Museum Studies at Tufts University

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Rapid Response Exhibits

The International African American Museum, a museum planned to trace African-American history in America from slavery to today, has hired a rapid response educator to help create exhibits in response to current events. Brenda Tindal had previously done this work at the Levine Museum in which she created an exhibit on modern race relations in the months after police brutality riots in 2016.

The choice to hire an educator focusing on rapid response and current events follows a new trend in museums. Whereas most new exhibitions take months, even years, of planning before coming to fruition, museums are consciously choosing to incorporate current issues and events to better serve their communities. This new trend has gone hand in hand with rapid response collecting. A practice in which museums begin collecting items from current events they deem important to our current society.

While this has been a growing trend for some time, our current political and social climate has accelerated the need for exhibits to give a voice to social issues. Just this month, the National Civil Rights Museum (NCRM) in Memphis opened an exhibit I AM A CHILD, to shed light on our current immigration crisis and the separation of children from their parents at the border. This exhibit was the result of a photoshoot by Paola Mendoza and Kisha Bari on the steps of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency in New York City. These photos, only taken one month prior to the exhibits opening, went viral. This led to NCRM to contact the pair via twitter about a rapid response installation at the museum. I AM A CHILD, speaks not just to a current human and civil rights crisis, but also to the power of social media to fight for social change.

While many museums are turning towards rapid response exhibits and installations to promote social awareness and change, the practice is also a necessary step to changing the narrative around museums. Museums for far too long have curated the dominant narrative of many cultures. It is time for us to step back and tell the story as it happens and embrace the fact that museums are biased.

Further Reading

National Civil Rights Museum harnesses social media for ‘rapid response installation’

New South Carolina Museum to have rapid response exhibits

I AM A CHILD

Do Pop-Up Museums Threaten the Integrity of Art Museums?

Fellow millennial colleagues, get ready: the Color Factory is opening in New York next month. This interactive and immersive exhibition features site-specific palette installations, including a massive bright yellow ball pit that participants can jump into, a room comprised entirely of confetti, and a larger than life size Lite Bright wall. Sound familiar? We have all seen these installations online or on our feeds. When the Color Factory first opened in San Francisco last year, it took the internet by storm, becoming an especially popular platform for colorful Instagram posts.

As an art historian and museum studies student, I’m somewhat uneasy about this latest museum fad: the pop-up museum. These “museums,” such as the Museum of Ice Cream, Candytopia,  and 29Rooms strategically provide multi-sensory experiences that are often geared towards a younger audience constituency.  However, with their commercial and social media appeal, instant entertainment, competitive ticket availabilities, and expensive entrance fees (with some tickets as high as $38 per person), I have to wonder if this pop culture fad is threatening, or helping, the integrity of art museums. Where museums were once thought of as a place of quiet respite and serious contemplation of the art and information available, many museums are now social gathering hubs for millennials, as a place to go to get that perfect Instagram shot. Are the days of “cultivating a broad public for high art” gone? Can we even compare the pop-up museum with other museum institutions?

Philippe de Montebello, the former director of the Met, has argued that quick turnover rates for such exhibitions, while fantastic for a museum’s finances, is sacrificing connoisseurship and education. This is especially true of hyped-up immersive installations; many people pay for the experience, and not to understand the idea behind the artwork- and that is okay. Pop-up exhibitions and installations are still succeeding in bringing in more visitors, many of whom may not have visited in the first place.

The high prices of these installations themselves are a problem. For instance, when the immersive Rain Room experience was at LACMA in 2015, tickets completely sold out in just days. With its widespread, if slightly pervasive, advertising, and the prevalence of the installation on social media, everyone was trying to get their hands on a ticket. However, upon inquiry with a staff member, I discovered I could receive a coveted ticket by simply “signing up for a museum membership for $110.” This was a proposal I declined, not only for the price, but also for the rather unethical nature of the offer. It didn’t sit right with me that those who were able to afford the membership fee would gain immediate access to this in-demand experience, while others, like students, would either have to wait in standby lines or pass up the experience altogether.

Similarly, the Cleveland Museum of Art is currently showing Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors, an immersive environment installation like the Rain Room. Although entrance to the Museum’s collections is free, tickets to this experience are expensive, at $30 per person, and almost inaccessible, considering the speed in which they sell out. This is another disheartening example of the threat to the integrity of art museums. It appears that individuals are traveling to the Cleveland Museum of Art in mass numbers to wait in line for hours for this experience, rather than taking the same amount of time to enjoy the Kara Walkers’, Mark Rothkos’, and Paul Cézannes’ all available to view in the adjacent galleries. I hope that visitors to these popular installations also take the time to visit the other collections on site after their three-to-five minute immersive and selfie experience is complete.

