In moments of uncertainty, it sometimes helps to step back. To try to make sense of the myriad changes that have taken place in museums in recent years—changes of scale, character, and outlook—I’d like to take the long view and propose that we are now in the “Third Phase” of the great age of American art museums that began in the last quarter of the nineteenth century with the founding of institutions such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the Art Institute of Chicago, and what would come to be known as the Philadelphia Museum of Art. What makes this period so different from those that preceded it is the questioning, even overturning, of many of the premises and principles that had guided museums in the past.
The museum regarded itself as a proactive force: an educator and arbiter of taste.
That first phase, let’s call it the Foundational Phase, saw the raising of great buildings to house their collections; the emergence of private benefactors such as J. P. Morgan to support them; and the professionalization of the institution—the insistence, for example, on displaying only original works of art and not copies, and on installing those objects by period or school and in other ways breaking with the “cabinet of curiosities” model epitomized by Charles Willson Peale’s museum. The mission was clear: to convey a sense of the unfolding history of art; to instill a discriminating taste; and