating museum exhibitions." - Kathleen McLean, independent museum consultant
    "Judging Exhibitions does an intriguing job of balancing the desire to offer people clear, common guidelines that do some of the basic work of judgment, with the realization that judgment itself is an art, not a technique, and certainly not a science." - Elizabeth Minnich, Fellow, Associate of American Colleges and Universities

    "The book is short, easy to read, and engaging. ..I found Judging Excellence refreshingly honest about the project's ups and downs. Serrell describes how developers and participants disagreed regularly on aspects of the framework-the use of the term "excellence," for example. She also is well aware that the framework may not work well for every exhibition on the planet. Putting aside my nagging suspicion that only exhibition virgins truly experience an exhibition through a visitor's eyes, I nevertheless found that the framework (especially when coupled with this publication) has real merit. While this is not the final evaluative tool created for exhibition review, Serrell hopes that museum practitioners-especially students, exhibition developers, curators, educators, project managers, and designers-will try using it. Anything that can potentially help exhibition professionals to perfect their skills and improve their audience sensitivity is a good thing." - Kym Rice, Museum Anthropology Review

    "This new book from respected museum consultant Beverly Serrell takes an innovative approach to assessing exhibitions. The framework allows you to bring your experience as a museum professional with you, rather than asking you to try and disengage and assess the exhibit from the point of view of someone else. This is a real strength, giving the user the opportunity to engage with an exhibit in the way they would normally--making comments about their area of specialism, as well as responding intuitively to other areas. Following a framework with set criteria helps one focus on the overall experience of the exhibit rather than looking for things to criticize. This book will succeed in helping museums create better visitor experiences, provide a common language for discussing exhibitions, and perhaps help us understand that elusive mix of features that make for a successful display."

    --Rhiannon Johns, The British Museum, Journal of Museum Ethnography