Last Wednesday, I had the opportunity to sit in on, participate in and document a training session for the MCA's Artist Guides (AGs), the corps of practicing studio artists who lead conversation-based tours for school groups throughout the academic year. The training was fantastic, in that I got to meet most of the AGs and hear them talk about their art, how leading school tours fits into it, and their unique role within the greater institution.
During the latter half of the morning session, Marissa Reyes, Associate Director of Education, School and Teacher Programs, rolled out the MCA's freshly crafted vision statement, which serves as a complement to the museum's mission statement by stating not what the MCA is but what it aspires to be. AGs, staff, and myself then broke up into small groups to parse out particularly complicated sections of the statement, and came back together as a large group to share insights and come to a collective understanding of the vision's meaning through the lens of the AGs' work with students.
Part of the vision statement refers the MCA as an "audience-engaged platform for producing art, ideas, community, and conversation around the creative process." A common question among AGs was: How do we make our students self-confident enough to become truly engaged? One AG, Alex, noted that when you come into a museum, you're essentially a human being, flesh and bones, in a building, looking at stuff. How can we help others make something more from that "stuff," when it also means taking the risk of making mistakes? Rachel Harper suggested that in order to do that, we need to set up boundaries to keep the space safe and allow students to push up against those boundaries. Marissa suggested building empathy toward one's students by using oneself as a starting point.
Something else that came up was the necessity of encouraging kids to share their negative reactions toward pieces of art. The guides talked about their experience with a Richard Serra sculpture in an exhibit a few years ago, and how students hated it when they first saw it, but how after engaging with it, many of them changed their minds. The group agreed that certain works of art are valuable within tours for their ability to turn kids off, and that those works serve as great icebreakers.
Today, I was talking with another AG about the Minimalism show that's going up on Saturday, which will be the site of the bulk of fall school tours. She expressed her excitement for it, and her particular interest in leading high school students through it. "Because they'll understand the conceptual part of it better?" I asked. "Because it's going to piss them off," she replied.
People talk about art as a thing of beauty, of cultural and significance, as an emotional force or a historical object, but I like art best when it pisses people off. Because what makes them angry, makes them talk, and when people talk -- especially passionately -- they learn.
cyberpedaling
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
Monday, September 19, 2011
routines and relationships, museum style
In a recent guest post on Nina Simon’s blog Museum 2.0, Laurel Butler, Education Specialist at the Yerba Buena Center from the Arts (YBCA) in San Francisco, talked about a program that the YBCA recently piloted called YOU Membership. Participants in the program enter into a close relationship with the YBCA, whose staff basically serves as the museum equivalent of personal trainers. Seriously: being a YOU Member means that you have professionals evaluate your interests and needs in order to recommend a “museum routine” designed to deepen your involvement with the institution and extend the benefits you reap from that involvement. From the point of view of the visitor, I see two major benefits of participating in the program. First, instead of having to sift through all offered programs and events, you are automatically directed toward the ones that should be of highest interest to you. Second, you get lots of one-on-one interaction with museum insiders.
As someone profoundly interested in ways in which the museum can make its interpretive processes more transparent to the public and privilege the voices of its visitors, this kind of initiative seems like a giant leap in the right direction. Still, considering the fact that YBCA continues to struggle with getting YOU Members to participate in the programming recommended to them, I can’t help but wonder if their efforts aren’t somewhat misdirected. Instead of spending a lot of time customizing visits for an intimate group of people, would the YBCA be better advised to focus on attracting wider audiences to the museum by proposing alternative ways of experiencing its collection?
I’ve been mulling over a few possibilities for using technology and the web to extend the appeal of the museum visit to a larger public. The first is some type of printed resource or website that treats the meta of the museum by demystifying the inner workings of the institution. This would be designed to the give the audience a better sense of what goes into constructing and maintaining a museum, and what decisions are made by various museum professionals. Knowing where the authority lies and where interpretation enters the mix in any decision-making process can empower one to challenge the end product, and I think people willing to spend a bit of time familiarizing themselves with the ins and outs of museum work would begin to feel much more comfortable calling into question the meaning and value of things they encounter in the museum of art. If this type of revelatory information could exist in museums themselves as interactive displays, I think the effects would be revolutionary.
The second idea resembles something like craigslist for museums. Not a social networking site per se, but a place to connect with people offering a service that you need, this could be a way for educators and museum visitors to connect in an informal way. Not only could museums advertise their exhibitions and programs, but they could learn about the desires of their visitors, and visitors could find peers with shared interests with which to visit museums, attend events, and debrief museum experiences.
Thursday, September 15, 2011
first week
my first week as the school and teacher programs intern at the mca chicago was awesome. things i love about it:
- my supervisors are competent young women who are incredibly approachable and very open and excited to allowing me to pursue my own research and interests within the internship whenever possible;
- the education department's offices are right next to curatorial's;
- my first major project consists of retooling and extending the life of a wiki that came out of the summer teacher institute, and is going to be a lot of fun.
- one of my supervisors, talking about the koi pond on the first floor of the mca, noted that many of the artist guides use it during school tours to set the tone for the visit, and introduce the mca as a space that challenges preconceived notions of what a museum is. what a great way to knock down the authoritative voice a few pegs from the get-go: find a feature of the institution that defies the normal characteristics of the museum as temple, and use it to bring up the paradigm.
- the mca does a lot of work to maintain and strengthen relationships with a small group of teachers and schools. how can this be balanced with attracting new audiences to the museum, and what should be breakdown be between close-knit relationships with a select few and shallower relationships with a much larger public?
reviving the blog
hello again, cyberspace. while this blog began as a home for posts pertaining to ray yang's cyberped class in the spring of 2010, i'm reviving it as place for journaling about my fieldwork internship in school and teacher programs at the mca in the fall of 2011. i should create a separate space for thesis-related blogs, but the thought of increasing my already expansive cyber footprint by one more blog is slightly nauseating, so this will have to do!
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
voki
i have to admit, i am not sold on avatars. this may go back to my middle school self's loathing of the times when i would go over to friend's house and they would want to spend hours playing sims... who knows. but i ended up on the world languages group of edutopia and saw a reference to voki. having never heard of it, i checked it out and discovered that it's a program that lets you create "personalized speaking avatars" for free that you then have the option of using on blogs and in emails. this actually seems like a potentially cool resource for foreign language classrooms, and i'll keep it in mind for this summer.
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Monday, April 25, 2011
we love museums... do museums love us back?
um. this is adorable. also, it says in less than 5 minutes what i am still not sure if i said in 18 pages of intro/lit review.
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