John Seed
3 min readJan 21, 2019

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Tidying Up at the Museum (satire)

The following is not a transcript of a recent staff meeting held at the Major Museum of Art in New York City, led by Director Robert Caucasian and attended by Board President Helena Van Rightwing.

Robert: I hope everyone will welcome a visitor that I have invited to today’s meeting. She is Marie Studio-Apartment, a highly regarded consultant who assists museums with de-cluttering.

(polite applause)

Marie: (blushing) I’m just so happy to be here! I love museums, especially ones that are de-accessioning!

To get started, let me explain the process for museums. My Vasari method involves cleaning up in these five categories:

1) Museum collections

2) Museum bookstore

3) Records and archives

4) Kimonos: (Museum Staff)

5) Donations: Second-rate items and sentimental Renoirs

Curator: Marie, I really need your help. The Italian Baroque painting room is just so cluttered and busy: it feels claustrophobic.

Marie: Try taking the paintings off the walls and sorting them into four categories: crucifixions, ascending virgins, martyred saints and baby Jesus.

Then, lean them against the walls in stacks. Go through them one at a time and ask yourself: “Does this spark guilt?” Get rid of the ones that don’t. Then do a quick Agnes Martin pop-up show to alter the Feng Shui and you’re ready to re-install

Curator #2: The Modern wing is jammed too. We have walls and walls of Picasso, Gauguin, Balthus…

Marie: Sometimes you need a friend to help. Have Hannah Gadsby come in and ask her “Which of these creep you out?”

Bookstore Manager: I’m so glad you mentioned the bookstore. We are literally drowning in catalogs, scarves, postcards, Basquiat skate decks…

Marie: Start by asking yourself which books spark joy when you see them on the shelf. Remove all of the rest.

I would recommend you keep maybe 30 titles or less.

Bookstore Manager: So just Taschen?

Marie: Yes. Also keep a few umbrellas in a Monet trashcan. They sell really well on rainy days.

Archivist: Marie, I don’t know how I can reduce the archives. For one thing, they contain the provenance records that prove our masterpieces are authentic.

Marie: You don’t really need provenance records. If something needs to be authenticated there are experts you can pay to help with anything: remember the “Salvator Mundi?” Contact any major auction house and they will know who to call.

Registrar: Marie I’m desperate for your help. Our storage area is jammed with mediocre works that have been gathering dust for decades.

Marie: (jumping for joy) Hearing this makes me happy!

Registrar: What is your advice?

Marie: Consign them all to auction and donate the proceeds to social justice causes. Doing this will spark joy throughout your museum staff and your nation.

Robert: Marie, I have to step in here. As I’m sure you know, what you are suggesting is illegal and also just a little bit too “Aggie Gund” for this museum.

Marie: I feel sad now.

Board President: Marie, this is awkward to bring up, but I have just been informed (turning towards Robert) that our Director has been having an affair with another staff member that creates a conflict of interest. I think we need to “tidy up” in our administration.

Marie: Helena, a Museum Director is a necessity. But you can still fix this problem easily. Just trade your Director for a similar one from the West Coast and it will all be fine.

Robert: You have sparked so much joy in my life! (gives Marie an inappropriately tight hug)

Meeting adjourned.

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John Seed

John Seed is the author of “Disrupted Realism.” He has written for the HuffingtonPost, Hyperallergic, Arts of Asia & other fine publications. johnseed@gmail.com