Drawing from a wide range of experience, the authors propose the simple ideas which should underpin all professional museum training courses. Organised on a modular basis Museum Basics provides a basic guide to `best practice' in every aspect of museum work, from museum organisation, through collections management and conservation, to marketing and security. It is designed for training courses, to be supplemented by case studies, project work and group discussion.
I actually have the second edition. It is a text from my museum studies program. It is great for anyone who is interested in how small museums operate.
I skimmed large portions of this, but did read quite a bit of it as well. It's an academic textbook that one would encounter in a Museum Studies Program, which I borrowed from the library (via interlibrary loan!) out of curiosity as to just what the field of study basics were. Some of it was interesting & illuminating, but it did remind me of the education classes & texts of my own profession (ie teaching) in that there was a lot of stuff that it felt like those actually "in the trenches" would roll their eyes at. It's very dry, but what do you expect from a textbook? No demerits for that, but wow does it have some awful "figures" in which vocab words are put inside boxes and arranged on the page, sometimes connected with arrows, or maybe linked in a circle, adding no meaning or value to the reader.
This is essentially an introductory reference book to the basic principles and practices of running an efficient and effective musicological institution.In contrast to many skeptical studies of museums, Ambrose and Paine are remarkably optimistic about the secure survival of museums as cultural institutions. However, the authors place emphasis on effective marketing and visitor experience. Despite the authors' assertion that the museum's responsibility to its collection should be foremost, issues of security and preservation are curiously not considered in other instances in favor of enhancing visitor experience, such as the allowance of photography (pg 36). While the authors treat the operation of museums as modern businesses, museums are nonetheless depicted as temples of knowledge (pg 35).
For a basic guide, this is a good reference tool to assist in shaping a museum, a sound collections management policy, and marketing strategies for the museum. A visitor's experience perspective also helps museums understand how and why people come to specific places, and what they are expecting from museums. For the new curator especially, this management tool can assist with understanding how the focus on an institution's collections help shape the roles the museum can play. A great coverage of general museum functions.
There's certainly truth in advertising here. It's basic. Good, if dated, thoughts on metrics to consider in planning and exhibit design (i.e. Fry test; summative evaluation suggestions). Definitely a few laughs with the scolding take on deaccessioning collections and the segment on "computerisation."
Basic overview of a broad array of mostly common sense stuff, but if you are starting from the very beginning or just need a refresher, it's a decent reference tool.