Staying Gold: Art Education Programming as Model for Queering the Museum Beyond Representation
Author
Schierl, Madeline RosemaryIssue Date
2024Advisor
DiCindio, Carissa
Metadata
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The University of Arizona.Rights
Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction, presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.Abstract
Queering the museum, as an active, critical orientation, requires a sustained engagement with anddeconstruction of binaries foundational to the logic of the Western canon and, by extension, to the modern museum. While most museums who have responded to the call to queer the museum have done so by staging temporary curatorial or artist-led interventions, these engagements have not led to structural change. This paper turns to the field of museum art education as an under-researched area containing rich potential for active engagement in the project of queering the museum. Specifically, I offer a case study of Stay Gold, a queer, intergenerational artmaking program hosted by the Museum of Contemporary Art – Tucson, as a key example of museum art education programming that queers the museum through a critical engagement with three key concepts: artist, art-object, and community.Type
Electronic Thesistext
Degree Name
M.A.Degree Level
mastersDegree Program
Graduate CollegeArt Education