Ethical Matters:
Battle for the Museums: Fighting Back Against Cultural Colonialism
18th September 2024 · 6:30pm - 8:00pm
Doors open: 6:00pm
Brockway Room
Museums can be both a valuable educational and cultural resource, and perpetrators of cultural colonialism, gatekeeping, and theft. In this Ethical Matters talk, we explore the underlying dark nexus of capital, art and power―and radical resistance movements fighting fiercely for exhibition spaces that serve today’s public.
One digital entrepreneur has taken matters into their own hands. Chidi Nwaubani created project LOOTY, which produces NFTs of looted objects in major institutions and sells them, with 20 percent of the proceeds going to grants for young African artists. Named after a dog taken from China and given to Queen Victoria as a gift, the project contributes to the charged conversations around restitution in a witty and anarchic way. The team executed a digital heist at the British Museum, making detailed scans of the Rosetta Stone that were transported, both physically and digitally, to Rashid, in Egypt, using Geo-located based AR. This allowed for one of the world’s first-ever digitally repatriated artworks to be placed back in its original physical realm.
Journalist Rachel Spence has watched visual arts become a flashpoint for today’s social divisions. She interviews artists, activists, directors and donors, revealing elitism and injustice. Business and finance launder their reputations through patronage, while governments exert authority by weaponising or attacking the arts―and gallery-goers and workers mobilise to demand better. How did we get here, and what awaits these institutions?
Rachel’s book, Battle for the Museum: Cultural Institutions in Crisis, will be available to buy in person from Newham Bookshop on the evening.
Age Recommendation:
16+
Price: *All ticket prices below include a £1 booking fee*
In person: Standard £10 • Living Support £7 • Students £7 • Members FREE
Access Information
Due to the age and Grade Il listing of the building, there is no lift access to rooms above the ground floor.
All the ground-floor rooms are fully accessible by wheelchair. Main Hall (street access, step-free), Brockway Room (street access, step-free), Bertrand Russell Room (street access, shallow ramp), Hive Cafe (street access, step-free), There is also an accessible toilet on the ground floor opposite the Brockway Room.
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Further Info
This event will be held in-person only at Conway Hall. Everyone wishing to join this event must register for a ticket in advance.
If you have any accessibility enquiries, please contact us at info@conwayhall.org.uk / 020 7405 1818.