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Is creativity a matter for cultural leaders?

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Version 1 2014-10-27, 16:25
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-16, 13:27 authored by R Rentschler
A climate of change in the arts in the 1990s, including a growing recognition of the need for creative management, has raised the issue of how not-for-profit art museum directors use creativity in their managerial role. Traditionally, the prime function of art museums has been to gather, preserve and study objects. The perception of directors as keepers of collections and creativity as residing in the object has evolved. Creativity is increasingly seen as residing in the managers of organizations. A survey of Australian and New Zealand art museum directors revealed six strategic responses to change, indicating the extent to which they used creativity in their leadership role: economic emphasis, market orientation, audience development, collaboration, accessibility and community relations. The question this paper poses is whether the change in the director's role has overturned the traditional view of creativity as focused on the art work rather than on management initiatives. The proposed answer is that it has been not so much overturned as extended: directors now balance the development and preservation of creative art works with creative management of the art museum as a market-facing organization.

History

Journal

International journal of arts management

Volume

3

Season

Spring

Pagination

13-24

Location

Montreal, Canada

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1480-8986

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, HEC MONTRÉAL

Issue

3

Publisher

Management International

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