Lissant Bolton


Lissant Mary Bolton is an Australian anthropologist and the Keeper of the Department of Africa, Oceania and the Americas at the British Museum. She is particularly known for her work on Vanuatu, textiles, and museums and indigenous communities.

Career

Bolton began her museum career in the Anthropology division of the Australian Museum firstly for the pilot survey of the Australian Pacific collections in 1979. From 1985 where she was the collection manager, and then senior collection manager, for the Pacific collection. During this time Bolton took leave to complete her PhD in social anthropology from the University of Manchester which she completed in 1994. Bolton left the Australian Museum in 1996 to work as an Australian Research Council Post-doctoral Fellow at the Centre for Cross Cultural Research at the Australian National University. From 1999 Bolton was a curator in the Department of Ethnography at the British Museum and from January 2012 became Keeper of Africa, Oceania and the Americas.
Bolton works in Vanuatu annually with the Vanuatu Cultural Centre developing programmes to document and preserve women's knowledge and practice. Bolton chairs the Women's Culture Project, developing ni-Vanuatu women fieldworkers who document and preserve traditional knowledge and culture.
Bolton has worked on a series of major research projects focusing on Pacific anthropology. Most recently she has worked on Melanesian art: objects, narratives and indigenous owners with Nicholas Thomas and Engaging Objects: Indigenous Communities, museum collections and the representation of indigenous histories with the Australian National University and the National Museum of Australia.
Among Bolton's curatorial work for the British Museum she was the lead curator in 2003 for the permanent gallery Living and Dying, and curated a number of temporary exhibitions including Power and Taboo: Sacred Objects from the Pacific, Dazzling the Enemy: shields from the Pacific, and Baskets and Belonging: Indigenous Australian Histories.

Honours

Bolton was the lead curator on the Living and Dying Gallery at the British Museum which won the Museums and Heritage Award for best Permanent Exhibition 2004.
Bolton delivered the Keynote Address to the Australian Anthropological Society Conference 2012 at the University of Queensland on Materialised moments: objects, museum and Melanesia.
Bolton was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for "significant service to the museums sector, and to anthropology" in the 2021 Queen's Birthday Honours.

Publications

Books and edited volumes

  • J. Adams, L. Bolton, T. Guillaume-Jaillet, M. McMahon, G. Sculthorpe, Reimagining Captain Cook: Pacific Perspectives.
  • Sculthorpe, G., J. Carty, H. Morphy, M. Nugent, I. Coates, L. Bolton and J. Jones. Indigenous Australia: Enduring Civilisation.
  • B. Burt and L. Bolton, The things we value: Culture and History in Solomon Islands
  • L. Bolton, Nicholas Thomas, Elizabeth Bonshek, Julie Adams and Ben Burt, Melanesia: Art and Encounter.
  • Brunt, Peter, Sean Mallon, Nicholas Thomas, Deidre Brown, Lissant Bolton, Suzanne Kuchler and Damian Skinner, Art in Oceania: A New History.
  • L. Bolton and N. Stanley, "Framing the Art of West Papua", The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, Special Issue 12.
  • M. Rodman, D. Kramer, L. Bolton and J. Tarisesei House-girls Remember: Domestic Workers in Vanuatu.
  • L. Bolton, Unfolding the moon: Enacting Women's Kastom in Vanuatu.

Articles

  • "Making baskets, making exhibitions: Indigenous Australian baskets at the British Museum". In Stephanie Bunn and Victoria Mitchell The Material Culture of Basketry, 155–163.
  • "Museums and cultural centres in Melanesia: a series of experiments". In Hirsch, E. and W. Rollason The Melanesian World..
  • A tale of two figures: Knowledge around objects in museum collections Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes 146, 2018, 87-98 URL: http://journals.openedition.org/jso/8206
  • Anthony Forge and Innovation: perspectives from Vanuatu. In A. Clark and N. Thomas Style and Meaning: Essays on the anthropology of art: Anthony Forge, 235–42.
  • "Moving objects: Indigenous Australia in the British Museum." In Encounters: Revealing Stories of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Objects from the British Museum.
  • "An Ethnography of Repatriation: Engagements with Erromango, Vanuatu." In Coombes, A.E. and R.B. Phillips International Handbooks of Museum Studies, Volume IV: Museum Transformations., 229–48.
  • "Women and customary land tenure in Vanuatu: Changing understandings." In Hviding, E. and G. White Pacific Alternatives: Cultural Politics in Contemporary Oceania.
  • "Describing Knowledge and Practice in Vanuatu’, in Hviding E. and K.M. Rio Made in Oceania: Social Movements, Cultural Heritage and the State in the Pacific pp 301–319.
  • ‘Framing the art of West Papua: an introduction’, in L. Bolton and N Stanley The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, 12 pp. 317–326.
  • ‘Los textiles y la vida’, in Mondragón, Carlos Moana: Culturas de las Islas del Pacífico pp. 67–72.
  • ‘Explorers and Traders of South Papua’, in I. McCalman and N. Erskine In the Wake of the Beagle: Science in the Southern Oceans from the Age of Darwin pp. 108–123.
  • ‘Living and Dying: Ethnography, class and aesthetics in the British Museum’, in D. Sherman Museums and Difference pp. 330–353.
  • ‘Island dress that belongs to us all’: Mission dresses and the innovation of tradition in Vanuatu’ in E. Ewart and M. O’Hanlon Body Arts and Modernity pp. 165–182.
  • ‘Resourcing Change: Fieldworkers, the Women’s Culture Project and the Vanuatu Cultural Centre’, in N. Stanley The Future of Indigenous Museums: Perspectives from the Southwest Pacific pp. 23–37.
  • 'The museum as cultural agent: the Vanuatu Cultural Centre extension worker program', in C. Healy, and A. Witcomb South Pacific Museums: Experiments in Culture.
  • ‘Power of the gods’, British Museum Magazine, 56 pp. 24–27.
  • 'Dressing for Transition: Weddings, Clothing and Change in Vanuatu', in S. Kuechler and G. Were, Pacific Clothing: the Art of Experience pp. 19–32.
  • The effect of objects: the return of a north Vanuatu textile from the Australian Museum to the Vanuatu Cultural Centre', in V.Attenbrow and R.Fullagar A Pacific Odyssey: Archaeology and Anthropology in the Western Pacific. Papers in Honour of Jim Specht Records of the Australian Museum, Supplement 29. pp. 31–36.
  • 'Living and Dying', British Museum Magazine, 47 pp. 34–37.
  • 'Radio and the Redefinition of "Kastom" in Vanuatu' The Contemporary Pacific Vol. 11, No. 2, pp. 335–360
  • , 'Fieldwork, fieldworkers: developments in Vanuatu research' Oceania, Special Issue 70 1999.
  • J. Weiner and L. Bolton "Multi-sited ethnography: investigations of a methodological proposal", Canberra Anthropology 22.