Two cases of objects featuring a blue fabric panel with round metal neck or wrist adornments and two painted signs with hairstyle diagrams

Exhibit: What Was Taken, What Endured

Museums often present themselves as neutral spaces of preservation. In reality, many collections were formed through Western colonial collecting practices that prioritized the acquisition of material over the preservation of meaning. Objects were removed from their communities and valued for their aesthetic qualities, rarity, or perceived ability to represent “vanishing” cultures. Little effort was made to record the knowledge, relationships, and responsibilities that gave those objects life. What remains in museum storage is incomplete. It reflects a system that has usually treated information as optional and people as peripheral.

This two-case display offers a limited but deliberate intervention into these legacies of collecting. It highlights structural issues embedded in museum collecting while also affirming the significance of African cultural practices represented. Together, these cases challenge what museums preserve, what they overlook, and how living cultures persist beyond institutional walls.

Contact

For further information on this event, contact the Museum Information Desk at or (217) 333-2360.

All are welcome. To request disability-related accommodations for this event, please contact Brian Cudiamat at or (217) 244-5586.