Marking its twentieth birthday, this symposium examines the elements of practice and theory that have come to define the Bard Graduate Center. An array of speakers from across the national, disciplinary, and institutional spectrum put the achievements of the past twenty years in context, and also outlined paths into the future. The morning session concentrated on issues relevant to the future of exhibitions, examining display and interpretation, publishing and the digital challenge, and how philosophy might inform museum practice. The afternoon focused on the role of the research institute, ways of defining good research, research as a way of life, and the necessity of research for teaching.


Susan Weber
Founder and Director, Bard Graduate Center
Welcome




Nina Stritzler-Levine
Director, Bard Graduate Center Gallery/Gallery Publications
Where We Have Been and Where We Are Going



Taco Dibbits
Director of Collections, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
Playful Simplicity: The Making of the New Rijksmuseum



Paola Antonelli
Senior Curator, Architecture & Design, and Director, Research and Development, The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
Exhibitions for the Real World: Contemporary Design at MoMA




Jill Shaw
Co-General Editor, Online Scholarly Catalogue Initiative (OSCI), and Research Associate, Department of Medieval to Modern European Painting and Sculpture, The Art Institute of Chicago
Meta Monet: The Journey from Print to Digital at The Art Institute of Chicago




Ivan Gaskell
Professor, Curator and Head of the Focus Project, Bard Graduate Center
The Museum of Big Ideas




Peter N. Miller
Dean and Professor, Bard Graduate Center
Research as a Calling



Norton Batkin
Vice President and Dean of Graduate Studies; Associate Professor of Philosophy and Art History;
Director, Philosophy Program; Bard College




Joachim Nettelbeck
Former Secretary of the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin)
The Administration of Serendipity: What is a Research Institute?



Harriet Zuckerman
Professor Emerita of Sociology, Columbia University, and former Senior Vice President of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
Basic Research with Potentials of Relevance




Michael Shanks
Professor of Classics and Classical Archaeology, Stanford University
Research as Performance




Panel Discussion