PEDRO PEREIRA LEITE
Lisbon in real Time
Exhibition Memory /
Memory of an Exhibition
Informal Museology Studies
Spring 2013
Ficha Técnica:
Informal Museology Studies
Papers on Qualitative Research
Issue 1 - Spring 2013
Directory
Pedro Pereira Leite
ISSN – 2182-8962
Editor: Pedro Pereira Leite
Publisher: Marca d‟ Água: Publicações e Projetos
Redaction: Casa Muss-amb-ike
Ilha de Moçambique,
3098 Moçambique
Lisbon: Passeio dos Fenícios, Lt. 4.33.01.B 5º Esq.
1990-302 Lisbon -Portugal
2
Informal Museology
Summary
Exhibition Memory / Memory of an Exhibition
Museologia Informal: Práticas e Saberes
Whath Is Informal Museology ?
3
Exhibition Memory / Memory of an Exhibition
Pedro Pereira Leite1
What are and how are memories witten? Since
classical antiquity that an understading of the
phenomon of memory has been searched for. How
do memories, images of another time, constitute
themselves as representations? How do we make
objects of the past became present? Writing about
the memories of an exhibition becomes a challenge
of creating a representation.
Fig 1- Context and
Setting of Memory
Operating a narrative that adds being. We assume
that we narrate a process of something missing by evoking what
became present in it.
At the beginning of 2012, feeling cold due to the winter freezing weather, I
rang the bell. I enter the lobby decorated with ashlars, climb up the wooden
stairs to the first floor and enter the room. I am welcomed by the aroma of
warm coffee made by Graça Teixeira. Sitting in a circle in the living room, in
loose talk there were Cristina Bruno , Katia Filipini , Marcelo Cunha , Mario
and Ana Moutinho . Shortly after, Gabriela Cavaco , Isabel Victor and Pedro
Cardoso joined the group2.
We started to talk about a project to develop an exhibition on Baixa
Pombalina, on its past, but especially
on its present. We all adhered to the
idea very quickly, thrilled with the
brief presentation projected on the
wall.
From that day on, the team was
composing itself. More faces were
adhering, with different abilities and
skills. Some from the area of Fig 2 1st. meeting on Feb 2012
technology, others in the area of
design, others specialized in different contents. As it goes with all projects,
some contributed more, others were helping as they could. Potential sites
for the exhibition were visited. The Palace of Independence, the Millennium
Researcher on Museology. Published in “Baixa in Real Tim”, (2013), Lisbon,
Universidade Lusófona, pp 65-67
2
The team on Museology School at Lusofona University. Some work in Brasil at São
Paulo University and Baia University.
1
4
Gallery, on Augusta Street. A visit to Brazil brought up the possibility of
taking the exhibit to Rio de Janeiro and Salvador, in Bahia. The exhibition
had become a pretext for different dialogues.
At different moments, proposals to look at Baixa Pombalina were advanced.
In one of our meetings we had a small workshop with Cristina Bruno on the
purpose of the trip as a catalyst factor for a museological process, in which
the illustrious museologist presented the methodologies used for the
proposed organization of the City
Museum of São Paulo3. The experience
of traveling as a methodology of
constructing narratives constitutes an
inspiring element for our research on
what we've been naming "The poetics
of
intersubjectivity"4
and
is
characterized by looking at the space,
at its relational dynamics in pursuit of Fig 3 Lisbon at Morning
its essential elements. Interrogating the
space and time, with the restlessness that seeks the essence in the process.
There is an old creator myth in Indian culture that speaks of a hidden river,
the Saraswati River that formerly ran open and
that time was in charge of hiding it. A river flow
that even hidden persists in influencing the
present. Observing Baixa Pombalina at the
present time is to look at a number of future
possibilities.
Possibilities
conditioned
by
installed dynamics. That was the challenge we
assumed to work on Baixa Pombalina. Asking
ourselves what this Baixa is today. Seeking
beyond narratives and meta-narratives towards
finding out how that space is perceived and
lived by its inhabitants. Inhabitant meaning
those that make use of the territory.
