I think the general mood in the field is ambivalence. There are moments of hope, like the work of MASS Action, and then plenty of problems like the Marciano Foundation's closure. There is plenty of good and plenty of bad, and we don't know if as a field we should call heads. The path we take is not completely our choice; though we all have more choice than we might imagine. In trying to make sense of everyone's tweets, I decided to do some preparatory reading. Dear readers, I value you all, but I rarely read 1 book let alone two as source reading for a post. :> First, I read The Optimist's Telescope by Bina Venkataraman, a book about the challenges of predicting the future. In essence, the book said our present grounds so wholly as to bias our predictions of the future. I moved on to The Drunkard's Walk by Leonard Mlodinow, which basically tells me chance is as likely a force in our life as choice. I'm not sure either book helped me write the post, but they did remind me I can only be wrong in the predictions I offer. So what will our future look like? If we toss heads, we'll end up with a landscape very similar to what we have. Many predict there will be more museums:Blog research in 2029 museum pros will have solved which work issue?— Seema Rao (@artlust) December 21, 2019
We'll still be enamored with technology:Blog research—in 2029 are there:— Seema Rao (@artlust) December 14, 2019
We might toss the coin, though, and win. I asked us what our most ardent wish for the field would be. That offered so many positive and exciting possibilities for our future. Mimosa Shah shared her ideas of an inclusive field:(Blog Research) In the future museums will have— Seema Rao (@artlust) December 17, 2019
And, many people who took the poll thought our audiences would be more diverse:Stop creating so many barriers for people to enter the GLAM profession, especially BIPOC persons who do not have the capital to participate in established tracks.— The Anatomy of Refusals (@mimosaishere) December 19, 2019
This diversity doesn't mean more of everything though. Our leaders have learned to prioritize. We do less better, as Matt Tarr and Susan Edwards suggest:Blog research- Orgs will MOST likely improve to do better with audiences by 2029 in which way?— Seema Rao (@artlust) December 22, 2019
In short we move from lip service to action, as Scott Stulen suggests:Do less well... Or do less, well... #focus #notAllThingsToAllPeople— Matt Tarr (@matthewtarr) December 20, 2019
How do we do this? First, museums start repositioning themselves:They start actually doing all the things they talk about doing. (Inclusivity, accessibly, diversifying collections and really focusing on audience needs)— Scott Stulen (@middlewest) December 19, 2019
enough with the initiatives, just give up power— PJ Gubatina Policarpio (@pjpolicarpio) December 19, 2019
That they learn to confront & discuss their challenging histories rather than hiding them away in storage rooms
— Annelies Van de Ven (@archaeoa1) December 19, 2019
Also better pay for employees, more inclusive hiring, co-creation with communities from the conception stage of projects, more ethical sponsorship, ... so many things!
And, they have the money to make these positive changes:More inclusivity at all levels: staffing, collections, exhibitions, and visitors.
— Diana West (@dmabelwest) December 19, 2019
The thing I realized as I read those books about the future and how choice and chance interact is tomorrow is always the future. Tomorrow at work you can make choices that make the field a bit better. Every day, you have the opportunity to pivot this field toward equity. Every person in every organization can choose to try to change things. I'm not talking change-maker level stress. I just mean the little choices. You can try to explain your reasons for your choices. You can listen to other people's reasons. You can choose to reply to your staff member's emails. You can choose to smile at your colleagues. You can choose to find ways to create the middle ground. We are all working on the future of this field, every day. As Mar Dixon reminded me, we've been building this future for the last decade:My wish--not expectation--is that they receive far more funding and use it to (1) work toward decolonization, (2) better compensate employees, and (3) increase public access.
— Marya VH (@maryaevh) December 19, 2019
We are the future. It's not up to one giant coin toss. Our future is a million little actions. Our best intentions are useless, but our so-so actions are everything. Any action toward good moves this ship toward a future I want to see. We are charting our course every day. I want to be going toward a positive future. With all of steering this ship, I am optimistic we can get there.Same as last decade - they listen to their community, use social for less marketing and more sharing and get more diverse.
— Mar Dixon - Ready for 2020! (@MarDixon) December 19, 2019