Moreover, ‘Instagramable’ exhibitions do not always align with the museum’s mission, and in fact the “museum’s basic mission can be directly contradicted by shoddiness of product,” as Montebello has observed. I contend that LACMA had its financial interests in mind over that of the public when they installed the Rain Room. LACMA’s mission statement is “To serve the public through the collection, conservation, exhibition, and interpretation of significant works of art from a broad range of cultures and historical periods, and through the translation of these collections into meaningful educational, aesthetic, intellectual, and cultural experiences for the widest array of audiences.” I will agree that the Rain Room experience achieved the “aesthetic experience” section of its mission, but what about the “educational, intellectual, and cultural experiences to the widest array of audiences?” Ultimately, it appears that a cultivation of commercial experiences, to the detriment of the inherently scholarly nature of some museums, is the latest threat to an art museum’s integrity.

Weekly Jobs Roundup!

Here’s the weekly jobs roundup for the week of July 22nd!

Northeast

Leadership Transitions and Data Administrator [Arts Consulting Group, Boston, MA]

Education Manager [Old North Church, Boston, MA]

Curatorial Assistant [MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, MA]

Museum Educator and Assistant [Historic Newton, Newton, MA]

Studio Coordinator [New Art Center, Newton, MA]

Education and Group Program Coordinator [Essex Historical Society and Shipbuilding Museum, Essex, MA]

Communications Manager [The Preservation Society of Newport County, Newport, RI]

Mid-Atlantic

Manager, Interactive Experiences [Liberty Science Center, Jersey City, NJ]

Manager of School and Community Programs [Reginald F. Lewis Museum, Baltimore, MD]

Registrar and Collection Manager [Reginald F. Lewis Museum, Baltimore, MD]

Co-Curator, Arts and Industries Building Future Exhibition [Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC]

Manager of Exhibitions [Woodruff Arts Center, Atlanta, GA]

Midwest

Collections Management Specialist [Ohio History Connection, Columbus, OH]

Curatorial Assistant, Contemporary Art [Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR]

Curator of Education [Dayton Art Institute, Dayton, OH]

Curator of Exhibits [Missouri State Museum, Jefferson City, MI]

Southeast

Curator [Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Jacksonville, FL]

Associate Curator [Cummer Museum of Art and Gardens, Jacksonville, FL]

West

Coordinator, School Programs [La Brea Tar Pits and Natural History Museum, Los Angeles, CA]

Assistant Conservator [LACMA, Los Angeles, CA]

Curator of Natural History [City of Riverside, Riverside, CA]

Corporate Development Officer [San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA]

Publications Associate [SFMOMA, San Francisco, CA]

Assistant Registrar [SFMOMA, San Francisco, CA]

Educator [Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education, Portland, OR]

 

Volunteers Needed for Free Fun Friday at the Fitchburg Art Museum!

The Fitchburg Art Museum is seeking enthusiastic volunteers to help with kids’ art projects and a Treasure Hunt during its Free Fun Friday event on Friday, July 27th, 2018. This is a great opportunity to see a large community event in action and be a part of it. No artistic experience is necessary!

Helping with the art projects involves explaining to the parents and kids how to do the project, showing them a sample and the supplies and tools, and tidying up the table when kids finish. It might involve preparing some of the supplies (cutting circles out of paper plates, cutting lengths of string, etc.) if supplies get low on the prepared ones. Helping with the Treasure Hunt involves sitting at a table and handing out the Treasure Hunt maps, reviewing the completed Treasure Hunts, and giving a prize to kids who complete one.

The day runs from 10:00 am until 4:30 pm; the Fitchburg Art Museum requests that volunteers stay a minimum of 2 hours. For more information or to sign up to volunteer, please contact Barbara Callahan at bcallahan@fitchburgartmuseum.org.

Weekly Jobs Roundup!

Here’s the weekly jobs roundup for the week of July 15th!

Northeast

Education Manager [Old North Church, Boston, MA]

Art Lab Assistant [Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA]

Museum Preparator [Williams College, WIlliamstown, MA]

Polly Thayer Starr Fellowship in American Art [Boston Athenaeum, Boston, MA]

Mid-Atlantic

Executive Director [Ward Museum of Wildfowl Art, Salisbury Maryland]

Co-Curator [Smithsonian Institute, Washington DC]

Development Coordinator [American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY]

Visitor Services Manager [National September 11 Memorial and Museum, New York, NY]

Manager, Interactive Experiences [Liberty Science Center, Jersey City, NJ]

Exhibition Curator/Director of Interpretation [Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington, Washington DC]

Midwest

Deputy Executive Director [The History Museum, South Bend, IN]

Exhibition Designer [Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis, MI]

Curator of Exhibits [Missouri State Museum, Jefferson City, MI]

Southeast

Associate Curator [Cummer Museum, Jacksonville, FL]

Exhibit Technician [Henry Morrison Flagler Museum, Palm Beach, FL]

West

Programs Manager, Pre-K Program [Bay Area Discovery Museum, Sausalito, CA]

Education Manager [Sacramento History Museum, Sacramento, CA]

Exhibition Developer [Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, CA]

Executive Director [San Diego Chinese Historical Museum, San Diego, CA]

Senior Exhibitions Coordinator [Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA]

 

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