Our starting point was to explore the territory.
On a February morning we arrived at Baixa, as Fig 4- Lisbon at Night
if we were travelers and we lived in it for
twenty-four hours. We tried to observe the different rhythms, its
inhabitants, how they made use of the space, the different meeting places,
the places that attract people, and the spaces of communication among
Bruno, Cristina (2004). “As expedições no cenário museal” (The Expedition on Musicological
Scenario) in “São Paulo Expedition 450 years, São Paulo, São Paulo City Museum, pp 36-47.
3
4
See Leite, Pedro Pereira (2012). Olhares Biográficos: a poética
Intersubjetividade em Museologia, (Biographical Glances: The Poétic
intersubjectivity on Museology), Lisboa/Ilha de Moçambique, Maca D‟Água
da
of
5
them. We tried to look at the stills. We particularly attempted to listen to
the meanings of these powerful hidden voices in the stones and blackened
faces of the people who speak of past experiences as present actions.
Curiously, in late September, already at
the final stage of collecting and
systematizing work, we went down to the
subterranean river that runs in Baixa. The
Roman Galleries of Prata Street are a
good example of our Baixa. A geology in
movement, which provides us with the
foundation
of
a
city,
periodically
devastated by natural cataclysms, which
mankind insists on confronting, rebuilding
beauty successively out of ruins. A city Fig 5- Old River underground the city
that is renewed every day, observed in
plural forms and lived differently.
The methodology of the trip allowed us to gather elements to be integrated
in the planned work. Proposals in which the construction of narratives
should be shared as well as express different ways of looking at the space.
It is true that "our journey" is still an
incipient proposal of the potential that
the
methodology suggests
as
a
challenge to urban spaces museology. A
challenge that seeks to overcome the
view of the city as a static object. The
city as living space incorporates forces
that face one another. Natural and
social forces. But cities are also
representative scenarios of themselves. Fig 6 The Tugus river
Depending on the point of view, the
representation proposals are different. Then the challenge is to watch the
city from its inside. Hear its echoes and incorporate them as museum
narrative as a plurality of views that could give us a city "tomography".
Out of this innovating potential that the applied methodology revealed, we
stress at this point the analysis of the poetic dimension of urban space and
the sound cartographies. They are two elements produced within research
and allow extending the proposed museum narrative in urban spaces.
From Cartography thru the Space Poetics
In the case of the poetic dimension of space as a tool for investigation, it is
useful to understand the "spirit of the place". Its utopian dimension (beyond
the site) is a starting point for the construction of structural concepts of
proposed narratives made from the users of the spaces. Confronting the
6
user of the spaces with his∕her experience in that space, be it by the way
he∕she moves in it, by his∕her life stories, or by the memory of his∕her
experience, allows us to intuitively grasp the transformation processes of
the space. The poetic presents an exegetical dimension (from exegesis or
transcendence) which releases meanings contained in the forms, through
verbalization and ritualization (commuting and celebrations). At the same
time it introduces a theoretical or
inclusive dimension, (immanence,
as a quest for the essence of all
things) because it produces a
contextualized speech in a space
and time, where traditionally one
seeks to capture the phenomena:
the setting. Well, this contextual
speech successively recreates the
Fig 7- My Guide
social
experience,
making
the
narratives as the development of
themselves.
Poetics as a communicative act allows producing plural meanings and can
be
translated
into
a
sensitive
experience. A journey of the senses
through space in search of processual
moments.
Poetics
as
an
urban
experience
is
an
experience
of
intersubjectivity where the various
subjects move in time and space
around socially significant objects, of
common heritage, to jointly reconstruct
the elements that are common to them, Fig 8 - The Tram- hear the urban sound
creating new meanings and new
processes.
Exploring urban sonorities
In the case of sound cartographies of spaces5, it is a proposal of process
knowledge about the identities of spaces. As the search for poetic images, it
results from the investigation and recognition of spaces through experience.
