Ethnographic Museum of the University of Zurich


The Ethnographic Museum of the University of Zurich is the third oldest ethnological museum of Switzerland. Owner of its collections since 1914 is the University of Zurich. The main fields of the museum's activities are the maintenance of the collections, research, teaching and public relations.

Location and building

The ethnographic museum is located in downtown Zurich within the premises of the Old Botanical Garden “zur Katz”. The building was first constructed in 1864 and underwent various changes over time. Until 1977 it served as a depot, office building and green house of the Botanical Institute of the University of Zurich, the latter still recognizable in the library tract's architecture.
The buildings conversion into a museum was undertaken by the architects Hubacher, Issler and Partners, Zurich; another major renovation was carried out by the architects P. + J. Diethelm, St. Gall, in 2014. The complex of buildings now comprises depots, studios of photography, graphic art and conservation, archives, library, office tract, lecture hall and auditorium, reception and three exhibition halls.

History

In 1889 the Ethnographic Collection of Zurich was presented to the public for the very first time. Initially the collection was property of the Ethnographische Gesellschaft Zürich ; in 1914 the collection was handed over to the University of Zurich where it was open to the public in the university's main building till 1979. In 1972, with the introduction of ethnology as a new subject of study at the University of Zurich, the former “Ethnological Collection” was shifted from the Faculty of Natural Sciences to the Faculty of Arts and renamed as “Ethnographic Museum of the University of Zurich”. In 1980 the collection was moved to its present location.
;Museum Directors:
The museum collection is presented to the public by means of temporary exhibitions. At present it comprises more than 40’000 artefacts. Thematic focus areas are material witnesses of religious context as well as objects embodying specific knowledge and skills relating to production and utilization.
Geographical focus areas represented in the museum's collection are
The museum also hosts a collection of visual anthropology consisting of 40’000 historical photos, a movie archive of about 2’400 titles, a sound archive containing 6’500 LPs and CDs originally collected by the Musikethnologisches Archiv der Universität Zürich , and an archive of documents related to the collections and the museum's history.

Library

The museum library comprises some 35‘000 books and several dozen specialist periodicals and works of reference. The titles can be searched online, and most of the books are borrowable. There is a reading room with 20 workstations. Rare books and non-circulation videos can be viewed here as well.

Literature