Penn Cultural Heritage Center Launches First-of-Its- Kind National Study on Collecting Practices, Paving Pathways for the Future of U.S. Museums
PHILADELPHIA, October 29, 2024—Today, the Penn Museum’s Penn Cultural Heritage Center (PennCHC) announced the Museums: Missions and Acquisitions (M2A) Project, an unprecedented three-year national study that will create an evidence-based framework for the future collecting decisions of U.S. museums. Funded by a National Leadership Grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), this first-of-its-kind research will enhance transparency in how museums currently make decisions about collections and identify models for their future collecting practices.
“Now more than ever, U.S. museums are being held accountable by their communities to maintain high ethical standards in their acquisition, stewardship, and deaccessioning of cultural objects. However, the field lacks the foundational information needed to guide institutional decision-making around key issues, such as what constitutes an ethical acquisition, whether continuing to collect is necessary, and what to do when an institution’s legal or ethical title to its collections comes under question,” explains Dr. Brian I. Daniels, the PennCHC’s Director of Research and Programs and the M2A Project’s principal investigator. “The M2A Project seeks to address these challenges by identifying the ways museums are acquiring objects today and how collecting fits within the broader social purpose of museums—now and in the future. This kind of information has never before been brought together on this scale and made available to museum leadership and policymakers.”
Through its extensive research during the M2A Project, the PennCHC will develop an informed dialogue that will reimagine the future role of museums in our society. Researchers will examine more than 450 American museums that have historically held cultural objects—such as art, archaeological, and ethnographic collections—and engage with practitioners and thought-leaders to better understand the lifecycle of collections from acquisition to deaccession or repatriation, as well as the ties between museums’ missions and their collecting practices.
By 2027, the PennCHC will share the M2A Project’s findings through a state-of-the-field report that synthesizes current collecting practices and spotlights innovative case studies across the U.S. museum sector. The report is intended to help museum staff at all levels, cultural leaders, trustees, grantmakers, and policymakers champion higher collecting standards and strengthen museum services for the American public.
The M2A Project comes at a critical moment as museums across the country grapple with the ownership histories of their collections and as the illegal trafficking of objects places global cultural heritage at increasing risk. This research builds upon the PennCHC’s history of addressing these challenges through collaborations with local communities and U.S. government agencies.
Since its founding in 2008, the PennCHC has worked closely with local communities around the world, such as in Afghanistan, Mexico, and Ukraine, to preserve cultural heritage while critically examining how museums collect and steward that heritage. “We founded the PennCHC, in part, to address questions about how museums represent the identities of communities whose defining objects and cultural heritage have been stolen,” explains Dr. Richard M. Leventhal, the PennCHC’s Executive Director and the M2A Project’s co-principal investigator. “With the M2A Project, we will finally be able to connect the dots and understand why and how the cultural property imported into the United States is acquired by museums.”
The M2A Project grows out of the PennCHC’s Cultural Property Experts On Call (CPEOC) Program, a partnership with the U.S. Department of State’s Cultural Heritage Coordinating Committee aimed at protecting and preserving international cultural property from looting, theft, and trafficking. Since 2020, the PennCHC has worked with subject matter experts from more than 100 museums and universities to identify the origins of cultural property in federal investigations and document the scope of the illicit artifacts trade. The M2A Project leverages the team’s experience in developing large datasets and marshaling the expertise of museums to address critical concerns around collecting cultural heritage.
“We are very pleased that the Penn Cultural Heritage Center is implementing such an important project and that its expertise has been recognized with a National Leadership Grant. This complements the Penn Museum’s proactive approach to collections practices and its leadership in our field,” adds Dr. Christopher Woods, the Williams Director at the Penn Museum and Avalon Professor for the Humanities in the Penn School of Arts and Sciences. “The M2A Project will provide a source of much-needed information that will help museums around the world address the cultural heritage in their care in a more ethical manner.”
This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (MG255529-OMS-24).
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About the Penn Museum
The Penn Museum’s mission is to be a center for inquiry and the ongoing exploration of humanity for our University of Pennsylvania, regional, national, and global communities, following ethical standards and practices.
Through conducting research, stewarding collections, creating learning opportunities, sharing stories, and creating experiences that expand access to archaeology and anthropology, the Museum builds empathy and connections across diverse cultures
The Penn Museum is open Tuesday-Sunday, 10:00 am-5:00 pm. It is open until 8:00 pm on first Wednesdays of the month. The Café is open Tuesday-Thursday, 9:00 am-3:00 pm and Friday and Saturday, 10:00 am-3:00 pm. On Sundays, the Café is open 10:30 am-2:30 pm. For information, visit www.penn.museum, call 215.898.4000, or follow @PennMuseum on social media.
About the Institute of Museum and Library Services
The Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) is the primary source of federal support for the nation's libraries and museums. IMLS advances, supports, and empowers America's museums, libraries, and related organizations through grantmaking, research, and policy development. IMLS envisions a nation where individuals and communities have access to museums and libraries to learn from and be inspired by the trusted information, ideas, and stories they contain about our diverse natural and cultural heritage.
About the Penn Cultural Heritage Center
The Penn Cultural Heritage Center (PennCHC), a research center at the Penn Museum, is committed to the preservation of cultural heritage as part of the foundation for social justice worldwide. The PennCHC implements a bottom-up approach to heritage preservation, ensuring that ideas, decisions, and narratives about the past rest in the hands of local communities.
Founded in 2008 and directed by Richard M. Leventhal, the PennCHC draws upon the expertise of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology and collaborates with researchers across the University of Pennsylvania and beyond whose research intersects with contemporary heritage issues. Since its inception, the PennCHC has created forums that bring together academics with non-academic stakeholders in cultural property policy programs.
Participants from the PennCHC
- Brian I. Daniels, Ph.D., Principal Investigator (Director of Research and Programs)
- Richard M. Leventhal, Ph.D., Co-Principal Investigator (Executive Director)
- Corinne Muller, Administrative Coordinator
- Kayla Kane, Research Coordinator
- Soleil Hawley, Research Analyst
- Daniela Tanico, Esq., Research Analyst
- Alyssa Thiel, M.A., Research Analyst
- Stefano Andronio, M.A., Graduate Student Research Assistant
- Hakimah Abdul-Fattah, M.A., Graduate Student Research Assistant
- Maggie Yuan, Work-Study Assistant
- Emily Jeong, Intern
- Julia Orientale, Intern
Images available for download here.