Skip to product information
Right to the Museum

Right to the Museum Race, Gender and Power in New York City’s Art Museums, 1966-1976

Sale price  $103.50 Regular price  $115.00

Reliable shipping

Flexible returns

Right to the Museum

Race, Gender and Power in New York City’s Art Museums, 1966-1976

Caroline Wallace

Art / American / African American & Black

Who does the space of the museum really belong to? How can museums become sites of social change? What role can artists play in making museums more inclusive?
This book explores the ways in which New York City's art museums were actively reshaped and radically reimagined by artists in the 1960s and 70s. Through a messy array of protests – feminist sit­ins, theatrical performances, and placard waving pickets – artists asserted their authority over the institutions responsible for the display and collection of their work. But they also created their own; as neighborhood museums, artist projects and collective spaces. Presenting a rich history of spatial reclamation and appropriation, this book offers an innovative new reading of this intense period of artist-activism and museum making.

Each chapter focuses on a specific institution in New York, whilst making connections to urban movements for spatial justice. Drawn from archival research and new spatial readings of art activism, the book also charts the history of Black, Puerto Rican and feminist groups, and how institutions coopted their ideals to facilitate the expansion of museums in late capitalism.

At a time when museums are again sites of protest and politics, The Right to the Museum forms a crucial contribution to broader understanding of the history of museums, and the relationship between artists and society. In looking back, it recovers the potential of the museum as a site for social and political transformation.

Caroline Wallace is a Lecturer in Visual Art at La Trobe University, Australia.

Publication Date: 06 August 2026
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Imprint: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
ISBN-13: 9781350412279
Format: Hardback
Page Count: 224
Weight (oz): 21.6

You may also like