Journal article
Engaging with the anti-museum? Visitors to the Museum of Old and New Art
A Franklin, N Papastergiadis
Journal of Sociology | SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD | Published : 2017
Abstract
Hailed as the most important cultural event since the opening of the Sydney Opera House, the Museum of Old and New Art (Mona) in Tasmania seemingly made very substantial changes to visitor experiences of an art gallery, catalysed a significant cultural florescence in Hobart and achieved tourism-led urban and regional regeneration on a par with the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Drawing on a large survey of visitors this article illuminates the origins, social aims and impacts of successful attempts to push art museums beyond what Hanquinet and Savage call ‘educative leisure’. It contributes to our knowledge of the processes by which traditional forms of ‘highbrow’ cultural experience associated w..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This article is an output from the Australian Research Council funded project: 'Creating the Bilbao Effect: MONA and the Social and Cultural Coordinates of Urban Regeneration Through Arts Tourism' LP120200302. Chief Investigators: Professors Adrian Franklin, Justin O'Connor and Nikos Papastergiadis.