TMS Vol1no1 Chipangura
TMS Vol1no1 Chipangura
TMS Vol1no1 Chipangura
www.themuseumscholar.org
Abstract This paper analyzes how the Mutare Museum, Zimbabwe, intends to invoke dynamism within its
stagnant displays by prioritizing visitor needs through offering educational services that are more inclusive,
interactive, and participatory. Visitors no longer identify the museum as a bastion of high culture but rather as
a place to interact, interrogate, and to engage with the collection, and learn in a relaxed atmosphere.
Essentially, this entails thinking critically about the contested nature of exhibitions in respect to the agency and
knowledgeability of visitors. Many of the exhibits at the Mutare Museum still reference the legacy and bias of
colonization. The proposed re-arrangement of displays in the Beit Gallery will echo the museum’s new
approach to dialogical interactions. Upon the installation of the new exhibition, it is envisaged that visitor
experiences will be underpinned by a variety of approaches to visitor education.
About the Author Njabulo Chipangura is employed by the National Museums and Monuments of Zimbabwe as
an archaeologist and is based in Eastern Zimbabwe at the Mutare Museum. He holds a Master of Arts in
Museums and Heritage Studies from the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. His research interests
include looking at the configuration and reconfiguration of museum collection and exhibition practices within
colonial and post-colonial settings, and the depiction of the “other” within ethnographic exhibitions. In addition,
he has researched the dissemination of public culture and the sense of community heritage ownership at
cultural festivals hosted on heritage sites. He is currently a Wenner Gren Wadsworth African Doctoral Fellow in
the Anthropology Department at the University of Witwatersrand in South Africa. His Ph.D. research looks at the
archaeological ethnographies of indigenous artisanal mining of gold in Eastern Zimbabwe.
The museum is a potent social metaphor and mode of representation of societies, their
history, and relationship with our cultures.1 Today, most museums are seeking to engage a
more diverse range of visitors by moving towards collaborative projects and activities
designed through dialogical and inclusive participation.2 This is in contrast with the
traditional approach of the museum as an official collector of objects, even in the absence
of voices of the represented groups – the so-called “other.” However, at Mutare Museum,
visitors and communities are yearning for more participatory and interactive experiences
with collections. Such experiences must move beyond the outdated view that visitor
interaction with museum objects should go no further than visual observation. 3 For example
in 2014, during the celebration of the Mutare Museum Golden Jubilee, visitors were given
free rides around the city in a collection of vintage cars. This was a transformation for the
museum in which a connection was established with visitors.4 This paper analyzes how the
Mutare Museum intends to further invoke dynamism in its stagnant displays by prioritizing
Figure 1:
Located in Eastern Zimbabwe, the Mutare Museum is one of the five museums under the
administration of the National Museums and Monuments of Zimbabwe (NMMZ). This
museum was established in 1964 and is a by-product of colonization, which started in
1890. Zimbabwe, formerly called Southern Rhodesia, obtained its independence in 1980
from Britain. The Mutare Museum is primarily the national collector of antiquities and
transport objects, although it also houses botanical, ethnographic, and archaeological
collections. The other four museums include: the Zimbabwe Museum of Human Sciences, in
Harare, which specializes in human science collections including archaeological and
ethnographic objects; the Natural Museum, in Bulawayo, looks after natural history
collections; the Military Museum, in Gweru, maintains the military collections; and the Great
Zimbabwe Museum, in Masvingo, specializes in the conservation of free-standing dry-stone
structures. The Mutare Museum (formerly the Umtali Museum) opened its doors to the
public on the 13th of September 1964. Since that time, exhibitions at the museum have
been stagnant and biased toward colonialism such that many aspects of an independent
Zimbabwe are ignored; hence the growing need to revamp the outdated exhibitions.5
The Mutare Museum seeks to engage a more diverse range of visitors and move towards
collaborative projects and activities designed through dialogical and inclusive methods. Part
The Beit gallery measures approximately 224 square meters and contains a wide range of
exhibitions that cover themes related to the traditional aspects of the Shona culture in
Zimbabwe.8 Upon entering the gallery, visitors view a case containing transport accessories
in which the artifacts have been placed as if they are in a storeroom with no orienting
labels.9 Opposite this display are zoological displays which include an animal tree and two
cases with different species of insects.10 Along the length of the gallery are a variety of
mixed objects including geological displays, different types of traditional artifacts, such as
drums and games. There is also a display case with beads, head rests, snuff boxes, and a
portrait of a traditional chief adorned with symbols of chieftainship, such as badges and
ceremonial artifacts.11 Additionally, there are groups of objects depicting traditional modes
of transportation lying on the floor of the gallery including bark boats and sleds. Lastly, there
is an archaeological display with cases containing the prehistory of Manicaland.
