Museums Association

The Museums Association (MA) is a professional membership organisation based in London for museum, gallery and heritage professionals, museums, galleries and heritage organisations, and companies that work in the museum, gallery and heritage sector of the United Kingdom.[1][2] It also offers international membership.

History

The association was started in 1889 by a small group of museums to protect the interests of museums and galleries. Its inaugural meeting was held at the invitation of the Council of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society in York on 20 June 1889. The MA is the oldest museum association in the world.[2]

Mission

The MA's mission is inspiring museums to change lives. It advocates for museums, sets ethical standards and runs training and professional development for members wishing to further their careers.[3]

Activities

The association organises an annual conference.[4] This is Europe's largest event for museum and heritage professionals.[3]

Members receive the monthly Museums Journal.[5] The MA also produces Museum Practice online.[6]

Through its work with the Esmee Fairbairn Foundation, the MA has created the Esmee Fairbairn Collections Fund,[7] building on its 2005 report, Collections for the Future.[8]

The MA charts the health of UK museums through its annual survey, Museums in the UK.[9]

In 2012 the MA began its "Museums 2020" project to create a vision for the future of the museum sector.[10] It hopes to focus on the impacts that museums will have in the future on individuals, communities, society, and the environment.

In 2013 the MA produced "Museums Change Lives", its campaigning vision for the future of museums. "Museums Change Lives" explores the impact of museums under three main headings: wellbeing, better places, ideas and people.[11]

The MA's Transformers scheme was piloted in 2014, then rolled out nationally. Transformers is for people in mid-career, supported by any accredited museum (or museum working towards accreditation), looking to change the way they work. Participants are challenged to develop new ways of thinking and supported throughout to engage with experimental ideas, fresh thinking and learning from the experience of experts and innovators.[12]

In 2018, the MA launched Collections 2030, a research project looking at the long-term purpose, use and management of museum collections.[13]

Membership

The MA has over 8,000 individual members, 580 institutional members, and 250 corporate members.[3]

It runs a professional development scheme, with mentoring and regular training events. "AMA" denotes an Associate of the Museums Association.[14] "FMA" denotes a Fellow of the Museums Association.[15]

Governance

The MA is governed by a board of trustees,[16] from all parts of the UK museum community, elected by members. The current president, as of April 2018, is Maggie Appleton. Previous presidents include David Anderson, David Fleming, Stuart Davies, Charles Saumarez Smith, Jane Glaister, Max Hebditch, Barbara Woroncow and Virginia Tandy.

The association is independently funded by its membership.[3]

See also

References

  1. Museums Association
  2. 1 2 Geoffrey Lewis, For Instruction and Recreation: A Centenary History of the Museums Association. London: Quiller Press, 1989. ISBN 1-870948-37-8.
  3. 1 2 3 4 About the Museums Association
  4. Museums Association Conference and Exhibition
  5. Museums Journal
  6. Museum Practice The latest case studies and best practice by museum professionals around the UK, with an interactive platform for users to share their ideas.
  7. Esmee Fairbairn Collections Fund
  8. Collections for the Future
  9. Museums 2020
  10. Museums Change Lives
  11. Associateship of the Museums Association
  12. Fellowship of the Museums Association
  13. MA board of trustees
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