Director’s Letter 5th & University / June 2023

 
Photo of Robert Saarnio by Kevin Bain/Ole Miss CommunicationsGreetings, everyone, and warmest of welcomes to the summer season of Exhibitions and Programs at your University of Mississippi Museum. The warmth of that welcome is not a weather pun, though as I write the forecast indicates up to 102 degrees at week’s end. For this Minnesota-born Scandinavian, that is a bit of a shock to the system, being hard-wired for twenty-degrees below.

I thought that this month I’d undertake just a modicum of museum-world ‘de-mystification’ of sorts, finding that audiences often appreciate an inside view of elements of museum functioning that are not always visible or apparent as one experiences the public-facing side of a museum visit. For this month’s ‘insiders tips’ I have in mind the following: gifts-in-kind, and museum student workers.

 A Gift-in-Kind is defined by the Association of Fundraising Professionals (AFP), as a “non-cash gift made to a nonprofit organization. These contributions can be made in the form of time, services, expertise, and goods, often coming from large businesses but also deriving from individuals.”   Applying this rubric one can perhaps readily then discern that museums receive mission-enhancing in-kind gifts on a very regular basis.

One distinctly visible current example of in-kind gifting is on view daily in the Museum, our major exhibition titled ‘Recent Acquisitions, 2012-Present. While a limited number of the works in the show were acquired by Museum purchase, the vast majority were gifted to us by exceptionally thoughtful and generous friends, alumni, community members, and stakeholders. Each gifted artwork is classified as a ‘Gift-in-Kind’ by the University of Mississippi Foundation, and formally receipted by the Foundation as such.

With the Permanent Collection thereby in mind, one can immediately see the deep meaningfulness of in-kind gifting to our University Museum, and particularly when one adds to the concept of gifted artworks the category of the gift of volunteer time, services, and expertise. In this regard we can think of those many individuals who support us with their volunteer time and expertise – – most notably of course our Friends of the Museum Board who dedicate themselves through hundreds of hours of annual effort on behalf of our mission and our contributed support needs.

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A separate category of support comes from some often unsung heroes, the University students who work inside the Museum in support of our Education, Collections, Exhibitions, and Visitor Services activities – and additionally at Faulkner’s Rowan Oak. Almost invariably when you visit the Museum you will see direct evidence of students working in a variety of roles, and beginning right at our Admission Desk in the Lobby. But the sheer number of student workers, and their variable points of origin might be quite a surprise when they are enumerated to be as many as thirty+ over the course of any given calendar year.

Their ‘official’ status ranges from unpaid course credit-earning Volunteers, paid Interns, stipended Graduate Assistants, and wage-compensated Museum employees.  Some are with us as a result of curricular or degree-field involvement, others such as our Grad Assistants are farther along their early-career pathways as they derive from Master’s Degree candidacies in Southern Studies and the UM School of Education.

Suffice to say that our Museum and our literary landmark site Rowan Oak would not be the compelling and impactful places that they are without the productivity, dedication, and talents of our student workers…of every category.

Thank you always for your support, attendance and participation at the Museum and Rowan Oak – – we deeply appreciate every one of you, for your involvement and your many gestures of thoughtfulness and care for our well-being and our mission of community-benefit impact.

Robert Saarnio's signature
Robert Saarnio 
Museum Director