Ancient vases in modern vitrines: The sensory dynamics and social implications of museum display

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Abstract

This contribution explores the changing sensory priorities underpinning the display of Greek painted pottery in European collections. The focus is on the introduction of glass-fronted cabinets in the purpose-designed public museums of art and archaeology of the mid-nineteenth century. Contrary to expectations, the contemporaneous debates surrounding the use of gallery furniture show that the museum stakeholders were less worried about the safety of the objects than the prospect of middle- and working-class visitors being exposed to the sexualized imagery on Athenian pottery. A survey of the different traditions of display in Britain and continental Europe highlights the shift from the multisensory engagements in early modern elite collections with vases as evidence of ancient custom to the selective viewing of the objects' painted decoration as works of art whose proper interpretation called for classical education.

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APA

Meyer, C. (2020). Ancient vases in modern vitrines: The sensory dynamics and social implications of museum display. Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies, 63(1), 91–109. https://doi.org/10.1093/bics/qbaa009

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