Controversial plan to merge museums slammed as ‘bizarre’ by experts

NSW parliament is set to approve a new cultural institution that will bring together 12 museums and the state’s $1 billion archives collection.

But the entity has been described by a group of academics,historians and emeritus administrators as dangerous and ill-considered.

The new Museums of History will have carriage over the Hyde Park Barracks,the State archives collection and Elizabeth House.

The new Museums of History will have carriage over the Hyde Park Barracks,the State archives collection and Elizabeth House.SMH

“If passed,it will create a bizarre and conflicted administrative marriage that is at odds with world’s best practice,” they said in a letter sent to all lower house MPs.

The government maintains the Museums of History NSW will enhance access,appreciation and preservation of history without weakening powers,responsibilities or provisions.

Museums of History NSW will bring together archive collections and the landmark buildings of Sydney Living Museums (SLM),including The Mint,World Heritage-listed Hyde Park Barracks and Rose Seidler House.

The draft bill has passed two houses of parliament and is awaiting final assent.

The Museums of History is expected to take responsibility of the former Land Titles Office,next to Hyde Park Barracks.

The Museums of History is expected to take responsibility of the former Land Titles Office,next to Hyde Park Barracks.James Brickwood

In a last-minute intervention,an open letter has been circulated to all lower house MPs. It’s been signed by architect Clive Lucas,historian Dr Shirley Fitzgerald,Professor Lucy Taksa,former chair of State Records NSW,Alan Ventress,a former director of State Records NSW,and Dr Peter Watts,founding director of the Historic Houses Trust,a predecessor of SLM.

Jill Hickson Wran,wife of former Labor premier Neville Wran,is also a signatory in her role as former chair of the Historic Houses Trust between 2002 and 2009.

The entity carried serious integrity risks for public accountability and governance of the archives,they said.

“MPs should be alarmed that no state archives anywhere in the world are managed under the arrangements proposed in this bill,with the collection split between two agencies and two pieces of legislation,” the group wrote.

Kylie Winkworth,a museum consultant,said the bill effectively allows for every house museum to become a cafe,conference or wedding venue and for the sale of properties in almost any circumstance. She said the bill didn’t give Museums of History responsibility for collecting NSW history.

A spokesperson for Arts Minister Ben Franklin rejected the assertions in the letter and said there were multiple inaccuracies within it.

“As outlined in the bill,the two entities will not be merged,” they said.

A full merger of Sydney Living Museums and the State Archives and Records Authority (SARA) was subject to an upper house inquiry in 2020.

That inquiry recommended the functions of SARA be split. The collection of 14 million records,going back to the early days of European settlement,was to be merged into the Museums of History,and its record-keeping functions preserved in a smaller authority.

State archives is the oldest archive collection in Australia,dating to European settlement.

State archives is the oldest archive collection in Australia,dating to European settlement.Peter Rae

Provided it was sufficiently funded,the inquiry found the new body would broaden access and engagement to wider audiences in ways not explored before and that museums would be able to tell more diverse stories about the state’s past with access to records.

It would enhance the public profile of the state’s history and provide opportunities for philanthropy and fundraising.

Ahead of the institution’s creation,the government has been busy reshuffling the state’s cultural furniture. It announced the Museum of Sydney,site of the city’s first government house,would be transformed into an Indigenous cultural space.

The move was criticised by the leader of theMetropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council as “colonialism 101” but Franklin said it was symbolically appropriate that Indigenous people now had influence over a key colonial site.

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Linda Morris is an arts writer at The Sydney Morning Herald

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