STUDENT NAME: Kelly Lew. Thinking Frame:

Similar documents
STUDENT NAME: Thinking Frame: Tanner Lee

Relaxed Performance Social Narrative Inside the Building

We re going to a show at the Hopkins Center!

Michael Fieldman, Architect

GREETINGS. When you enter a room, see someone you know or meet someone new, it is polite to greet him or her. To greet someone, you:

Science Museum of Minnesota. Omnitheater Social Narrative

Adel Abdessemed L âge d or

Going to The New Victory Theater!

STUDENT NAME: Aylin Cruz. Learning Places Fall 2018 SITE REPORT #3A HONORS STUDENT AT THE WILD PROJECT

Joyce Theater International Center for Dance Preliminary Program Requirements

Name. Read each sentence and circle the pronoun. Write S on the line if it is a subject pronoun. Write O if it is an object pronoun.

Asymmetrical Symmetry

I am going to the Waterside Theatre in Aylesbury. Social Story for the Waterside theatre. Page 1

Childsplay presents. A Social Story

In Conversation: Lowery Stokes Sims on New Territories

SYMPHONY CALENDAR JULY 2015 JUNE Sweet on the Symphony Valentine Fundraiser

Strule Arts Centre Visual Guide

A trip to a museum is an excursion, an event it s planned and prepared for in

Art as experience. DANCING MUSEUMS, 7th November, National Gallery, London

Liverpool Empire Theatre Visual Story A visual resource for people with Autism Spectrum Condition visiting the theatre.

ANDRÁS PÁLFFY INTERVIEWS FRANK ESCHER AND RAVI GUNEWARDENA

Chapter 3: Seeing the Value in Art

Information about Visiting The Customs House

Museums Australia Conference, May After the show: Making sense after the event. Gillian Savage Director Environmetrics.

Wolfgang Tillmans at Fondation Beyeler, Basel

FALL EXHIBITIONS SEPTEMBER 8 NOVEMBER 19, 2017

Rosa Olivares: Something Like Desing - Interview with Jörg Sasse

Layered Upon, Over Time An interview with Bill Jacobson

Newsletter Issue # 3 September 2004

Going to the Library. A social narrative for visiting Galaxie Library

Appalachian Center for Craft - Clay Studio. How to Write an Artist s Statement

STAGE MANAGER JOB DESCRIPTION & DUTIES

Same Name. by Steven Burton

- 1 - LICENSEE S INFORMATION: (Please complete all for processing) Licensee s Name: Licensee s Address: City, State, Zip Code:

Fall of the Artist Individual, Rise of the Art Corporation

DEVELOPING IWM NORTH. May Suzanne MacLeod Jocelyn Dodd Tom Duncan

Black Representation on British Television: The 1990s

HOW LOS CARPINTEROS CONSTRUCT By COLLEEN KELSEY Photography THEA GOLDBERG

kathy mctavish Press Release 1 Artist Statement 3 Images 9

What Do You Call A Place Where Books Are Kept?

ROUP VISIT #HOWREVOLUTIONARY YOU DON T KNOW THE HALF OF IT

KEYWORDS Participation, Social media, Interaction, Community

the CenterStage Policies & Procedures

how does this collaboration work? is it an equal partnership?

CINEMA SIX Emergency and Safety Procedures

Demographics Information

THE HEART OF HOLLYWOOD WORLD TOUR LONDON The Must See Spectacular Showcase of the Magic and Mystique of HOLLYWOOD

Art Criticisni and Aesthetic Judgn1ent

Bring it On: The Gift of Conflict

DON T TALK TO STRANGERS

Arch 464 ECS Spring 2017

Artist Augustus Serapinas: "I know exactly what I'm doing and where I was going

2079 UNIVERSITY AVENUE, BERKELEY Former Ice Cream Shop in Tremendous Foot-Traffic Area

SAVOY THEATRE VISUAL STORY

The Reality of Experimental Architecture: An Interview with Lebbeus Woods By Lorrie Flom

SamanthaGreenMysteries.com

Observational Study: The New Museum and the Frick Collection

Art and Design Curriculum Map

CORPORATE SPONSOR THEATER NAMING

Exclusive Use of a Cinema for a Current Film Screening Private Screenings/Fundraisers

New Media and the Gallery. Paul Slocum

THE AUDIENCE IS PRESENT

WELCOME TO ACTORS THEATRE OF LOUISVILLE S PAMELA BROWN AUDITORIUM!

Sculpture Park. Judith Shea, who completed a piece here at the ranch, introduced us.

FELIX GONZALEZ-TORRES

Incoming 9 th Grade Pre-IB English

Cambridge Assessment International Education Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education

Who s an April Fool this year?

