Associate Members

Chiara Garbellotto

© Tal Adler

CARMAH members’ portraits were captured in March 2017, on the ‘New55 PN’ – a new handmade instant film for large format, 4”x5” cameras. This film was launched through crowdfunding in 2014 as a reinvention of the discontinued, legendary ‘Type 55’ by Polaroid. Since the sixties, Polaroid’s unique ‘Type 55’ starred in many artists’ and professional photographers’ projects. ‘Type 55’ provided both an instant print and a superb negative from which more (and larger) prints could be made. Like so many photographic material in the last 10-15 years, ‘Type 55’ was discontinued in 2009. Tal Adler decided to use the ‘New55 PN’ not only for its beautiful quality but also to reflect, and participate in, the revival of (photographic) heritage.

“Knowing and caring for biodiversity. Public engagement ecologies at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin”

Grounded in social anthropology, critical museum studies and feminist STS approaches my research project studied multiple modes of doing biodiversity in different ecologies of public engagement practice at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin (Museum of Natural History Berlin). The major structural and infrastructural renovations at this museum since 2017 made it a particularly exciting research context. Matters engaged include citizen science, the coexistence of different epistemic cultures, the emergence of publics, and the “participation issue”.

I directed my ethnographic attention especially to guided tours and workshops as material-semiotic mediation assemblages. Through these activities – which unfold according to various purposes, means, and thematic focuses – multiple biodiversities were done differently, assembling subjects and objects in different ways. Moving from an ecofeminist approach, my core interest was to explore how a multiplicity of other modes of knowing and caring for Biodiversity than the technoscientific one can and should be mattered.

In order to think further public engagement practices in museum institutions as research, I co-designed in 2019 the workshop series oddkin°labs together with researcher Sina Ribak, artists Constanza Mendoza and Sybille Neumeyer and filmmaker Nnenna Onuoha. During three sessions, we invited MfN practitioners, artists and researchers to test different formats and critically engage with the themes of co-evolution, taxidermy and rocks’ entanglements.

In my PhD scholarship position (2017-2020), my supervisor was Prof. Dr. Tahani Nadim and my co-supervisor Prof. Dr. Sharon Macdonald.

Academic and professional background

In 2012, I gained a master’s degree in Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology from the University of Bologna – from which I also gained my bachelor’s degree. My MA dissertation in Museum Anthropology was based on ethnographic research conducted at the London-based Wellcome Collection, where I examined verbal and non-verbal processes of meaning construction during guided tours of the permanent exhibition “Medicine Now”.

In 2015 I conducted a four-months work placement as part of the artistic project “Museum of Contemporary Commodities” co-founded by artist-researcher Paula Crutchlow and Cultural Geographer Ian Cook, University of Exeter. The project was hosted at London-based Furtherfield Gallery.

In the same year I was Engage Volunteer at the Horniman Museum and Gardens, London.

In January 2016 I received a master’s degree in Museums, Galleries, and Contemporary Culture from the University of Westminster, London. My final project dealt with informal learning experiences during participatory workshops in exhibiting contexts.

In 2016 I worked as assistant exhibition registrar for La Biennale di Venezia Foundation in the frame of the Architecture Biennale supporting, among others, the pavilion A World of Fragile Parts realised by the Victoria and Albert Museum.

In the same year, I was intern project assistant for RAVE – East Village Artistic Residency. The theme of that edition was “Animal Spaces” and the artist in residence Tomàs Saraceno. It was co-designed in collaboration with the Politecnico in Milan (“Milano Animal City” project) and the Technische Universität Braunshweig (BioBerlin project).