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  2. Collection manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collection_manager

    Liebieghaus Depot collection storage. A collection manager ensures the proper care and preservation of objects within cultural institutions such as museums, libraries, and archives. Collection managers, along with registrars, curators, and conservators, play an important role in collections care. Collection Managers and Registrars are two ...

  3. Collections management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collections_management

    Museum Properties Management Act of 1955, (16 USC, Sect. 18 [f]): explains the responsibilities and actions that may be performed by the United States secretary of the interior through the National Park Service to include accepting donations and bequests of money, purchasing museum objects and collections, making exchanges of museum objects or ...

  4. Registrar (cultural property) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Registrar_(cultural_property)

    Using the museum's Collections Management Policy, the registrar assesses whether or not the object fits the collection, determines whether the museum has the necessary resources to properly care for the object, and ascertains that provenance can be established to protect the museum from potential litigation.

  5. Collections management system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collections_Management_System

    In 1997, art historian and museum information studies consultant Robert A. Baron outlined the requirements for Collections Management Systems, not as a list of the kinds of collections object information that should be recorded, but rather as a list of collections activities such as administration, loan, exhibition, preservation, and retrieval, [13] tasks that museums had been responsible for ...

  6. Curator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curator

    Curator and exhibit designer dress a mannequin for an exhibit.. A curator (from Latin: cura, meaning 'to take care') [1] is a manager or overseer. When working with cultural organizations, a curator is typically a "collections curator" or an "exhibitions curator", and has multifaceted tasks dependent on the particular institution and its mission.

  7. Economic theory of museums - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_theory_of_museums

    The discussion of free admission to museums goes back at least as far as Hans Sloane, whose donation in 1753 was the foundation of the British Museum. It was accompanied by the explicit condition of free access, and still is today. Similarly, the Smithsonian Institution's museums are free of charge. The main argument supporting free admission ...

  8. Museum anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_Anthropology

    Specialized training for graduate students in collections-based research in museum anthropology (focusing on ethnographic rather than archaeological, biological, or linguistics collections) is provided in the Smithsonian Institution's Summer Institute in Museum Anthropology (SIMA), an initiative funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation. [26]

  9. Collections Trust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collections_Trust

    The Collections Trust is an independent UK-based charity that works with museums, libraries, galleries and archives worldwide to improve the management and use of collections. It was established in February 1977 as the Museum Documentation Association (MDA) and re-launched as the Collections Trust in 2008.