The Museum of Mosaic Environments publishes its institutional research as a matter of public record. Reports span five thousand years of mosaic history, exhibition design theory, governance frameworks, and original scholarship on mosaic as a fine art medium. Available in full for press, peer institutions, and donor due diligence.
A Substrate of Exclusion is the evidentiary foundation of the Museum of Mosaic Environments. We posed questions, followed the data, and wrote our findings from the history and the evidence. Our institutional design follows directly from the conditions we observed.
A single interlocking architecture of structural exclusion has operated in the arts since at least the sixteenth century — across gender, race, economic precarity, disability, queerness, class, and medium bias. Each report in this series concludes with the concrete commitments MME has made in response: how the museum is designed from first principles to operate inclusively, to build the critical and economic conditions for mosaic’s recognition as fine art, and to document and share that methodology with institutions whose work has been similarly misclassified.
The Architecture of Inclusive Experience is the MME’s exhibit design research series. Reports examine specific practitioners and institutions whose approaches to immersive experience have something to teach — and develop original theory on how designed environments produce emotional and perceptual states. The series draws on neuroscience, empathy research, and cultural analysis to argue that designing for the full range of human experience from first principles produces better outcomes for every visitor — not as accommodation, but as architecture. The Emotional Score, The Held Note, The On-Demand Oracle, and The Archipelago of Reflection are among the frameworks developed here. The senses research, currently in development, represents the series’ most substantial contribution to the field.