Difference between revisions of "Brigham Young University. Museum of Peoples and Cultures"

(Assets and Administrative Structure)
Line 13: Line 13:
 
==Assets and Administrative Structure==
 
==Assets and Administrative Structure==
  
Four full-time positions administrate the Museum of Peoples and Cultures. The director leads the Curator of Education, Media Contact, and Office Manager. Outside of these roles students primarily staff the museum. The museum offers educational programs within the Department of Anthropology.
+
Four full-time positions administrate the Museum of Peoples and Cultures. A director leads the curator of education, media contact, and office manager. Outside of these roles students primarily staff the museum through educational programs within the Department of Anthropology and volunteer work.
  
 
==Associated Units==
 
==Associated Units==

Revision as of 15:48, 28 October 2011

The Museum of Peoples and Cultures began as the repository of the Department of Anthropology in the 1960s. In 1981 the Department's repository function was relocated off-campus to Allen Hall, a former men's dormitory. In 1982, the Museum received its current name and gradually separated administratively from the Department. Museum directors included Joel C. Janetski (1987-1999) and Marti L. Allen (1999-2007). Paul Stavast serves that the current director.

Description

Established: 1982

Location: Provo, Utah (1982- )

Functions

The Museum of Peoples and Cultures provided modest exhibits which focused on the prehistory of Utah, the American Southwest, Mesoamerica, Polynesia, Near East, and early pioneer life. The museum collections contain prehistoric and ethnographic artifacts, cares for a collection of over 20,000 black and white and color photographs that document BYU archaeological research and materials. Furthermore, the museum provides classes on museology to aid students in gaining practical experience in collections care management. In conjunction with the Department of Anthropology, students can pursue field and laboratory research. The Office of Public Archaeology which is one of the leading archaeological contracting organizations in the inter-mountain area, is located at the museum. Also housed at the museum, the Archaeological Technical Laboratory specializes in botanical and minerals analysis. The offices of the New World Archaeological Foundation are also located in the museum.

Assets and Administrative Structure

Four full-time positions administrate the Museum of Peoples and Cultures. A director leads the curator of education, media contact, and office manager. Outside of these roles students primarily staff the museum through educational programs within the Department of Anthropology and volunteer work.

Associated Units

Superior unit: Brigham Young University (1986-)

Superior unit: Brigham Young University. College of Family, Home, and Social Sciences (1986-)

Superior unit: Brigham Young University. Dept. of Anthropology (1982-1986)

Associated unit: Brigham Young University. Research Division (1986-1990)

Associated Archival Materials

Of human interest : the newsletter of BYU anthropology and archaeology (GN 42 .O34x)

Sources

Brigham Young University Museum of Peoples and Cultures WWW site, October 28, 2011: MPC History, MPC Staff, MPC Mission Statement (history; director (Paul Stavast), curator of education, media contact, and office manager; engages students in as many positions as possible)

Brigham Young University General Catalog, 1981-1982: p. 31 (administrative history, functions)

Brigham Young University General Catalog, 1986-1987: p. 113 (placed under the direction of the College of Family, Home, and Social Sciences)

Brigham Young University General Catalog, 1987-1988: p. 111 (Joel C. Janetski, director (1987-1988))

Brigham Young University General Catalog, 1999-2000: p. 58 (Marti L. Allen, director (1999-2000); functions)

Maintenance Information

Record ID: EAC-2009-00595

Creator: RSP