Grantee Partner Spotlight: Western Illinois Museum

Western Illinois University Fraternity, Delta Upsilon, helping move the collection in preparation for renovation work.

2021 Delta Upsilon Volunteers scaled2

Features
By Mark Hallett, Director of Grants Programs

Read Time 5 minutes
April 15, 2023

Founded in 1974, the Western Illinois Museum’s mission is to “nurture our history and culture.” The Museum grew from a one-floor space, campus museum created and run by dedicated students to a full-fledged Museum in its own space, housing well over 6,000 historic artifacts from the region. It is now a hub of community activity. The Museum received an Illinois Humanities General Operating Grant to provide financial stability during a time of expansion and renovation.

A Q&A with the Western Illinois Museum

Featuring director Sue Scott.

Q: How do you see the arts, culture, and the humanities as being essential?

Sue Scott: The Arts and Humanities, at this time of my life, seem like a heavy toolbox, the kind you find in an old garage full of tools. Often you don’t even know what they are used for. Yet without those tools, you can’t build something new or fix something that needs repair. Maybe you are lucky enough to know someone who has just the right tool to make a job easier and who generously teaches you how to use it. The humanities and arts can do that. 

They build an understanding of the world around us and even offer us what we need to rethink and create a more meaningful, equitable, and connected place to live and thrive.

Q: What is the most important thing that people should know about your work?

Sue Scott: After nearly 15 years in Macomb, I have seen qualities of rural America that are often misunderstood –even within the community. At the Museum, it’s intentional that we don’t often focus on the exceptional or famous person from our town but find we can address the need to shift the perception that our lives are just defined by a series of well-established milestones, graduation, marriage, family, etc. At the Museum we look for connections with history and other to help our audience to see how their actions, decisions, and relationships- impact others and shape our community. 

By looking at the everyday lives of others, we can show that their lives, too, have value and a nuanced meaning, even if they are not in a history book.

Q: How did you arrive at doing what you do?

Sue Scott: I grew up in a family that visited museums and historic sites. Being curious and asking questions were encouraged in our household. I wanted to be an artist from a young age and my dad told me that artists had to observe and notice details. This encouragement serves me well in my creative work, as well as running an art gallery, and now a small regional Museum. I see the Museum as belonging to our community. 

Curiosity has served me in learning what I can from the people who have lived here for generations and those who choose to make it their home. I need to be a keen observer to document and collect what I hope will represent this place at this time.

Q: Who makes your work possible?

Sue Scott: There is a web of people that makes it possible for the Museum to carry out its mission and live its values. The groundswell of support that the community offers for programs and exhibits is key to keeping the doors open. We think the building needs to be full of people, interacting, talking, laughing, and learning to be relevant. Our volunteers are our biggest advocates and offer the support needed to help us further our mission. Financially, we have many individual donors who give at all levels. This participation and diverse sources of revenue allow us to take an innovative approach to present the arts and humanities as well as make it much more fun.

Sue Scotts’s Suggested Readings

I read Priya Parker’s book, “The Art of Gathering” during the pandemic and it reshaped the way I approach programming. I find myself coming back to it again and again especially when I am not sure how to move forward with a new initiative or when a program series needs to be recrafted.

Another book that I keep coming back to is “Unreasonable Hospitality” by Will Guidara. It is about running a fine dining establishment and might seem unrelated to Museum work. I found it shifted how I approach creating a connection with our visitors, and, more importantly, how to empower staff and volunteers to carry out that work.

Note: Sue Scott was honored with a Public Humanities Award by Illinois Humanities in 2022.

Corn Husk Dolls IMG 8584

Families at a fall festival make corn husk dolls.

About the Western Illinois Museum

Founded in 1974, the Western Illinois Museum’s mission is to “nurture our history and culture.” The Museum grew from a one-floor space, campus museum created and run by dedicated students to a full-fledged Museum in its own space, housing well over 6,000 historic artifacts from the region. The Museum has become a hub of community activity. 

Renovate to Innovate

Help support its “Renovate to Innovate” capital campaign to make the east side of the Museum's building fully functional.

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About the Grantee Partner Spotlight Series

Illinois Humanities highlights the work of our Grants partners through our monthly Grantee Partner Spotlight. It shines a light on our grantee partners' work and allows readers to get to know them better through a Q&A with members of the organization.

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