In this current state, the variety and display of the exhibitions in the Beit gallery do not
represent any meaningful story and visitors could easily mistake it for a storeroom.12 There
are neither clear-cut objectives nor specific themes addressing the visitor. Further, this type
of scenography presented in this gallery fails to do justice to the social biography of these
collections, which cannot be understood in terms of a single unchanging identity, but rather,
by tracing the succession of meanings attached to the objects as they move through space
and time.13 The artifacts are displayed on the floor in an almost derogatory way, presenting
the objects as if they were strange and exotic, and devoid of any social and historical
significance; thus furthering the notion of the “other.”
Figure 2:
Historically, the idea of an exhibition had to be conveyed by either the objects themselves or
the accompanying written labels. Today, there are many more tools at a museum’s disposal
One section of the new Beit Gallery will depict the traditional music of the Eastern Shona
and the musical instruments that they use during a variety of leisure time performances.21
This is where the invention of our interactivity is situated as our visitors will be allowed to
have a high degree of association with the musical instruments both on display and on the
LED screens. The visitors will touch the musical instruments and use them in real time. This
is fundamentally different from the classical “hands-off” approach in the traditional
museum. Instead of understanding objects as possessing an unproblematic concrete
existence that can be visually understood, the exhibition in the revamped Beit Gallery will
afford a multisensory interaction with visitors, thus aiding their experience. This is the
participatory experience that visitors to Mutare Museum have been yearning for over a long
period of time.
Figure 3:
A combination of participatory experience and education will be born out of this new display
and thus allow visitors to have experiences which are absent in the traditional galleries at
the Mutare Museum. This gives visitors a sense of freedom to participate in a way that they
have not been able to do in the past.22 It is this focus on the proactive engagement of the
visitor that influenced the redesigning of the Beit gallery. What electronic technology does in
the museum is opening the crack in time beyond what would otherwise be an array of static,
silent artifacts with interpretative text.23 In the future, it seems inevitable that museums will
become “hybrid places, combining recreation and learning, allowing visitor’s diversions from
the intense stimuli of strolling through galleries and viewing multitudinous objects.”24
Figure 4:
Visitor records also show that during the period when Mutare Museum used to have live
birds and snakes the year in and year out numbers were higher than they are now. For
example, between 2000- 2005, the number of visitors to the museum each year averaged
between 10,000- 20,000 whereas between 2006 and 2015 the number dwindled to 2,000
a year.27 Although there are a host of other factors which contributed to the decline of
numbers, the most talked about as deduced from the visitor’s response book was the
absence of live displays. Many comments had a recurring flow path indicative of the reasons
why most visitors would not want to come back to the museum again after their first or
second visit. One visitor comment explicitly said:
When I was a kid we used to come here with my parents to see live birds and snakes
now there is nothing to see. I even brought my own kids so that they could see the
birds and the snakes. How disappointed I am! I will never come back to this museum
until I hear that they have reintroduced the birds and the snakes. 28
Conclusion
Education is not the only benefit the visiting public perceives that museums afford.
Increasingly, the visiting public now sees museums as social settings, as places where
families, couples, and other social groups can comfortably recreate.32 The Mutare museum
is seeking to incorporate interactive digital displays in the Beit Gallery and reintroduce
snakes displays to accommodate this. Based on feedback obtained from the museum visitor
books and our interactions, the visitors want to play a role in co-creating content and being
active participants in the museum experience itself. The story of the Eastern Shona, for
example, will be told in such a way that our visitors will experience the museum both in
terms of knowledge building but also by finding a certain degree of affiliation within their
properly presented cultural objects.
