EVENT

Saving the Past: The Future of Our Heritage w/ Rachel Spence, Tom Holland & John Orna-Ornstein

26 Jun 2024 – 14:30 BST
Chalke Valley History Festival
IPGL Stage
Bury Ln
Broad Chalke
Salisbury
SP5 5DP

Join journalist Rachel Spence, John Orna-Ornstein (Director of Curation and Experience for the National Trust) and Tom Holland for this discussion on the future of our heritage.

Culture and power have been uneasy bedfellows since ancient times but today with money in scarce supply for our heritage, this uneasiness has boiled over in rancour. Protesters force out patrons and curators of exhibitions, and pressure museums to abandon fossil fuel sponsorship. Campaigners demand equality and diversity, condemn exploitation of artists and staff, and urge restitution of imperially tainted objects. Journalist Rachel Spence, John Orna-Ornstein, Director of Curation and Experience for the National Trust, and Tom Holland discuss how we got to this situation, and what awaits our cultural and heritage institutions.

About the book

Culture and power have been bedfellows since ancient times—in the case of exhibits and collections, now more than ever. Protests force out patrons and curators, and pressure museums to abandon fossil fuel sponsorship. Campaigners demand equality and diversity, condemn exploitation of artists and staff, and urge restitution of imperially tainted objects.

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?

From China and Russia to Helsinki and Brooklyn, from the British Museum to the Louvre and Guggenheim in Abu Dhabi, Battle for the Museum uncovers a dark nexus of capital, art and power—and radical resistance movements fighting fiercely for exhibition spaces that serve today’s public.

About the author

Rachel Spence is an arts writer and poet. Her reviews, features and reporting, chiefly for the Financial Times, often cover freedom of expression, and the politics behind international cultural institutions or programmes. Her poetry collections include Bird of Sorrow; Call and Response; and Venice Unclocked, a journey through Venice.

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