Showing posts with label Buffalo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buffalo. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Connecting to Collections Forum: Day 2


[Top: Burchfield Penny Art Center, University at Buffalo; Bottom (added by popular demand, left to right): Susana Tejada, Albright-Knox; Lynn Boland, GMOA; Laura Anderson, Birmingham Civil Rights Institute; Monument of Rick James.]

Today’s speakers at the IMLS’s Connecting to Collections Forum in Buffalo, NY really got to the heart of the topic at hand, discussing ways in which conservation serves communities. The buzz words today were “win-win,” and examples abounded of mutually beneficial partnerships and networks, such as the Regional Alliance for Preservation (geared towards museum professionals), and the Nebraska PBS station’s “Saving Your Treasures” program and website, which has a wealth of good, general information.

Following the talks, we went to the Burchfield Penney Art Center and participants had an opportunity to talk one-on-one with the forum’s presenters. I’m happy to report that I got some great advice on strategies to address some of our own conservation needs. I also left the forum with a stack of useful handouts—and a snazzy tote bag in which to carry them—along with a much larger rolodex than I had last week.

After the planned activities, I tagged along with some of my new friends for a trip to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Darwin Martin House Complex. With a major renovation project underway, and having just come from a forum on conservation, preservation, and restoration, I felt well primed to appreciate not only Wright’s design achievements, but also the tremendous yet rewarding efforts of the Martin House. After that, we toured a bit of the city and I was fortunate to have two of the best tour guides possible: Susana Tejada, Head of Research Resources at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and Lorna Peterson, Associate Professor in the Department of Library and Information Studies at Buffalo State College. