When I was
little, my uncle drove me to see a real big top circus. I don’t quite remember
where it was, somewhere over in the farmlands near Santa Cruz, like Gilroy or
Watsonville. Like so much of those valleys, I mostly remember the lush
flatness, in this case with the red tent popping up like a mirage. I was
younger than school age, and little from that circus visit remains in my
memory.
One
distinct memory I have, to this day, was of a single one-man, or we might say one -person band. He wandered
around the big top playing music with his jiggered musical contraption attached
to his body. As a kid, this one-person band didn’t seem all that extraordinary.
The guy after him was on a unicycle juggling rubber chickens, after all.
Seemingly without thought, cymbal hand and kazoo mouth sounded in time with
keyboard hand and horn foot. Everything ordered, everything in time, everything
easy.
But, now
as an adult, I am amazed at the guy’s ability to move his limbs in harmonious
synchronicity. I can barely drink coffee and read my email some mornings, let
alone play a full symphony alone. (Of course, I was four when I saw the guy. It
might have been barely a harmony.)
I tell the
story of the one-person band because I think many museum professionals feel like
him. We are spinning and performing, and most people have no idea of the
preplanning it takes to make it look so easy. But, most importantly, few museum
professionals have a free hand or moment. We are just doing our best to keep
from going off-key.
Last week,
I asked what are the barriers to keep us from throwing open the doors. There
are plenty. We might think of structural racism or the classism inherent in our
funding structures. I hope to hear you articulate your thoughts in comments or
on social.
Today, I’d
like to call out a huge one. We will always find it hard to implement equity
and access, metaphorically throwing open the doors, if our leaders don’t spend
time thinking about how we do our work. We can’t serve our patrons if we
are not thinking about the people doing the work.
Museums
rarely have the funding to replicate positions. If the building operations guy
is sitting with you in a meeting, there is no second building operations person
at his desk. If you have a teen program running, there are no second teen
programs person out drumming up business. While we might not play accordions
with our feet while shaking maracas, most museum professionals are orchestrating
huge amounts of disparate forms of labor all the while making it look
effortless.
As a
field, we spend a whole lot of time evaluating patron’s experiences (hopefully).
Museums are for people, after all. But patrons are only a portion of the people
in museums. Staff is an important part of the equation. The systems that staff
work with can be empowering or inveigling. So much of our work is collective, a
lifelong group project. But as a field, we don’t always articulate our work
norms to each other. Our organizations often have people playing different
songs, with earplugs on, instead of finding ways to perform together.
What’s the
solution? Well, noticing each other, listening carefully, and trying solutions.
We do this for our visitors (hopefully). Why not for staffing functions?
Recently,
my amazing colleagues and I have started to articulate and improve many aspects
of our work. For example, we are working out what needs a meeting and what can
use an email, writing out process documents, and then putting these efforts
into action. This is stuff that any workplace does, ad hoc, but we are trying
to be purposeful and thoughtful. Why? Because while we want to do the real
work, we first have to work out how to best keep our own sanity. If we can as a
staff decrease the cognitive load of our everyday work, think of how far we can
fly. I am humbled by how awesome my colleagues have been to take the leap with
me. We’re not quite at the point where we can share all our efforts, though we
will eventually. But, in a broad sense, we are trying to be purposeful in how
we do our work, so we can free ourselves up to do our work better. BTW, Thank
you. Thank you, awesome colleagues.
To take it
back to this month’s topic, what is holding back our ability to metaphorically throw
open the doors? Time and energy are finite resources. Are we using them well? Work
practices can be a boon, helping you do more better. But efficient and
effective work practices take thought and refinement. Most museum workplaces
don’t place energy or thought into work practices as they focus their scant
energy on collections or visitors. If you can spend real time on improving
work, you might find yourself freed up, emotionally and with labor. With that
freedom, you might feel giddy and free—so free you decide it’s time to plan to
throw open the doors.
Managers have a huge part in this. Leaders often look at
their best staff, and think, ‘hey let’s put them on this project.’ But what
they might not realize is that they are potentially destabilizing that
employee. They are asking the one-person band to jump on a unicycle. Now, maybe
that performer can do that, but he will need time to practice and fall.
Similarly, when good employees are asked to take on more thing, they will need
time to fail. Many of our institutional efforts at throwing open the doors, add
labor to staff. But, leaders don’t create the systems to understand how it
impacts overall work. We are asking our staff to perform without a net with
their hands tied behind their back. They can’t throw open the doors.
What’s the solution? Leaders need to realize access and equity
isn’t solely about visitors. It’s about systems and staff too. They need to
think holistically and carefully. They need to put in the effort to support
their staff and try to support process improvements. They also need to honor
the careful orchestration that happens in every museum in the country, with
each museum professional, spinning, dancing, and performing amazing feats every
day.
---
Also, please consider passing on your ideas about what keeps
us from throwing open the doors. Tag me so I can add your thoughts to this
month’s summary post @artlust on twitter, @_art_lust_ on IG, & @brilliantideastudiollc on FB).
Thanks to Cynthia Robinson of Tufts University for talking out the one-man/ one-person band. I appreciate her reaching out and discussing it. I was worried one-person band wouldn't work since one-man band is common idiom. But we agreed one-person works--we are flexible, equitable thinkers after all. I write these things late in the evenings alone. Without a sounding board in person, I need your voices to help me.
Thanks to Cynthia Robinson of Tufts University for talking out the one-man/ one-person band. I appreciate her reaching out and discussing it. I was worried one-person band wouldn't work since one-man band is common idiom. But we agreed one-person works--we are flexible, equitable thinkers after all. I write these things late in the evenings alone. Without a sounding board in person, I need your voices to help me.