Object journeys: outreach work between National Museums Scotland and the Tlicho

Objects are always undertaking new journeys as they physically move with people, between people through exchange, and are used or engaged with by their makers, owners or users. These journeys diverge from the biographies of individuals or groups who are temporarily or transiently associated with the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Knowles, Chantal
Other Authors: Brown, Alison K
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Marischal Museum, University of Aberdeen 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.abdn.ac.uk/materialhistories/documents/proceedings.pdf
Description
Summary:Objects are always undertaking new journeys as they physically move with people, between people through exchange, and are used or engaged with by their makers, owners or users. These journeys diverge from the biographies of individuals or groups who are temporarily or transiently associated with them. The journeys that objects are taken on are both physical and metaphorical and bind together all the individuals whose personal histories are caught up with them in a network of stories and experiences. The collection of nineteenth century Athapaskan artefacts held by National Museums Scotland [NMS]consists of 240 objects,each with individual ‘travelogues’ or stories associated with them. These travelogues began to be recorded once the objects entered the museum and developed as they began to be viewed as a coherent unit; a ‘collection’. In 2006 the collection embarked upon another significant and symbolic journey which brought 40 artefacts back to the Northwest Territories the region from which they originated, providing an opportunity for the descendants of their makers and the traders of the artefacts to engage with them. The return journey of these artefacts from Scotland to Canada has also provided an opportunity to reflect on the past, on the craftsmanship involved in their production, and to encode the objects with their own set of contemporary meanings. Yellowknife, capital of the NWT, had been a manned trading post or ‘fort’ for the Hudson’s Bay Company but was now a city with a population of 18,000. In this context the objects resonated differently as they were viewed by the indigenous communities, other Canadians and foreign tourists. This twenty-first century journey was realised through an exhibition displayed in the territorial museum, the Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre,an outreach programme to the communities, a published catalogue and an online catalogue. The exhibition and associated activities were the culmination of five years of work in partnership with the PWNHC, NMS, the Government ...