Experiments and Experience in SP173. MIT Student

Copyright Corwin 2017

Hopkins Center for the Arts Visitor s Guide

85.1% Mystery Shop Report # Greenwood Premiere Cinema Bypass Hwy 72 Greenwood, SC Saturday July :23PM.

virtual interiors - Interview with Annett Zinsmeister, Berlin

eric Lafforgue Making movies in North Korea

2019 Ford Theatres Artists Partnership Program. Day of Show Guidelines. Day of Show Guidelines. Arrival. Departure. Know Before You Go.

1968, The Fire of Ideas

I S E D S U R P R C O N F U S E D I F U L B E AU T I R E D I S M E R E L AT E PAGE 10 S H A R E W O U L D PAGE 2 PAGE 4 PAGE 6 I N S P PAGE 8 PAGE 12

going to the theatre a social story The Orlando REP Sensory-Friendly Series is presented by

The Golden Age of Non-Idiomatic Improvisation

SPONSORSHIP GUIDE. Thank you in advance for your interest in sponsoring Downtown Orlando s Signature Film Festival.

Long-term Pinacoteca s Collection exhibition Educational proposals Relational artworks

EXHIBITOR & SPONSORSHIP PROSPECTUS. April 18-20, 2018 Boston, MA Hynes Convention Center #ESACon18

Inboden, Gudrun Wartesaal Reinhard Mucha 1982 pg 1 of 11

[Sur] face: The Subjectivity of Space

ARTIST'S STATEMENT. An artist statement should provide insight into the artist's concept and motivation behind making the work.

Jennifer L. Fackler, M.A.

10 Ways To Improve Well-Being. by Bryony Shaw MAPP. 10 scientific, yet simple ways to improve well-being

Galschiot creates large monument for Aarhus Harbor

Attachment 7: 5/9/13 Neighborhood Meeting Summary

30 June pm midnight

Lesson Concept Design. Pop Up Art Show: Public Space Intervention

We hope that you will find the following information helpful to you in your capacity as a volunteer usher.

Type to enter text. Greater Boston Stage Company Social Story Welcome to Our Theatre!

SILENT AUCTION. WALDO PIZZA FOR A YEAR Waldo Pizza has dinner covered with one completely customizable pie every month for an entire year!

SHAPE Shape defines objects in space. Shapes have two dimensions height and width and are usually defined by lines.

SILENT AUCTION. WALDO PIZZA FOR A YEAR Waldo Pizza has dinner covered with one completely customizable pie every month for an entire year!

GOING TO SEE DISNEY S THE LION KING A Social Story

Klee or Kid? The subjective experience of drawings from children and Paul Klee Pronk, T.

The Guthrie Theater & The Orchestra Hall: Performance Spaces and Public Engagement. ARCH 3711W Julia Robinson & James Wheeler Fall 2016

Ivanhoé Cambridge begins major work to the Place Ville Marie Esplanade

Transcription:

Learning Places Fall 2018 SITE REPORT #2A name of site report NAMING PROTOCOL. When saving and posting your site reports on OpenLab, please follow the following format: SiteReport#Letter.LastnameFirstname. Here s an example: SiteReport2B.SwiftChristopher. STUDENT NAME: Kelly Lew Thinking Frame: In the reading, audio, and video assignments for this week a number of spaces for voices of protest are discussed. The Guerilla Girls broadcast their messages across a wide variety of media and places: posters on walls and billboards, handouts on the sidewalk, t shirts on bodies, projections on walls, installations in abandoned buildings and art galleries, magazines, zines, websites, etc. Next Epoch produces ecological art in neglected urban wastelands. Decolonize This Place conducts protests in museums, without prior permission for use of the spaces. As a group, these interventions could be described as unsanctioned or subversive events performed in spaces that were not designed or curated specifically for protest. In response to these kinds of activities (and perhaps in recognition aesthetically or culturally of their importance), there have been increased efforts by community leaders and cultural institutions to create spaces for critical or dissenting voices. Landers, et al, describes strategies to create sanctioned spaces for protest in libraries, plazas, and parks. Similarly, the Brooklyn Museum now seeks to create spaces for alternative, minority, and resistant cultures and voices through curation and architectural interventions. The question remains whether resistant practices, alternative performances, and protest are more effective when sanctioned or unsanctioned. Where is Dread Scott s Impossibility of Freedom in a Country Founded on Slavery and Genocide more effective, in the original 2014 performance on a street or represented in photographic form in a museum in 2018 as part of a curated exhibition? As you go through the site report collecting images and documenting your ideas, keep these tensions in mind.

