PRESENTATION
Presentation Title:
Exhibiting Knowledge: An Experiential Approach to Research Engagement
Presenter:
Dr Megan Fizell, Dr Emily Morandini
Presentation Date:
Wednesday 13 May 2026 | 2:30pm – 3pm
Presentation Description:
UNSW Library’s Exhibitions Program bridges academic research and student engagement by collaborating with experts to translate complex scholarly work into engaging exhibitions. This approach not only makes research more accessible and understandable but also actively repositions our scholarly collections, including Special Collections, to create unique and enriching research, teaching, and learning experiences.
The Library’s program is underpinned by principles of inclusive pedagogies and sustainable practices, ensuring our initiatives are accessible to diverse learners. Our interactive, immersive exhibitions are evolving projects that generate new knowledge through community involvement. This approach allows a deeper, more dimensional exploration of themes for students. To further this, we leverage exhibitions as powerful educational tools by creating an Experiential Learning program, which is a hands-on, object-based learning initiative designed to develop critical literacy, analytical, and interpretive skills. We collaborate with academics to create workshops that directly link exhibition content to course outcomes, helping students deepen their understanding and allowing academics to assess critical thinking.
Our presentation will demonstrate this process through three recent case studies:
The exhibition “Living Water” exemplified our approach to making interdisciplinary research tangible. It brought together work from five faculties, connecting research across various environments and disciplines to showcase how scientists, engineers, artists, and policymakers address complex environmental challenges. We complemented this project with “Deep Illustrations”, a display featuring historical scientific illustrations and rare volumes from our Special Collections. The exhibitions enabled students to connect contemporary research with its historical lineage in scientific inquiry.
Similarly, the “Materials Revolution” exhibition showcased cutting-edge research from UNSW SMaRT Centre, revolutionising recycling science by developing innovative solutions for problematic wastes not subject to conventional recycling. To provide historical context, we presented displays at other Library sites featuring texts, diagrams, and illustrations from the Library’s collection to consider radical technological shifts from the 18th century to the present. The “Industrial Revolution” and “Technological Revolution” displays connected historical precedents with current scientific frontiers, offering students a layered understanding of innovation.
Our current exhibition, “Revealing Riversleigh”, focuses on UNSW’s world-leading palaeontological research in the Riversleigh World Heritage Area. To enrich this narrative, we curated “Drawn to Extinction”, a display featuring rare historical illustrations and scientific drawings of the Tasmanian tiger. The display helped contextualise the Riversleigh fossils within the broader history of how we have documented and understood evolution, adaptation, and extinction. The projects encourage students to consider both the scientific process and the cultural aspects of knowledge creation, generating a powerful narrative about the fragility of life, and the importance of conservation efforts in the face of climate change.
This presentation will demonstrate how the UNSW Library’s Exhibitions Program is a powerful tool for community engagement and for transforming the perception and use of our scholarly collections. We create dynamic, immersive, and pedagogically sound experiences that enrich the research and learning ecosystem for the University community. Our Exhibitions Program highlights the significance of collections by drawing upon them to explore contemporary societal issues, creating a space for open dialogue and knowledge sharing.
Dr Megan Fizell
Curator, Special Collections and Exhibitions, UNSW Library
Presenter Bio
Dr Megan Fizell is the Curator, Special Collections & Exhibitions at UNSW Library. Megan has worked in the GLAMR sector in London and Sydney as a curator, writer, and art historian. Megan centres her current curatorial practice on reconceptualising interdisciplinary research, using inclusive and collaborative methods to create engaging, multisensory exhibitions and experiences.
Dr Emily Morandini
Exhibitions Coordinator, UNSW Library
Presenter Bio
Dr Emily Morandini is the Exhibitions Coordinator at UNSW Library. Emily is an arts facilitator, artist, and curator and has worked in the GLAMR and education sectors for several years. Emily is interested in the ability of art and exhibition-making to communicate knowledge and ideas beyond traditional disciplines, to connect with broad audiences.
