Monday, December 5, 2011

Week 7

This week we had two really wonderful guest speakers.  Curator Lisa Dorin came and spoke to us about her career as a curator and specifically about her work on the Sharon Hayes exhibition.  I thought one of the most interesting things she shared was that her favorite part of her job--working with living artists--can also be the biggest challenge of her job.  She explained that she loves being an advocate to help make the artist's vision happen in the museum, but on the flip side, sometimes certain ideas and requests are just not possible.

Troy Klyber is the Intellectual Property Manager here at the museum.  We were particularly excited to talk with him because we had lots of questions about the types of images/music/etc that can be used in the Digital Collage projects and still make them legally in-the-clear to post on the museum website.  He talked to us about copyright laws and the idea of fair use.  He said that a lot of people ask him about if the museum "goes after" people who use AIC artworks in commercials, ads, products, etc.  Interestingly, he said his job isn't so much about policing use of the museum collection as it is to make sure that the museum itself is fairly using the collection!  He loves the research and investigation that comes with tracking down artists and estates of artists who have died.  Just after his talk with us, the AIC blog featured a post by Troy about this issue.

Another highlight of the week was going to the ASM College Fair.  We have a few seniors in Teen Lab who were able to get lots of important and useful information, but it was also a helpful orientation to the process for underclassmen as well.  ASM offers some great resources about the college process on their website too.


Saturday, November 12, 2011

Sharon Hayes: Spoken Word DJ performance

On Thursday we got to check out Sharon Hayes's Spoken Word DJ performance for the opening of the special exhibition featuring her work.  She mixed audio from historic public speeches and news broadcasts like a DJ mixes music.  Many students documented the performance as potential material for their upcoming digital story collage projects.  We get to meet with the curator on Monday to learn more!


Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Thinking about Themes

Terah led us on an improvised gallery exploration of a theme.  First we discussed what a theme can be and brainstormed a list of ideas in the studio.  After some very (un)scientific voting, we landed on a theme to explore together: BLUE.  Amanda suggested Ed Ruscha's City for a starting point.  As our conversations in the gallery went on, each student wrote notes, words, and associations on post-it notes, which we compiled on a collective poster.  Three students were designated photographers, and they collected images to document our walk and the works we considered.  Ultimately, our improvised stops and the conversations we had at each work provided the kind of elements that we could use to develop our next project: digital story collages.





Monday, November 7, 2011

Digital Collages - inspiration!

Here are some digital stories created by teens and teachers who participated in other programs at the museum, as well as other examples from the Internet.  What techniques could you emulate?  What could you do differently as you develop your theme through your own Digital Collage?

AIC examples



Other examples

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Personal Museum Maps - Presentations with Staff

We had a wonderful group of museum education staff members turn out for our midterm presentations of our Personal Museum Map projects.  Students each created a collage featuring a selection of works or spaces from throughout the museum.  Many included a packing tape transfer technique as one of their collage element layers.  While their final collages did not necessarily need to read visually as a literally map, they needed to include the museum map in "some way, shape, or form."

In small groups, teens took the staff members around the museums on a tour of their collages, stopping to talk about their selections along the way.  These collages will be included in a final exhibition (which the students will plan) in the Ryan Education Center.  Here is a glimpse of their work and tours.





Friday, October 28, 2011

Found Text Poetry

We used the words collected through our Text Glimpses activity in the gallery on Oct. 20 to write found poetry.  After creating a group bank of words from our own lists, we each wrote a stanza to add to a group poem.  We began by thinking about the theme "life in the museum," but some of us ended up going in slightly different directions... post-apocalyptic museum, anyone?  Here's the result (sorry, guys, if the order is slightly different -- the sheets got a little mixed up).

Anyone have any title suggestions? 

Industrial City
Museum Admission is mine!
Cafes and levels
I find it beautiful.

Beautiful art is a garden around the world.
Warmed photography is special towards mom.
Pressure between beautiful, not nothing.

Paradise is the key to no pressure.
Hidden cities' elevators is love.
Virgin child's modern wing is Paris.
Hidden cafes everywhere between polished laptops.
MINE!

Don't do that.  The people stay nervous.
Look carefully, hidden dead bodies.
Find them.
The path finder in my mind is the Devil inside me.
The Devil.
Creepy bloody stuff in my Perfectly imperfect world.
The beauty.

Virgin Child leaves outside, crying.
Window city hidden in beautiful Beast.
Dead bodies everywhere, fantastic!
Mom, Devil is in side me, hidden inside mind.
Emotional war open, running is key..
God is mine!

Around the world no exit.
Dead bodies everywhere,
She's crying.
Reminds her of war,
Emotional beast in Paris.

Even beasts find it,
Between industrial archives:
A chance to win,
Running, unarmed, toward the polished city.

I break their neck
On membership desk.
Devil is inside me.
There is no exit.

Paris has a garden that's hidden.
The walls move and you find dead bodies.
The dead bodies are my grandchildren.
But it's okay because it's a perfectly imperfect world.

Every day life, love, Paris.
Crying and cursing.
Photography of every Sunday in the parks archive.

Polished key.
Chance to win marvelous path
Finder to Paradise around the world.
Paris.

I'm fantastic in my mind.
Can you find it?
It's hidden, get the key.
Open it wide look carefully.
Everything in my mind is everywhere scattering.

Look carefully, restroom that way.
Explore its beautiful hot marvelous reflection.
Work hours, exit, leave now, don't stay.
Terminated but stop, no pictures, photography.

I have the key to my mind that lets me think.
Can you see?
That's why I have to archive goals.