SITE OBSERVATIONS Insert two images of Brooklyn Museum s facades. The first of a more traditional architectural feature for a public civic space and the second an untraditional architectural feature. Traditional architectural design. 1

Public seating Why did you choose these images? As you look at each, what do you expect to encounter once you enter the building? Explain. From the first picture I imagined a huge historical archive displaying our history and life in Brooklyn. Then I looked to my left to see space to sit which introduced a public space for all to share. It was not roped off to people who did not buy tickets or went to the museum. There were people having lunch or children running up and down the stairs. It felt like a sense of community that was joined by one large building. Upon entering the building was a new layer. There was the smell of coffee in the air and more public sitting space. Many historical or educational institutions do not have public sitting spaces. I felt that the museum was welcoming people to sit in the space that were going to view behind the ropes or the art that was in the lobby. The entrance felt more like a café or gift shop than a museum entrance. Take for instance the Metropolitan Museum which is another large historical museum and attracts a lot of visitors, but does not have a public seating space nor a café when entering the building. The Metropolitan feels more enclosed and heavy weight of regulations while the Brooklyn Museum felt open with lighter weight of regulations. Despite how both museums in size are not the same; however, the architecture on the building are very similar as well as the content within the museum. The stated mission of the Brooklyn Museum is to create inspiring encounters with art that expand the ways we see ourselves, the world and its possibilities. Take a photo of one piece of artwork that expands the way you see yourself or the world. Give the photograph a caption and 2

explain why it expands your vision of yourself or the world. Web of Life: John Biggers. The painting to me describes how life begins and how it will end. We walk on this Earth to make a home from the ground and work the land the make it our home. When we pass away we go into the ground we worked to make a home. In other words, we came from the Earth and we will return to the Earth when our time comes. Life will always revolve around Earth itself, whether it is the land, water or the air. She gives us life and takes us back when time comes. It describes how I look at the world and take the time to be more conscious of my habits to reduce pollution. When trees start to die so does life itself. The stated vision of the Brooklyn Museum is to create a place where great art and courageous conversations are catalysts for a more connected, civic, and empathetic world. Consider the curated areas of the museum. How is space arranged in order to create courageous conversations? Can you describe conversations between spaces? The space in the museum is quite interesting and fascinating how the curator has organized the artwork to blend together to create a sense of a story. I wondered through an archive of furniture, vases, and miscellaneous pieces of silverware. At first I thought it was storage area and went beyond the Employee Only sign. But it was an actual display of American historical household pieces. It was organized by item and dates. It was a true display of archive like a library with furniture, silverware and vases. After exiting the archive space there was an open space of portraits and more furniture pieces. It displayed a contrast of difference between the British and American design. It has 3

allowed patrons to observe where our inspirations come from and where we came from. Some items in the museum I feel were pieces that are controversial and misunderstood. These are the artwork pieces to make you think, feel and agree or disagree. I felt that the feminism hall displayed a lot of pieces that were unusual and curator designed it with pieces we can recognized and the further you walked in the pieces started to look not like art but a display of propaganda or documentation. I felt that it would create a sense of connection for those who can see the message and for those who did not cause confusion and distaste in the artwork. Insert an image of designed space (not art objects themselves) that suggest connection. How is the concept of connection articulated in the way art is arranged in space? (Consider the 4

walls, walkways, display boards, pedestals, rooms, etc.) Vanity with Mirror and Stool: Kem Weber. It creates a sense of connection especially how the curator has the words above it as I saw myself see myself. Brooklyn Museum declares that since we see ourselves as a conduit for open sharing and learning, we accept the controversies that may accompany courageous conversations. Consider 5

the way art objects are arranged in space for the Half the Picture exhibition in relation to viewers. How would you describe the arrangement of objects for viewers. Did the arrangements accept controversies? Did they encourage courageous conversations? If so, how? If not, why? I believe in our freedom of expression, but the intent to express to hurt someone. Now it seems like a contradiction; however, most art is offensive depending on your cultural background and gender. I felt that the space for Half the Picture was not controversial. For myself, I felt the space projected more of interpretation of what would considered offensive. I walked in with an open mind and expecting something offensive. I feel that art is offensive especially with nudity or certain colors. I felt it created more of a conversation starter or an education approach of why would this offensive or why not? Art has ways to move you to tears, anger or calming a person. I think that Half the Picture makes people think differently and question things more than they usually would. I felt very confused with certain pieces, but maybe that was the artist intention or maybe I do not see what the artist indeed for me to see. I believe that controversial or not controversial art needs to be viewed and talked about in order to create our sense of identity as well as a connection to our society. 6