Remuseum Conversations
Join Remuseum’s Founding Director, Stephen Reily, in conversation with museum innovators.
CAN YOU AFFORD FREE ADMISSION?
This Remuseum Conversation shines a light on leaders from the only two U.S. art museums to introduce free general admission in recent years: Heidi Zuckerman (Orange County Museum of Art) and Jessica Kay Ogdin (Yellowstone Art Museum). Developing themes illustrated in “Case Studies in Innovation: Access”, these innovative leaders explain the impact, benefits, and challenges from “going free.”
Read “Case Studies in Innovation: Access“
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RIGHT FOR ITS PLACE
Bringing life to key content from Case Studies in Innovation: Audience Development, Stephen Reily and Art Gallery of Ontario Director Stephan Jost discuss the AGO’s success in representing and engaging the fast-growing, diverse community of Toronto – and securing more financial support for that work.
Read “Case Studies in Innovation: Audience Development”
Watch on Youtube
CONTESTED COLLECTIONS AND NEW MODES OF INTERPRETATION
Stephen Reily is joined by Susan de Menil and Shalini Le Gall for a version of their panel conversation at the 2025 Association of Art Museum Curators conference.
For many years, museums have been addressing their responsibilities regarding art over which others may have claims. While some claims have led to traditional (and sometimes prolonged) legal disputes, others have led to a more nuanced approach to the legal and moral claims of others, which in turn beget a new approach to interpretating and explaining both the art and the museum’s relationship to it.
The premise of this conversation is to explore how evolving concepts of ownership have introduced new voices into the museum’s work and inspired new modes of interpretation in all areas of art. When binary concepts of ownership (it is either “ours” or “theirs”) begin changing it also generates a more nuanced and adaptable approach to the way curators talk about all the objects they share with the public.
Susan de Menil shares the story of an early example of a museum that acquired art with the purpose of identifying its rightful owner and then entered into a unique partnership in exhibiting and presenting it to the public; this work led her to create the Art & Antiquities Blockchain Consortium, which recognizes that the rights of ownership are multiple and can be divided in non-binary ways by museums and communities.
Shalini Le Gall explains how the Portland Museum of Art approached the reinstallation of its collection and the acquisition of contemporary indigenous art to address new modes of shared stewardship. Such work can redefine what a public collection means, both in legal terms and in the invitation the museum extends to outside voices to explain and give meaning to art.
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