2024 Council for Museum Anthropology Awards
I happily share the following CMA announcement:
2024 COUNCIL FOR MUSEUM ANTHROPOLOGY AWARDS
We’re delighted to announce the winners of this year’s Council for Museum Anthropology awards!! We thank the CMA Awards Committee (Lijun Zhang (Chair), Jason Jackson, Amanda Guzman, Sowparnika Balaswaminathan), and the CMA Book Award Committee (Cara Krmpotich (Chair), Molli Pauliot, Lijun Zhang) for their dedicated work on this.
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CMA STUDENT TRAVEL AWARDS:
Congratulations to this year’s CMA Student Travel award recipients, Amanda Sorensen and Haley Bryant!
The CMA Student Travel Awards are awarded to students who are going to present papers or posters at AAA meeting that present novel contribution to museum anthropology and have the potential to develop into works that could more broadly impact the field.
Amanda Sorensen and Haley Bryant have co-organized a panel for the 2024 AAA meeting which explores software and technologies used in museum practice. In the panel, Sorensen and Bryant will present papers to discuss digital technologies, software development, human labor, anthropological archives, and museum practice.
CMA MICHAEL AMES AWARD FOR INNOVATIVE MUSEUM ANTHROPOLOGY:
We are excited to share the news that the 2024 CMA Michael M. Ames Prize for Innovative Museum Anthropology is awarded to the exhibition project Mnaajtood ge Mnaadendaan: Miigwewinan Michi Saagiig Kwewag Miinegoowin Gimaans Zhaganaash Aki 1860 / To Honour and Respect: Gifts from the Michi Saagiig Women to the Prince of Wales, 1860. The project researches on and displays baskets made by women at what is now Hiawatha First Nation (HFN) in Ontario and gifted to the Prince of Wales in 1860. The exhibition enables Michi Saagiig community members to reconnect with their ancestors and visit their creations.
Congratulations to the co-curators Lori Beavis and Laura Peers as well as the HFN community members who have been involved in the project. See their amazing work here: https://www.tohonourandrespect.ca/
CMA BOOK AWARD
The CMA Book Award for 2024 is awarded to Balgo: Creating Country by John Carty, published by University of Western Australia Publishing in 2021.
The Nomination for Balgo: Creating Country highlights Carty’s skill in combining a rich ethnographic account with the methods of art history and an appreciation of the importance of collections and archives. Drawing on vast sources, Carty studies Balgo art from various perspectives, including art history, anthropology, economics, religious study, statistics, and gender studies. Balgo: Creating Country seamlessly integrates an art historical understanding cultivated through the study of changing forms over time with an understanding of the social processes represented in those changes, made known through sustained and ethical research relationships.
Balgo: Creating Country is the fruit of years of original research with close and insightful examination of Balgo art, history, individual experiences, community life, and the living world. It situates desert art and the creative process in complex historical, economic, and political dynamics. Balgo: Creating Country successfully navigates the scale of art practices, attending to over 15,000 artworks all the while being attentive to the artists at a very human scale. A distinguishing and innovative aspect of the book is Carty’s use of kinship relationships and kin diagrams to analyse and demonstrate the aesthetic and stylistic relationships between paintings over time.
CMA’s Book Award Committee wholeheartedly agreed with the Nomination that Balgo: Creating Country “exemplifies the unique contribution museum anthropology as a discipline is able to make to the understanding of world art, by challenging received Western categories yet at the same time bringing different art histories into dialogue with one another.”
Upon learning of the Award, Balgo artists shared this message with CMA:
“We are very proud of this book, and we are happy that other people can see its importance through this award. Our art is more than art, more than painting, it is our Country – who we are as people. It takes a lot to see what we are painting. This book tells that story: from the early days before whitefellas, to the mission days, and now today, where we are strong people who have built a new life for ourselves in Balgo. That’s what’s in our painting. It’s a big book, but it tells an even bigger story. (Warlayirti Artists, Balgo, Australia.)”

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For more information on CMA’s annual awards: https://museumanthropology.org/awards/nominations-and-applications/



