"As museums grapple to keep their mission relevant, and as the emphasis shifts toward user-experience as opposed to merely buildings and services, research which focuses on post occupancy behavior and opinions is clearly useful and needed. Museums, one of the most recognizable and important cultural institutions of our time, can benefit greatly by the work of the authors."Martha Thorne, Executive Director, The Pritzker Architecture Prize, Dean, IE School of Architecture and Design, Spain. "A unique and refreshing perspective on museum design by calling upon readers to become aware of voices that are rarely heard: those of museum employees. By sharing their stories as well as those of museum visitors, they illuminate how museum spaces - public as well as employee-only - can profoundly influence the human experience. Museum architecture, just like the art contained within it, continues to challenge and transform individuals - and it can do much better, as per Altaf Engineer and Kathryn Anthony. By taking a critical look at the seemingly endless expansion of museum buildings around the world, Shedding New Light on Art Museum Additions has far-reaching implications for the multiple fields of architecture, museum studies, tourism, leisure and recreation."Carla Almeida Santos, Professor, Department of Recreation, Sport, and Tourism Director, European Union Center, University of Illinois, USA. "An excellent, systematic study of significant museums noted for both their collections and architectural design. The results are insightful, due to the authors’ ability to not lose sight of the importance of aesthetic design while expanding our understanding of how it affects human behavior and emotions in both positive and negative ways. Anyone about to engage in museum design would provide a benefit to its future visitors and museum employees by reading this book."Joy Monice Malnar, AIA, author of Sensory Design and New Architecture on Indigenous Lands, USA. "Altaf Engineer and Kathryn Anthony analyze important perspectives from various types of people who interact with art museums, repositories of unique and avant-garde cultural elements of human civilization. The strengths of this book are the multileveled approaches to how a museum is branded as an important element for a city, the function and aesthetics of different types of museum spaces, and how preconceived beliefs merge with real-time engagement. Their findings present crucial information for improving the design of museums and other important public spaces."Dak Kopec, Associate Professor, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA.
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