
Andrew McClellan
Author of The Art Museum from Boullée to Bilbao
About the Author
Andrew McClellan is Associate Professor of Art History at Tufts University
Works by Andrew McClellan
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- McClellan, Andrew Lockwood
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London (Ph.D)
University of East Anglia (MA)
University College London (BA) - Occupations
- professor
art historian - Organizations
- Tufts University
- Nationality
- UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- UK
Members
Reviews
Art and Its Publics collects essays from various museum studies professionals to engage the reader to think about museums and art galleries and other exhibition spaces and how the public thinks and acts in them. It’s quite a heady subject as each person has differing agendas when going to a museum. The editor’s essay on the types of publics reveals that throughout history there has always been a discussion about who goes to museum and why, and if knowing those reasons attracts or show more detracts more visitors.
Other essays looks at private museums, public art exhibitions, how the public evaluates what is art in the first place, and how exhibition layouts and signage play into patron bias. Each essay is insightful (or at the very least informative) in its own right, and all throughout reading, I felt compelled to go to a museum to see how various tidbits from the book were present, so it does get the reader thinking about museums.
Is it a fun read? Decidedly not. But, if you are at all interesting in how museum directors and curators make decisions about their collections and exhibitions, then there are probably far worse books you could read. All in all, it was worth the time I put into it. show less
Other essays looks at private museums, public art exhibitions, how the public evaluates what is art in the first place, and how exhibition layouts and signage play into patron bias. Each essay is insightful (or at the very least informative) in its own right, and all throughout reading, I felt compelled to go to a museum to see how various tidbits from the book were present, so it does get the reader thinking about museums.
Is it a fun read? Decidedly not. But, if you are at all interesting in how museum directors and curators make decisions about their collections and exhibitions, then there are probably far worse books you could read. All in all, it was worth the time I put into it. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Members
- 185
- Popularity
- #117,259
- Rating
- 2.9
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 12






