Catalog Description
Fundamental concepts of gallery and museum practices including in-depth study of the nature of objects, interpretation of objects, and administration responsibilities. (Fall) [Graded (Standard Letter)]
Course Overview
This discussion-intensive capstone course provides pre-professional training in exhibition and display practices in museum and gallery settings. Because both writing and display are central to the arts—and offer significant professional opportunities—the course emphasizes writing and research skills alongside technical and aesthetic problem-solving in exhibition design.
Course Description
Students will explore a range of curatorial methodologies through readings, discussions, and critical reflection on best practices in visual storytelling. They will also gain hands-on experience with label writing, interpretive materials, gallery and exhibition design, creative access strategies, evaluation methods, and the fundamentals of museum interpretation.
Exhibitions serve as vital spaces for dialogue, reflection, and learning, particularly in collection-based museums where objects connect audiences with history, culture, and ideas. This course asks: if exhibitions construct meaning by telling stories with objects, how can interpretation—through labels, panels, catalogues, digital media, and more—enhance that process?
Through a combination of readings, discussions, writing workshops, and experiential projects, students will examine the craft and stakes of effective exhibition writing. They will practice multiple genres of interpretive writing to understand how scholarship, interpretation, and marketing intersect to create cohesive and compelling narratives about an exhibition’s purpose, value, and relevance.