Reinventing the Boston Museum of Fine Arts: The Twentieth Century and Today
Harvard Extension School
HARC E-181
Section 1
CRN 26807
Anyone visiting a major art museum today quickly realizes how popular such places have become. Crowds overflow special events, timed tickets sell out, exhibition schedules stretch to meet demand. Contributing to this is the fact that art museums' traditional roles—acquiring, displaying, and preserving works of art—have evolved to embrace a larger agenda as important cultural centers, where dining, shopping, and socializing now complement, and can even compete with, the art. Boston's Museum of Fine Arts (MFA) offers an especially rich example of this phenomenon. Treating it as a case study, the course examines the MFA's twentieth-century development as a world-class treasure-house of masterpieces, and then consider a range of such issues that bear on its continuing vitality today. Recently, these also include ethical questions about object provenances, procedures for new acquisitions, commercial sources of revenue, appropriate exhibition content, and programming for diverse audiences. Looking at what the museum is doing to address these issues opens questions about the art museum of the future—another fascinating subject.
Registration Closes: January 22, 2025
Credits: 4
View Tuition Information Term
Spring Term 2025
Part of Term
Full Term
Format
Live Attendance Web Conference
Credit Status
Graduate, Noncredit, Undergraduate
Section Status
Open