Museums

Museum without Walls

Museum without Walls

Museum without Walls

Meeting/workshop with residents and allies for the creation of the Museum of Removals (© Luiz Claudio Silva / Museum of Removals collection).

Map of the Third World's south-southeast island, 2011.

Phi Books VR (© Antonopoulou & Dare).

Houseplans, Phi Books (© Antonopoulou & Dare).

David Hall, A Situation Envisaged: The Rite II (Cultural Eclipse), 1988-90. VR experience presented at the NEoN Festival, Dundee, 2017. Development by Rhoda Ellis, curating by Adam Lockhart (© Adam Lockhart).

© The Kremer Museum

The processes that culminated in the independence of the former European colonies affected disciplines that, directly or indirectly, legitimized colonial power. The New Museology movement provoked actions that brought the museum closer to the community, making it possible to include groups related to the safeguarded collections within the institutions.

untitled (Gilbert Chaudanne, acrylic on eucatex, 1997) - access in augmented reality

Dja Guata Porã exhibition, Museu de Arte do Rio, 2017-8.

The digitization of the Bendegó meteorite with the HandySCAN 3D was done in several parts that were digitally merged.

The Museum of Removals emerged from the struggle of the residents of Vila Autódromo, a former fishing community in the west of Rio de Janeiro, against the wave of evictions carried out by the city government from 2009 until the first half of 2016 for the construction of sports complexes for the Olympics.

In addition to preserving parts of this history of dispossession that would be erased by the hegemonic narrative of the mega-events, the Museum also delimits a space of resistance against the continuing violence of urban development. In this sense, it demonstrates how an institution can articulate forms of political action both in its collection and with its presence.

As a social museology project, built on the collaboration among community members, students and professionals of different areas, the Museum invites us to recognize the publics’ authority over the constitution of their own heritage.

It is a living museum, whose collection includes not only documents and material remains but also the voice, memory and routine of the residents. This configuration is expressed even in its physical form, which cannot be reduced to a single building. The Museum of Removals is outspread in the open, across the geographical, imaginary and media territories of Vila Autódromo, in such a way that it is difficult to discern the separation between institution and community.

The streets of Vila are marked by a memory path that, on the occasion of the global pandemic, was remediated into a series of videos available on Instagram and on YouTube.

Museum of Removals

Ongoing