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Natick History Museum Hosts “Active Collections” Workshop

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On October 3, staff and volunteers from more than 20 New England history museums filled the Natick History Museum for a half-day workshop, “Developing Active Collections at Your Museum,” with independent curator and author Rainey Tisdale. The workshop was the first public event in the newly restored Natick History Museum, which will reopen on October 21.

Tisdale co-founded the influential Active Collections movement, which advocates for leaner, more focused collections at small history museums. The movement urges practical reforms to museum practice, including easing the process of inter-institutional loans, streamlining the deaccessioning of objects lacking provenance or educational value, and assigning collections objects to “tiers” according to their usefulness in sharing important local stories with museum audiences.

“Artifacts are a compelling way to connect with the past,” writes Tisdale, who directed the Old State House Museum for eight years and taught in the Tufts University museum studies program. “But some objects support our missions better than others—not based on monetary value or rarity, but on the stories they tell and the ideas they illuminate. The ones that provide the most public value should get the largest share of our time and resources.”

The October 3 event attendees included curators and directors of small history museums and historical societies throughout Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Maine. Framingham History Center director Annie Murphy called the workshop “fantastic,” adding, “I’m going to get [Tisdale’s] book and make it required reading among staff.”

Rainey Tisdale is co-author of Creativity in Museum Practice (2013) with Linda Norris and co-editor of Active Collections (2017). For more about the Active Collections movement, please visit www.activecollections.org.

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Miniature Home Is a Centerpiece of Upcoming Exhibit at Natick History Museum

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Gene Martin works on a miniature replica of the Victorian farm house where his wife, Janet, grew up on Cottage Street in Natick. In the background is Martin’s miniature replica of the home he and Janet built in 1955 to raise their three children. The 1955 replica is on display in the Natick History Museum.

The Metrowest Daily News reported on the miniature house at the center of our new exhibit, Your Dream House: At Home in Postwar Natick, at the Natick History Museum.
Read the article here

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