An underlying question, however, is whether the increased interactivity would bring out the
expected participatory experiences and educational benefits, or whether this would reduce
the museum to a mere fun house. Some have argued that multi-media displays have
reduced a museum to a high tech futuristic institution with no linkages with the past.33 The
fear is that museums will lose their integrity and stray from their original missions to
preserve and educate; critics suggest that they may simply become arenas for pleasure
rather than education.34 However, this article has demonstrated that there are multiple ways
to promote and encourage a deeper visitor experience while maintaining visitor education.
Developing museum experiences that are entertaining and enjoyable does not mean
trivializing the experience or mission of the institution.
List of Figures
Figure 1. The Mutare Museum, photo by author, 5/25/15.
Figure 2. Ethnographic objects displayed on the floor in the Beit Gallery, photos by author,
5/25/15.
Figure 3. An artistic impression of the proposed interactive nature of the Beit Gallery,
graphic designs by Munyaradzi Mashamaire, 6/15/14.
Figure 4. Live snake display in one of the galleries at Mutare Museum, photo by author.
Translating Local and Global Knowledges, ed. Raymond Silverman (New York: Routledge,
2014), 280.
3 Njabulo Chipangura and Chidochashe Mandizvo, “Static Collections and Experiential
Objects at Mutare Museum,” in Museums and the Idea of Historical Progress, ed. Rooksana
Omar et al. (Cape Town: Iziko Museums Publications, 2014), 190.
6 Laurajane Smith, Uses of Heritage (London and New York: Routledge, 2006).
7 Karp and Kratz, “The Interrogative Museum,” 287.
8 Shona is the name widely given to the indigenous population in Zimbabwe and is constituted
by people who speak one similar language also called Shona. However, the Shona language
itself is not homogenous because within it are different dialects that vary from district to
district. Eastern Zimbabwe is constituted by the manyika, ndau, jindwi, hwesa and karanga
speaking people. Chipangura, “Rethinking the Practice of Collecting and Displaying
Ethnographic Objects at Mutare Museum,” 192.
9 Ibid.
10 Beatrice Mareya, “Project Proposal for the Beit Gallery New Exhibitions: The Traditional
Aspects of the Eastern Shona in Zimbabwe,” (report, National Museums and Monuments of
Zimbabwe, 1999), 3.
11 Ibid.
12 Chipangura, “Rethinking the Practice of Collecting and Displaying Ethnographic Objects at
Material Culture, ed. Elizabeth Edwards et al. (Oxford and New York: Berg, 2006), 3.
14 Personal communication with the Heritage Education officer at Mutare Museum,
03/28/16.
15 R. Mapako, Mutare Museum Visitor Comment Book, 2000-2005.
16 Constance Classen and David Howes, “The Museum as Sensescape: Western Sensibilities
and Indigenous Artifacts,” in Sensible Objects: Colonialism, Museums and Material Culture,
ed. Elizabeth Edwards et al. (Oxford and New York: Berg, 2006), 200.
17 Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, “Objects of Ethnography,” in Exhibiting Cultures: The
Poetics and Politics of Museum Displays, ed. Ivan Karp and Steven D. Lavine (Washington
DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1991), 398.
18 Simon Masters, “The Use of Live Animals in Museum Exhibitions.” Paper presented at the
Graduate Research in the Museum Sector Conference, Sydney, Australia, July 22-24, 2002,
8
19 Bruce, “Spectacle and Democracy,” 141.
20 John H. Falk and Lynn D. Dierking, The Museum Experience Revisited (California: Left
a Change! Present between Past and Future. A Symposium Report, ed by Daan van Dartel
(Amsterdam: KIT Publishers, 2009), 56.
31 Masters, “The Use of Live Animals in Museum Exhibitions,” July 22-24, 2002.
32 American Alliance of Museums, “Museums and spaces of the future,” Newsletter, 2012.
33 Bruce, “Spectacle and Democracy: Experience Music,” 140.
34 Ibid., 135.
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