The proposal is to capture the urban action in process through its sounds.
Here, we took the time of the city sound as a field for recognition of urban
experiences. A commuting trip between urban and rural spaces is enough
for one to realize the differences in sound, visual and smell densities. Cities
Inspired on the works of Carlos Fortuna in “Music, Urban Live and Deafness”
published in Rua Larga, Coimbra, june 2012. Carlos Fortuna work in Coimbra
University in Portugal and proposals some analytical approaches on urban
sociology.
5
7
domesticated time. Time has come to be linear, marked by mechanical
sounds that shape its pace. The silence interrupted by the bell from Catholic
churches steeples, or by the call for prayer from the mosques are elements
of domestication. But the cities and contemporary metropolis have
intensified mechanical sounds, involving the city rhythm in a noisy concert
which we strive to control all the time. Whether
through the use of "headphones", either through
forgetfulness, urban sound is an experience of space
recognition. Through the relationship between silence
and the importance attributed by the brain we can
guide ourselves and recognize the differences
between the spaces. For example, the mechanical
noise of cars is also a marker of territory, as the
silences of contemporary museums symbolize
changing territories.
Fig 9 to build a play list
of urban sounds as
experience oh
knowledge
Observing the sound of real life as a recognition exercise, as an experience
of an intersubjectivity proposal is thinking about how individuals get
connected between themselves and with the earth. Restoring the
connectors as building tools of ecology knowledge. It is useful to draw the
intention of urban planners to the fact that the sound is not integrated into
the territory planning while sonorities are territorial trademarks of resilience
from which one can recreate the urban landscapes of the future.
Those are two contributions to the development of future investigations that
mark the my memory of this exhibition.
8
Museologia Informal: Práticas e Saberes
Rede de empreendedorismo e inovação social criado em
Moçambique com um olhar global. É um espaço virtual para
apoiar a criação dum mundo radicalmente mais justo e
mais feliz através duma prática museológica informal
O que é a museologia informal?
A museologia informal é uma reflexão e uma prática com o objetivo
de ligar capacidades inovadoras na sociedade. Apoia-se na poética da
intersubjetividade e procura práticas sociais emancipatórias para a
construção dum mundo mais feliz. Muss-amb-ike espaço de saberes e
memórias é uma comunidade global de gentes de diferentes origens
e profissões, com diversos olhares e diversas culturas que trabalham
sem fronteiras e com as novas fronteiras para enfrentar os novos
desafios sociais, culturais e ambientais a partir da teoria critica
Consideramos que os problemas do mundo atual não são a falta de
ideias mas sim a construção do acesso aos saberes e aos
conhecimentos, aos recursos necessários para agir e à consciência
dos impactos da ação.
Por isso acreditamos que é necessário criar espaço locais coma
acesso ao conhecimento, a recursos e a ligação às experiencias
emancipatórias e a sua divulgação
Estamos a trabalhar para criar lugares para gente que cria mudanças.
Esta é a nossa ambição e estamos comprometidos a criar sítios que
reúnam vontades associativas, capacidade de ação e inovação, uma
oficina dotada de serviços. Estamos a criar um espaço de
experimentação e inovação social participada
Temos objetivo de trabalhar com as ferramentas necessárias para
crias e desenvolver novas iniciativas. Lugares para ter acesso à
experiencia, conhecimento, ajuda financeira. Gerar encontros e trocas
de experiências
9
Cinco princípios da museologia informal
1. Co-criação: Em Muss-amb-ike todos somos criadores de novas
realidades em colaboração com a comunidade. As nossas ações são
criativas e utilizamos os processos de comunicação participada e a poética
como ferramenta de trabalho. Estamos presentes e em diálogo como os
outros. Para isso construímos e incentivamos a organização de comunidades
de aprendizagem onde somos todos mestres e alunos.
Palavras-chave: Criatividade, Colaboração, Comunicação Assertiva, Cocriação, Comunidade de aprendizagem.
