Making the Museum is a newsletter and podcast on exhibition planning for museum leaders, exhibition teams and visitor experience professionals.

A project of C&G Partners | Design for Culture


Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Dollhouse Owner View

Planners plan using floor plans. A floor plan is a great tool. But sometimes even veterans make weird decisions because we’re thinking while looking straight down. Our visitors don’t have a dollhouse-owner-view. They have a doll’s-eye-view. …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Trippy Art Spa

Welcome to the trippy art spa. You might not know the name. But you know the formula. It’s a subgenre of immersive art that combines multiple trends into one night out. Giant room with projections covering walls and floor,? Check. ..

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Office Supplies

Ah, the humble Post-it. Classic yellow, light pink, pale blue. A staple of low-budget interactive experiences for a generation, museum teams either love or hate these little squares. I’m a fan. Not because it’s the most novel thing I can come up with. It’s for another reason …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Project Onto Stuff

There are two tricks that are so good, they work every time. So good, they work on experts who know the trick. This is one of those. This works even if the budget is low. Even if you just did it last time, or in the same room. Even if the subject doesn’t fit. …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Rethinking Climate Control in Museums, with Roger Chang

Why is “70/50” the gold standard? Who decided? Does every gallery really need to be 70 degrees? At what cost? Roger Chang (Principal, Buro Happold) joins host Jonathan Alger (Managing Partner, C&G Partners) on Making the Museum, the podcast. …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

To Screw In a Light Bulb

Q: How many museum-making people does it take to screw in a light bulb? A: Check the responsibility matrix. A responsibility matrix — a chart of which team will do what — is a must for any complex project. Especially when it’s both new construction and a new exhibition. …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Throw a Handful of Darts

Creative contracts call for “three options”. But complex organizations need more than the usual three options to make good decisions. They need plenty of choices to not like. And when you need to hit a balloon in a dark room with a dart, you throw a handful of darts.

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Embracing Chaos, with Jon Maass [PODCAST]

What if chaos in cultural projects is something to embrace, not fear?Can chaos theory give us new insights about how to manage complex work? What are the three things upon which the success of a project depends? Are we owner’s advocates — or project advocates? …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

LATCH: Five Ways to Organize Exhibitions

Richard Saul Wurman, co-founder of TED, popularized LATCH in the 90s. Essentially, you can organize any information by Location, Alphabet, Time, Category, or Hierarchy. You can find LATCH everywhere. In fact, exceptions are rare. …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Exhibits … of Exhibits?

What words do we all use to refer to the individual parts of an exhibition space? Let’s say we have a large exhibit. Within that overall space, there are individual discreet experiences. What do we call them? Zones? Areas? Modules? … Exhibits? …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Elephant, Dog, Gerbil … Fly?

When we plan our exhibitions and experiences, it’s critical that we take into account the aging speeds of the elements of a project: Elephant, Dog, Gerbil. But things just got faster. AI tech is now in our exhibitions too. What aging speed is that? …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Phil & Monique: Free Cheese

MONIQUE: [Chewing] This free cheese isn’t bad. Museums should give out more free cheese. PHIL: [Stops chewing] What? MONIQUE: Metaphorically. PHIL: Uh oh. [Chews] MONIQUE: See, usually we consider marketing for exhibitions as separate …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

TL;DR

My new acquaintance K.C. and I were watching a conference talk. She runs a museum. When a slide defined “TL;DR” for the audience (“Too Long, Didn’t Read”) she whispered to me, “That’s what all our exhibits are.” Heh. She’s right. And our visitors don’t come to read. …

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Respites

Concerts have silences between songs. Book chapters have blank spaces at the end. In this email, there is an empty line after each idea. But in our exhibitions, sometimes we let stuff fill up every surface, like we gotta hose down the place with content …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

How Do Museums Make Money?

Almost all museums are nonprofit businesses. But “nonprofit” is a tax status, not a financial goal. Museums make money. They have to. And when our work helps them to do that, we can have a bigger impact. So how do museums make money? Here’s the list …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

What Does “Black Box” Mean to You?

“Black box” — which definition of the term do you use? The general public might say “flight data recorder” or “a computer thing that works mysteriously”. But museum folks and exhibition planners mean something else. I’m asking: what’s your definition? …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

What’s Esprit de Corps?

Yes, apparently it’s French word week here at MtM. In our MtM podcast on “How to Build a Museum”, architect David Greenbaum called “esprit de corps” a must-have for every project team. But what is it? It literally means “group spirit”, and it’s as powerful a tool as anything we use …

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Jonathan Alger Jonathan Alger

Extreme Enfilade

What’s “enfilade”? When you arrange rooms without a common hallway, you have to go through each room to get to the next. Architects call that “enfilade” circulation. The rooms are the hallway. But caution: some museums take enfilade to the extreme. …

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