News – Newsletters – en2019-03-31T18:06:40-04:00

News – Newsletters

Decolonisation and Restitution – moving towards a more holistic perspective and relational approach

Michèle Rivet The first afternoon of the ICOM Kyoto 2019 General Conference featured a panel on Decolonisation and Restitution. The panel was held in the main hall, with translation in English, French, Spanish, and German. Representatives of 10 ICOM national committees presented on the panel, including Canada. Michèle Rivet, Vice-President of the Board of Trustees of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights and Board member of ICOM-Canada gave a presentation titled, From Decolonisation to Indigenization: the road to equality. After having given an historical overview of Canadian examples of policies and practices on restitution and repatriation with museums, she illustrated with five examples the work now being done by museums throughout Canada, discussed the principles underlying museums’ actions, and concluded with challenges still facing museums today. The full version of this presentation can be found here.

ICOM Canada and the Museum Definition

Marie Lalonde This year, the ICOM held its triennial conference in Kyoto, Japan from September 1 to 7, welcoming 4,500 delegates from 119 national and 30 international committees including ICOM Canada and its members. This resulted in the highest triennial attendance on record.  Museums as Cultural Hubs: The Future of Tradition theme inspired a rich program of plenaries and concurrent sessions alongside meetings and study tours where delegates were offered memorable experiences and professional exchanges in the unique museums of the host country. Plenaries reflected the evolving role of museums and their impact on global challenges, with an overall program aligned with the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Topics included Curating Sustainable Futures, reconciliation, and intangible heritage. ICOM Canada was invited to present Canada’s experience with decolonization (see the article below) and on the need to develop disaster resilient museums, with the [...]

The Museum Definition – The Backbone of ICOM

Michèle Rivet The Museum Definition discussion was constant at the ICOM Kyoto 2019 General Conference, in the corridors, at the coffee breaks, everywhere. Released by ICOM in July, the proposed definition immediate sparked a petition from ICOM-Europe requesting a postponement on the vote to approve the definition. ICOM-Canada, in an August 15 Board meeting, was the first non-European national committee to join that petition. On September 7, the Extraordinary General Assembly voted in favour of the postponement. THE ROLE PLAYED BY ICOFOM DURING THE KYOTO CONFERENCE ICOFOM has been actively involved with ICOM’s defining the “museum” process as ICOFOM has a long history of meetings and publications on the topic. Amongst the most current ones are the international symposia held in 2017 in Paris and 2018 in Cuba. During the Kyoto conference, ICOFOM organised a half-day meeting on the Museum definition. This meeting included Marie Lalonde, Chair of ICOM-Canada in [...]

Message from the Chair – January 2020

Dear ICOM Canada members, This past year was a very productive and successful one for ICOM Canada and its members. Of particularly interest to all of us this year was the ICOM discussion on the proposed new museum definition, with ICOM Canada playing an important role, engaging members and working in closer collaboration with colleagues across the globe to address this fundamental matter central to understanding our work. On behalf of the ICOM Canada Executive, I am pleased to highlight some of our accomplishments and work in 2019. It was a very busy year! In April we hosted our Annual General Meeting during the Canadian Museums Association conference in Toronto. At our AGM we welcomed two new Board members to the team: Leah Best (Royal BC Museum) and Dr. Karine Duhamel (Canadian Museum for Human Rights). The Board has worked diligently in 2019 to launch our new website (www.icomcanada.org), re-energize [...]

ICOM Canada Joins Cultural Diplomacy Research Project

This article was released in the ICOM Canada September 2019 e-newsletter on Cultural Diplomacy. See more articles from this issue here. Lynda Jessup (Queen’s University at Kingston) and Dr. Sascha Priewe (Royal Ontario Museum) ICOM Canada joins partners in Canada, US and Mexico for a new multi-partner research project to study cultural diplomacy. There is ample evidence that we are living in an increasingly adversarial moment: a world of global terrorism, refugee crises, and divisive partisan and nationalist politics. While mitigating cultural conflict through traditional diplomatic channels remains an urgent focus of governments, efforts are failing. They are failing not only because the re-emergent, polarizing forces of protectionism, xenophobia and extremism are "wicked problems” – complex issues that do not offer a clear or apparent solution – but also because the practice of diplomacy itself has shifted.   In response to these concerns, the North American Cultural Diplomacy Initiative (NACDI) is thrilled to announce a new [...]

Senate report: Cultural Diplomacy at the Front Stage of Canada’s Foreign Policy

This article was released in the ICOM Canada September 2019 e-newsletter on Cultural Diplomacy. See more articles from this issue here. The “Cultural Diplomacy at the Front Stage of Canada’s Foreign Policy” report is the first parliamentary review of cultural diplomacy since the 1995 Canadian foreign policy review. This report, which views cultural diplomacy as a country’s promotion of national interests through arts and culture, echoes one of the earlier review’s main points: to establish cultural diplomacy as a pillar of Canadian foreign policy.  After 27 hearings with more than 60 witnesses and a number of written briefs by the Standing Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade, the report was launched at the National Gallery on June 11, 2019. The report urges the Government of Canada to create a comprehensive cultural diplomacy strategy, as in the words of Committee chair, Senator Raynell Andreychuk, “[t]he full reach and potential of cultural diplomacy, as [...]

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