
New Books Network Beth Derderian, "Art Capital: Museum Politics and the Making of the Louvre Abu Dhabi" (Stanford UP, 2026)
Apr 3, 2026
Beth Derderian, Assistant Professor at Brandeis who studies museums and art politics in the Middle East. She talks about the Louvre Abu Dhabi as a case of museum franchising and market power. Short scenes and ethnography reveal shifts in how museums, artists, and exhibitions respond to capital and claims of inclusivity.
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Museums As State Building Tools
- Museums function as tools of state-building and reflect national aspirations beyond displaying art.
- Beth Derderian shows the Louvre Abu Dhabi project was aimed at economic diversification, job creation, and diplomatic rapprochement with the West, not just culture.
Capitalization Meets Decolonization
- Late 20th–21st century museum practice mixes capitalization with pushes to diversify and decolonize collections.
- Derderian frames the UAE as a testbed where immense wealth and a diverse population amplify tensions between market forces and inclusivity.
Using Exhibition Interludes To Protect Sources
- Derderian uses interlude scenes of exhibitions to immerse readers while anonymizing interview subjects.
- She adopted this from her advisor Jessica Winegar to show artworks in-room and then protect interlocutors in the analytical chapters.

