Reimagining the Historic House Museum coming to Nashville in July
Ken Turino introducing the Reimagining House Museum workshop at Bayou Bend, Houston, 2025. In July, Ken Turino and I will be leading the one-day Reimagining the Historic House Museum workshop on Friday, July 10, 2026, at Belle Meade Historic Site & Winery in Nashville, Tennessee. It's designed specifically for people working at house museums and historic sites who are wrestling with familiar questions: How do we refresh our programs?
Reimagining the Historic House Museum coming to Nashville in July
Ken Turino introducing the Reimagining House Museum workshop at Bayou Bend, Houston, 2025. In July, Ken Turino and I will be leading the one-day Reimagining the Historic House Museum workshop on Friday, July 10, 2026, at Belle Meade…
24.02.2026 16:40 —
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
When Oversight Becomes Bullying: Lessons from the Smithsonian
In December 2025, the White House sent a letter to the Smithsonian Institution requesting extensive documentation related to exhibitions, educational materials, internal processes, and collections. The request followed an earlier directive tied to an executive order and was framed as part of federal oversight. In principle, this kind of oversight is not only appropriate—it is necessary. The President and senior staff have a responsibility to ensure that federally-funded institutions are operating effectively and that public resources are protected from waste, fraud, or abuse.
When Oversight Becomes Bullying: Lessons from the Smithsonian
In December 2025, the White House sent a letter to the Smithsonian Institution requesting extensive documentation related to exhibitions, educational materials, internal processes, and collections. The request followed an earlier…
12.01.2026 14:51 —
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Navigating Community Engagement in Museums in a Charged Political Climate
I attended a timely and thought-provoking session at this year’s AASLH Annual Meeting called Bridging Divides: Navigating Challenging Histories Through Community Engagement on September 13. It gathered five panelists—Angela O’Neal, Columbus Metropolitan Library, Columbus, OH; Rebecca Asmo, Ohio Humanities, Columbus, OH; Jason Crabill, Decorative Arts Center of Ohio, Lancaster, OH; Kaitlyn Donaldson, Lorain Historical Society, Lorain, OH; Doreen Uhas-Sauer, Rickenbacker Woods Foundation, Columbus, OH—who shared practical advice for how museums and historic sites can continue doing meaningful work in an era of heightened scrutiny, political pressure, and declining trust.
Navigating Community Engagement in Museums in a Charged Political Climate
I attended a timely and thought-provoking session at this year’s AASLH Annual Meeting called Bridging Divides: Navigating Challenging Histories Through Community Engagement on September 13. It gathered five panelists—Angela…
30.09.2025 18:00 —
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Exploring the Over the Rhine neighborhood of Cincinnati. First stop the Music Hall, founded by an all-woman board. #AASLH2025
12.09.2025 14:17 —
👍 2
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Job Fairs: A New Public Program for Museums?
This fall, the Museum Studies Program at George Washington University is joining forces again with the History and Art History Departments to offer a Museums+ Internship Fair. Now in its second year, the fair connects undergraduate and graduate students with a wide range of museum and history internship opportunities in the DC area. For a couple of hours on a Friday afternoon, students will gather in the atrium of the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design to meet representatives from dozens of institutions—including the National Gallery of Art, Hillwood Estate, the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Supreme Court of the United States, White House Historical Association, and many more.
Job Fairs: A New Public Program for Museums?
This fall, the Museum Studies Program at George Washington University is joining forces again with the History and Art History Departments to offer a Museums+ Internship Fair. Now in its second year, the fair connects undergraduate and graduate students…
02.09.2025 14:23 —
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Reimagining Historic House Museums: Two Workshops Coming Up!
House museums across the country are confronting difficult questions about relevance, sustainability, and meaning in the 21st century. What worked twenty years ago—traditional tours, decorative arts displays, and carefully preserved interiors—often isn’t enough today to engage visitors or generate financial stability. Communities are changing, audiences have new expectations, and historic sites are under increasing pressure to demonstrate their value. That’s why Ken Turino (formerly at Historic New England) and I developed…
Reimagining Historic House Museums: Two Workshops Coming Up!
House museums across the country are confronting difficult questions about relevance, sustainability, and meaning in the 21st century. What worked twenty years ago—traditional tours, decorative arts displays, and carefully preserved…
19.08.2025 15:08 —
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Designing for Impact: Why Reflection Should Be at the Heart of Your Museum Experience
In today's fast-moving, attention-fragmented world, museums are under pressure to do more than just deliver content--they need to make it stick. Whether it's an online program, a guided tour, or an immersive performance, professionals are increasingly asking: How do we create experiences that matter? Three recent studies point to a clear answer: if you want to deepen impact, design for reflection…
Designing for Impact: Why Reflection Should Be at the Heart of Your Museum Experience
In today's fast-moving, attention-fragmented world, museums are under pressure to do more than just deliver content--they need to make it stick. Whether it's an online program, a guided tour, or an immersive…
15.07.2025 13:56 —
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
What Should Stay, Grow, or Go? Let the Impact–Sustainability Matrix Help
Back in 2014, I shared a classic business matrix as a tool to help museums and historic sites think more strategically about their programs and activities. It plotted mission alignment on one axis and financial sustainability on the other, providing a quick visual way to categorize whether something was worth continuing, needed revision, or should be reconsidered altogether, using metaphors of stars, hearts, cash cows, and bunnies.
What Should Stay, Grow, or Go? Let the Impact–Sustainability Matrix Help
Back in 2014, I shared a classic business matrix as a tool to help museums and historic sites think more strategically about their programs and activities. It plotted mission alignment on one axis and financial sustainability…
17.06.2025 15:05 —
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0