2. Integridade: Na nossa vida somos coerentes entre o que pensamos,
dizemos e fazemos. A nossa comunidade interage com os outros e fomenta
os processos participativos
Palavras-chave: Transparência, Coerência, Integridade
3. Aceitação incondicional do outro: Muss-amb-ike é uma comunidade
aberta, inclusiva que se enriquece com as diferenças dos seus membros.
Quem se identifica com estes princípios é Benvinda. O nosso potencial
reside no reconhecimento da diversidade dos saberes e dos olhares.
Reconhecer a diversidade implica trabalhar o conflito como um processo
criativo e reconhecer a dignidades e a liberdade de todos.
Palavras-chave: Dignidade, Inclusão, Diversidade
4. Sustentabilidade: Estamos na busca dum novo paradigma onde as
comunidades se possam organizar na busca de um modo de se relacionar
com a natureza sem dependência do carbono, com base numa organização
social que resolva os seus conflitos pelo diálogo e que desenvolva processos
produtivos que garanta a distribuição dos recursos alimentares com base na
disponibilidade da natureza e no uso adequado nas capacidades e saberes
disponíveis. Entendemos o mundo como uma realidade complexa. Cada
uma das nossas ações integra dimensões sociais, espirituais económicas,
políticas e ambientais. As suas diferentes dimensões afetam o ser e a
comunidade.
Palavras-chave:
sustentabilidade
Pensamento
holístico,
integralidade,
complexidade,
5. Flexibilidade: Não temos uma visão do futuro estático ou definida.
Acreditamos que é através da prática e do confronto do saber com o seu
resultado que se constrói a realidade do dia-a-dia. Por isso a nossa
capacidade de mudança e transformação é fluida. O nosso crescimento é
orgânico e não imposto.
Palavras-chave: crescimento orgânico, flexibilidade.
10
A Prática da Museologia Informal
A prática de museologia informal apoia-se na
Intersubjetividade, desenvolve ações colaborativas,
poética
da
Os sete princípios da prática da museologia informal.
1.
Partir do Conhecimento da Vida:
a.
No mundo de hoje há mutia informação. É fácil procurar
informação e conhecimento. Mas na verdade temos pouco
conhecimento do mundo e da vida.
2.
Procurar o Conhecimento Pertinente:
a.
Procurar um conhecimento que não mutila o objeto. É
necessário contextualizar. Procurar o todo dentro do uno. Olhar para
as relações.
3.
Compreender o Indivíduo
a.
Identidade Humana: É preciso compreender o indivíduo, o
social e o natural. A unidade tridimensional da condição humana.
4.
Compreender o Social
a.
A compreensão humana:
comunicar através do diálogo
5.
Desenvolver
a
capacidade
de
O conhecimento é incerto
a.
A Incerteza: a ação gera incerteza. É necessária uma ecologia
da ação. Dar pequenos passos e pensar em alternativas
6.
Os fenómenos são complexos
a.
Condição planetária: Os fenómenos são complexos e
interligados em múltiplas escalas e tempos (transcalaridade e
transtemporalidade)
7.
Acção como limite da ética
a.
Antropo-ética:
O
ser
humano
é
tridimensional.
É
simultaneamento ser biológico, ser individual e ser social. Cada um
desse desenvolver as suas responsabilidades individuais e sociais.
11
What Is Informal Museology ?
No matter how elementary the
level of attention that is paid to
contemporary
Museology
in
Portugal,
its
multifaceted
character should nevertheless be
acknowledged. It is a site where
concepts, attitudes and aims
cross,
translating
not
only
museology‟s general guidelines,
but the role and the place that the
different actors in the most
diverse processes seek to occupy
in society, in the affirmation of the
shared right to a full citizenship.
The different forms of museology
that has developed throughout the
country, in particular post April 25,
vouchsafes the statement that, in
parallel with State museums,
there came to light hundreds of
museological
processes
by
initiative of the cultural and
ecological associative movements,
in addition to those of the
reinvigorated autonomous power.
