Post Tagged with: "museums"

NPR’s ‘Museums in the 21st Century’

NPR’s ‘Museums in the 21st Century’

Here’s the best Christmas present a museum nerd could ever ask for.  NPR is releasing a series of programs on today’s museums.  Each one presents an in-depth but easy-to-understand summary of the challenges facing museums in the U.S.–everything from art crime to experimental architecture to education. Thoroughly researched, with quotes from all the great players in the field, each is a fascinating gem.

Listen at NPR’s ‘Museums in the 21st Century’ series webpage.
Via Museum Blogging.

Monday, December 29, 2008 2 comments
Highlights of Paris

Highlights of Paris

Revised with commentary There’s nothing like seeing a work of art in person.  After all, do projected Powerpoints or captioned dimensions really mean anything? After spending a semester abroad last spring, and standing in front of famous artwork for the first time, I reaffirmed just how important seeing the true size of art in relation to a person is — it almost always adds a whole new dimension to the work. This little series called Art in Real Life aims to add a little of that feeling to internet-art-viewing by presenting photos of art history’s master works in real life.

The first installment of Art in Real Life is in Paris, home to countless masterworks of art. I was lucky enough to go to Paris when I was abroad, and annoyed many of my friends by insisting they stand in front of artwork so I could get shots of how large the piece actually was.  Have you, too, wondered just how big David’s Oath of the Horatii is or whether you’re taller than the Mona Lisa?  Read on for highlights at the Louvre and the Musée d’Orsay.

Monday, November 24, 2008 3 comments
Yoga in the Galleries

Yoga in the Galleries

Ever wanted to practice your child’s pose or downward dog surrounded by incredible works of art?  Turns out you can — at UNC Chapel Hill’s Ackland Art Museum, where weekly yoga programs are offered in the Asian galleries. Although I was a little shocked at first at the idea of any sport-related anything being done in a museum, on second thought, yoga seems like the perfect activity in a calm, quiet, well-lit atmosphere surrounded by beautiful objects. Now, to convince my college museum to move yoga from the gym to the galleries…

Yoga in the Galleries, at the Ackland Art Museum

Sunday, November 23, 2008 0 comments
Weekly Art Scavenger Hunts at the Met

Weekly Art Scavenger Hunts at the Met

Want to have a scavenger hunt at the Met, but aren’t into paying a hefty price ala Watson Adventures? (Though I have to say, I’m sort of dying to go on one.)  No problem: the New York Times has a challenge for you.  An intrepid and clever photographer at the newspaper takes detail shots of different paintings in the museum, according to a different theme each week.  The NY Time’s question: Can you find the full paintings?  Even having worked there for an entire summer, I can’t say I recognize a single one… which is kind of embarrassing.  Then again, there are three million works in the Met’s collection, so I guess I shouldn’t feel too bad.

The posts begin with ‘The Hidden Collection‘, followed by last week’s ‘Animals’ and this week’s ‘Tabletops‘.  Image above from the New York Times website.

Friday, August 22, 2008 2 comments
Colorful Design at the Cooper-Hewitt

Colorful Design at the Cooper-Hewitt

Wallcovering samples by Morris & Co. (London, England). From Left to Right: Wreath, Christchurch, Bramble, Apple, Ceiling, Honeysuckle; 1887. Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, New York City. Image from exhibition website.

Meandering aimlessly through museum websites earlier this summer, I came across a description of an exhibit at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum called Multiple Choice: From Sample to Product.  It wasn’t the name that drew me in, though — no, being the sucker for good, beautiful design that I am, it was an image of a French porcelain plate decorated with the various colors and glazes offered by the company.  If you are at all like me — that is, if you love paper, patterns, color combinations, interior design, lace, typography, things handwritten or things letterpressed, or really anything, for example, that’s ever been showcased on the lovely blog design*sponge — then you absolutely must go see this beautiful little exhibit.

Sample Book: The Della Robbia Papers, designed by O.W. Jaquis and published by P.P. Kellogg Division, United States Envelope Co., 1926. Smithsonian Institution Libraries. Image from exhibition website.

This is the story of the little exhibit that could.  It was supposed to close a month or two ago (or so the young woman at the admissions desk told me), but is staying open through September 1, and if you are in the New York area, you would do yourself a favor to go and see it.  It’s not perfect, and there are no brochures anymore and no catalogue ever created, but these tiny, delicate, carefully-cut scraps of paper, rolls of handmade lace, and hand-numbered wallpaper samples cluster in the basement gallery in an array of beautiful colors that spread around the room.  It will take you about a half-hour, an hour if you stretch it and read every description, to go through the exhibition; it’s a short trip, but well worth it.  I wish the section on the “origin of the sample book” had been first — it would have provided, perhaps, a better introduction — but it’s irresistible either way to anyone who’d like to look at a lovely collection of objects.  They range from samples of painted porcelain, to Japanese wallpapers, to lace, to artist’s tools.

Sample book: A Descriptive Handbook of Modern Watercolor Pigments, written by J. Scott Taylor and published by Winsor and Newton, Ltd., late 19th century. Smithsonian Institution Libraries. Image from exhibition website.

One of my favorite objects was this group of paper samples (above, left).  Zoom in on the image to see a close up of the paper — the colors are named the most exotic, strange words: burnt sienna is “tobacco”, a dark sky blue is “gobelin”, and my favorite, a gray-lavender, is “gloaming”.  If you need any word inspiration, this is the exhibit to go to — many of the samples, colors, and patterns are named with some lusciously descriptive words, like the “honeysuckle” or “bramble” patterns (above, right) by Morris & Co.

Also nice to check out at the Design Museum is the garden in the back.  The garden is as big as the floor of the museum.  Unfortunately, while they change exhibits (the Rococo show just ended), there’s only a small room with a selection of works from the permanent collection and this show that are open; but they have Friday night cocktails in the beautiful, sprawling garden.  Can you tell from this review how much I love this charming little museum?  Don’t even get me started on their great website, which has a blog, Youtube channel, and extensive websites on each of their exhibits… just get there yourself and immerse yourself in a world of samples!

Multiple Choice: From Sample to Product, at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, 2 East 91st St., New York City. | Now through September 1, 2008.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008 0 comments