Architecture & Design NOW Series: Kevin MacLean

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Architecture & Design NOW: Kevin MacLean
I have an old, old...
6 p.m., November 19, 2018
Room L1060, LINC building
Free admission, everyone welcome

After a quarter century managing the Galt Museum’s collection, Collections Technician Kevin MacLean has developed conclusions on cultural objects and their capacity to transmit who we are and where we live. One unintended outcome of his thinking is a more efficient use of resources.

At the beginning of his career, MacLean found that the Galt valued its objects on near physical form alone. This contrasts with today when their value is equally measured by the no. and quality of words solicited on their distinct ownership and use.

This shift did not happen overnight.

First, it took MacLean several years to recognize his privilege in being able to connect with specific living memory. 

Second, he decided that best practice was to solicit and record objects’ contexts…at the point of donation.

Objects’ voices in the Museum should come from persons intimately familiar with them. Intangible voices are what make the Galt’s objects unique to its communities and region, expanding their value for interpretation, personal connection and Museum use.

Which returns us to sustainability. The greater the extent to which we develop our objects’ intangible value, the more useful objects are to us. Museums can do more with less. Simply being “old” is not good enough.

 

Kevin MacLean has deep roots in Lethbridge. He and his wife, Tami, and their two kids, Duncan & Riley, represent the fifth generation of Kevin’s maternal family to live along “William Street” – present day 15th Street. When not wandering his neighbourhood's sidewalks, talking to residents, Kevin can be found at the Galt Museum & Archives. Hired by the Galt in 1994, his responsibilities there include the registration, research and preservation of Lethbridge's cultural object collection. Kevin’s interest outside of work and family is developing of a sense of place and connection in his Lethbridge neighbourhood. He credits his participation in a local Jane’s Walk in 2014 as the spark that ignited his passion for researching and sharing his neighbourhood's heritage.

Photo courtesy of Lethbridge Herald. 

Room or Area: 
L1060

We wish to thank the Galt Museum & Archives for their collaboration in making this lecture possible.


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