There are tens of thousands of
people who, in various ways more or less elaborated or
theorised - find in museology the
privileged expression means on
issues
concerning
so
many
heritages
–
historical,
architectural,
linguistic,
archaeological or anthropological within
the
context
of
the
valorisation and identification of
local
specificities
and
competences.
These are no doubt museological
processes,
permanent
or
intermittent, creative or model
reproducing,
conservative
orparticipative in the development
of the communities that have
given them life.
Meager in its essential, it is a
museology devoid of financial
resources
or
sophisticated
knowledge, often also featuring
out-of-date
ideologies
and
paradigms.
But it is also a museology that
expresses the cultures of our time,
the culture of the mix, the
expression
of
a
society
in
transformation.
Such museums and museological
processes
are,
in
our
understanding,
the
deep
expression
of
Portugal‟s
contemporary museology.
And, in this sense, this museology
of daily life turns out to be an
essential component of change
itself.
It is, thus, neither rupture nor a
marginal phenomenon, but instead
it is the fruit and seed of a more
democratic society, of a more free
associativism, of a municipalism
that are more aware of a new
development model that favours
decentralisation
and
the
consequent valorisation of local
resources – both human and
natural.
Not being a marginal or a rupture
museology does not mean it is
structured around and founded on
the image of a traditional and
urban museology. Instead, this
NEW MUSEOLOGY that results
from the new conditions of the
museological discourse - and
therefore
is
part
of
the
museological
knowledge
accumulated for generations – has
demonstrated in its diverse forms
a more clear conscience of the
idea of participation and sparks a
more evident social implication.
We speak then of an informal
museology that fits into the wider
concept of SOCIAL MUSEOLOGY,
which translates a considerable
part
of
the
museological
structures‟ effort to adequate itself
to
the
conditionalisms
of
contemporary society.
This adaptation effort, which by
the way extends over many other
countries, was synthesised by
UNESCO‟s
General
Director,
Frederic Mayor, at the opening of
ICOM‟s 15th General Conference in
the following way: the more
general
phenomenon
of
the
cultural conscience development –
be it the emancipation of the
interest of the public at large for
culture as the result of the
widening of leisure time, be it the
growing cultural awareness as a
reaction to the inherent threats of
the
acceleration
of
social
transformations – finds, on the
level
of
the
institution,
a
welcoming largely favoured by
museums.
This evolution is evidently both
qualitative and quantitative. The
distant institution, aristocratic,
Olympian, obsessed with object
appropriation
for
taxonomical
purposes has increasingly given
way – and some are distressed by
this – to an organisation open to
the environment, conscious of its
organic relationship with its own
social context. The museological
revolution
of
our
times
–
manifested in the emergence of
community museums, „sans murs‟
museums, ecomuseums, itinerant
museums or museums exploring
the apparently infinite possibilities
of modern communication – finds
its roots in this new organic and
philosophical awareness.
This process was already heralded
in the Santiago Declaration (1972
UNESCO/ICOM), where it was also
considered: that the museum is an
institution at the service of the
society of which it is an integral
part and an institution that
features within itself the elements
that enable participation in the
conscience
building
of
the
communities it serves; that the
museum can contribute in leading
those
communities
to
act,
situating its activity within the
historical framework that helps to
clarify present day problems…
That this new conception does not
imply in the extinction of present
day museums nor that we
renounce to specialised museums,
but, instead, this new conception
will allow museums to develop
andevolve in a more rational and
logical manner, in order to better
serve society.
Such
concerns,
which
were
renewed in the certainly most
important
document
on
contemporary museology, which is
13
the 1992 Caracas Declaration,
makes us sure that we should
consider informal museology or
social museology as a fundamental
element to think museology and
the new paths taken by museology
in Portugal.
We cannot any longer be satisfied
with the eventual modernisation of
traditional
museums,
intended
mostly through the creation of a
pathetic shop featuring nearly
nothing to sell, or a mega
exhibition of rare objects with
budgets that insult the most
elementary
good
sense
and
seriousness.
