Oh Canada Part II – Museum Start-up advice from the Textile Museum of Canada

Elaborate Silk Road Embroidery

In the last post, I promised to summarize the advice so generously shared by the Executive Director and Curators of the Textile Museum of Canada. This is my best shot, and if I missed or garbled the wisdom they imparted, I hope someone will correct me and expand on this great base. Sorry – no pix of the advice team;  they were all too focused on sharing info to pause for a photo op.

1.       To secure funding, it is crucial that the Museum focus on the education and research aspects of the institution, not just its collection – The Museum must be an organization with a well-defined vision that will be attractive to funders.

2.       Adequate operating funding means, ideally, having in hand a million a year for five years by the time the Museum opens. (yikes – raising the sum – or getting commitments for $5 million is a tad daunting);  Other museums have confirmed this is a realistic sum for an all-professional paid staff. This big figure assumed that by then the Museum would have a core staff of four: Curator/Director – Researcher – Installer – Financial person.

3.       The Museum must have a clear scope of the collection policy and adhere to it. It is most important to have good documentation and provenance information when accepting objects.  Condition of the objects is an important consideration. The Museum must have the strength of will to reject beautiful objects (deftly) that don’t fit the Museum’s collection criteria, or that would create a conservation burden.

4.       It is important to be able to contextualize the objects in the collection – to make them meaningful, useful, relevant and interesting to the general public.

5.       The Museum formation team must be strategic and politically savvy as it recruits board members, basing its choices on the following:

  • skill sets,
  • fundraising capacity,
  • political connections,
  • the willingness of prospective  members to donate services.

6.       The Museum formation team will benefit from accessing the list-serve for the Textile Society of America- a wealth of good information [since my trip to Toronto I followed have joined the TSA so I can be part of that information stream].

7.      The Museum must have a good collections management system, implemented at the beginning. The staff of the TMC suggested Canadian Heritage Info Network – CHIN -  as a great resource. They warned that if complete documentation is not entered at the outset, the department will never be able to correct the errors and omissions, and will never catch up.  [A curator from the Royal Ontario Museum shared detailed information about the ROM’s system; there were 19 pages of documentation just to explain how to complete the various fields.]

8.       The Knitting Heritage Museum formation team needs to tap expert resources to understand the conservation standards as well as the specific distinctions among stabilization, restoration and repair.

9.       The TMC stated the method of dealing with the insect problem of textile eating insects – Bag the object and deep freeze it at minus 8 degrees Fahrenheit for two weeks. That could mean a lot of freezers will be needed at start-up.

10.   The TMC collects historic textiles, yet often builds its exhibits around contemporary objects and developments. This way the past serves the future.

TMC has a fabulous gift shop, too.  Their manager, John Alexander, explained merchandising policies – how all the items for sale relate back to the textile theme, and how to gauge when demand is saturated.

Unravelling Textiles

Unravelling Textiles

I snapped up several great new titles on Knitting as an art medium, and my current bedside read: Unravelling Textiles, A Handbook for the Preservation of Textile Collections,  by Foekje Boersma; originally written in Dutch, translated and into English. (For some reason I am avoiding the chapter on carpet beetles . . . . )

Thanks so much to the awesome folks at the Textile Museum of Canada: Shauna McCabe, Executive Director; Sarah Quinton, Curatorial Director; Roxane Shaughnessy, Curator for Collections and Access; and Natalia Nekrassova, Curator for Collections and Research. Their advice was firmly, but warmly, delivered and came with the best wishes for the success of the Knitting Heritage Museum.

Mandates and Budgets and Boards! OH MY!!

Did Roxane really suggest that Textile Society might be interested in a poster presentation of our progress?  What might we able to report about the steps toward a Knitting Museum by Sept. 2012 that textile professionals would want to hear?!?!?!?

Next Post – Wisdom from Stratford’s Archivist.

Oh Canada Part I – Bedazzled in Toronto

Italian Silk and Gilt Intarsia Jacket at the ROM

My quest to create a Knitting Heritage Museum kicked into high gear in June when I asked the Yarn Group of The National NeedleArts Association for a grant to cover symposium expenses. Much to my delight, the Yarn Group made a grant of $5000, $2000 more than I had requested. At the end of the meeting, Kathleen Kroeger of Bejeweled-Bedazzled  rushed up and invited me and Amy, City Knits’ manager, to visit Toronto to research how the Canadians treat their textile heritage.  Besides being an amazing hostess, she is the creator of glorious glass buttons, so light that they will work on even delicate hand knit sweaters.  I am  still digesting all the wondrous things that happened during our visit – both as a tourist and a researcher.

On Monday, we enjoyed a special tour of the Textile Collection of the Royal Ontario Museum  led by Mitzi Beale, long time volunteer with the ROM, and my traveling buddy from our life -changing 1996 Scandinavian Knitting Tour.

The Italian knit jacket was a breathtaking masterwork from the 1600‘s, knit of silk and silver gilt thread using the intarsia technique in an impossibly fine gauge.  We are still wondering about the drawer of knitted and crocheted bags and lace:  seven objects, but only six descriptions.  I guess that means another email to a curator, and another “crochet gets no respect” anecdote for the files. We were nourished in many ways by a delicious dinner hosted by our friend Norm.

Silk Oasis on the Silk Road: Bukhara - Exhibit at the Textile Museum of Canada

On Tuesday, we were gifted with an astounding mini-seminar at the Textile Museum of Canada/. Executive Director  Shauna McCabe arranged for us to spend an hour with three key curators. I still haven’t yet absorbed all the wisdom they offered. [I’ll summarize their advice in Part II.}Our hostess Kathleen was so generous: Bead store 101 for Amy at BeadFX, shrimp on the BarBee, swimming with silver globes under a silvery summer moon; bedazzling bra straps and creating jewelry at midnight, and soaking up personalized tours of the special byways that make Toronto such a wonderful city.

 

On Wednesday, after a shopping spree at Romni Wools, Toronto's mecca for knitters,  we visited charming Cambridge, and fiber genius Kathy Fisher.

Hostess Kathleen Kroeger, Mitzi Beale and Kathy Fisher

She shared amazing insights about the modern chemistry of medieval plant dyeing, an introduction to Viking whirling spindles. I am in awe of her sheer energy and intellectual pursuits. Who knew that black walnut husks yield less dye if they have grown near the road in vehicular pollution, than trees grown in the cleaner air of the woods?

Wednesday evening Amy and I saw Camelot at the Stratford Festival was sublime, from the opening hawk flight (yes, a real hawk!), through the love songs with cunning lyrics, to the despicably evil Mordred who preyed on the human frailties of King, Queen and Knight, locked in a love triangle — all enhanced by the tour de force of costuming expertise.

Granny Square Jacket from the Stratford Festival Archives

Still the highlight of our Stratford visit was a tour of costumes, and props (Amy is a gifted designer, whether sewing or knitting), followed by our lunch with Stratford’s Archives Director, Dr. Francesca Marini. Though busy with founding a museum for the Stratford Festival,  she found time to share a very special costume from her archives with us: a bright green granny square suit, crocheted from fabric strips, as well as great advice for a start-up museum, which I’ll save for another day.

How wonderful to have so many new friends “up north.” I can’t thank you all enough. Can’t wait to return.

  • Up Coming Topics:  
    • Oh Canada! Part II – Museum Start-up Advice
    • Building the Board;
    • Selecting a Symposium Date;
    • What makes me think that I am the one to start up this Museum???
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 981 other followers