Custodial narration for museums, archives,
and public history institutions
Narration for Institutional Memory
Custodial Neutral Methodology (ACN)
Object-Centered Voice
Pilot-First Engagement
How This Work Is Used in Institutions
Pilot Deployment
Single Object or Room
Introduced as a limited pilot
Often tied to one artifact, case, or gallery
Allows evaluation without structural change
Exhibition Refresh
Interpretive Update
Used during audio or label refresh cycles
Integrates with existing interpretive frameworks
Requires no rebranding or redesign
Sensitive or Dense Material
Custodial Neutral Context
Applied where emotional over-interpretation is avoided
Prioritizes clarity, chronology, and provenance
Keeps the object central, not the narrator
Quiet Expansion
Selective Adoption
Begins with one installation
Expanded only if it proves useful
Often formalized without formal announcement
Specific use varies by institution, collection, and interpretive context.
Custodial Narration — Selected Works
These recordings demonstrate custodial narration as it is used in museums, archives, and public history institutions.
The voice does not interpret meaning into existence. It clarifies relationships between object, system, and time — allowing the material to carry its own weight.
These samples are presented without performance framing, emotional guidance, or imposed narrative emphasis. They are intended to be heard as they would be encountered in situ:
steady, precise, and subordinate to the artifact.
Basalt Stele Fragment
(Inscribed stone monument · Near East · c. 9th-7th century BCE )
Telegraph Sounder
(Communications apparatus · United States · Late 19th century)
Tin Lunch Pail
(Industrial domestic object · United States · c. 1920-1940)
Gelatin Silver Portrait
(Photographic print · United States · c. 1900-1930)
Sextant
(Navigational instrument · Maritime · 19th-20th century)
Spatial Narration — Selected Works
These recordings demonstrate spatial narration as used in galleries, historical sites, and interpretive environments.
The voice establishes orientation, scale, and sequence — guiding the listener through space without directing emotion or interpretation.
These samples are intended to be heard as they would be encountered in situ:
measured, clarifying, and responsive to the environment.
Victorian Front Parlor
(Domestic interior · United States · Late 19th century)
Kitchen Hearth
(Domestic work space · Europe & North America · 18th-19th century)
Machine Shop Floor
(Industrial interior · United States · Early-mid 20th century)
Aircraft Cockpit
(Aviation control space · 20th century)