We think that the urge is, before
anything else, in the opening of
the museum to the environment in
the
study
of
its
organic
relationship with the social context
that gives it life, facts that have
sparked the need to elaborate and
clarify new relationships, notions
and concept that can handle this
process.
A few examples of the issues
derived
from
contemporary
museological practices and that
are part of a growing specialised
bibliography: the widening of the
notion of heritage and the
consequent redefinition of the
“museological object”, the idea of
community participation in the
definition and management of
museological practise, museology
as a factor of development, the
issues of interdisciplinarity, the
use of “new technologies” of
information and museography as
an autonomous
means.
communication
Recalling once again the Santiago
Declaration, where it reads That
the
transformation
of
the
museum‟s activities demands a
progressive
change
on
the
mentality of the conservative
curators and those responsible for
the museums, as well as the
structures on whichthey depend”
we should admit the need to train
new museum professionals for the
new
museological
discourse
production conditions.
It is within the field of informal
museology, that we certainly find
innovation, change and new paths.
The
biggest
challenge
in
museology teaching in Portugal is
not that of teaching what is
featured
in
the
museology
manuals, but instead that of
providing the future museologists
with the means that will allow
them to place themselves and act
within a context of social change
that cuts through all aspects of
contemporary society.
The exhibition that simply displays
without
questioning,
is
increasingly inscribed in a kind of
archaeology
of
an
archaic
museological thinking.
In museums one does not simply
handle objects, but instead and
chiefly with ideas. We now place
the question of whether we know
where the role of the curator
begins and ends, and equally,
where does the role of the
museologist begins and ends.
14
This change in attitude was, by the
way, referred to by Hugues de
Varine in the synthesis report of
the
16th
ICOM
General
Conference: “It became clear, in
the
international
committee
meetings, that there is a strong
current geared towards opening
and innovation… leading museum
professionals to act in a nontraditional way and accept being
influenced
by
multicultural
concepts.
The
interdisciplinary
cooperation that is emerging in
the bosom of ICOM, the bridges
built
between
the
various
disciplines and projects, and
groups such as the MINOM are
indications of this opening spirit.”
To recognise this is, deep down, to
accept that in the contemporary
world there is a new intervention
space conditioned above all by the
attitude and social implication of
each one of us.
A kind of interdisciplinarity of
attitude, a lot more complex than
the sought for and ill-loved
interdisciplinarity of knowledge.
If there is a new challenge in
museology, in our understanding,
it does not regard in its essential
to the features of its shape, but
the place within it that we wish to
occupy
and
above
all
the
possibility of deepening and finally
recognising that it is the attitude
of the actors that determines the
meaning of the work we do.
So much so that we cannot control
nor even condition the final effect
of our intervention, which in truth
ends up far removed, so often
perverse and alienated from our
first intentions.
In the culture of the now that
determines our submissions, which
we rarely acknowledge and reject,
we forget that time introduces, in
a certain way, new conditions
which escape us, transforming the
pursued path, irrevocably. What is
actually within reach is no more
than the possibility of choosing the
beginning of the direction we wish
to imprint our action.
If it is so, we can more easily
relativise
the
successes
and
failures, to doubt our short term
evaluations and start afresh each
day conscious of a new history, a
new museum.
We
shall
continue
and,
increasingly, speak of an informal
museology. We shall continue to
speak, and increasingly, to speak
of social museology.
By Mario Moutinho (1993)
15
Informal Museology Studies
Papers on qualitative research
1. Memory of an Exhibition / Exhibition Memory (Spring 2013)
2. African Heritage on Lisbon Museums
3. Muss-amb-ike Home Land : the commitment on museological
process
4. 20 years of Urban Heritage in Mozambike Island
5. Hybridism and Interculturality on Mozambike Island
6. Lisbon Sarawsti: The Experience of Travling
7. Salt See Heritages: A geoculture approach on maritime
strategies in Portugal
8. Traveling on Muzambik Museums
9. The Mediation Strategy on Museological Poetics
Muss-amb-ike - Memory Space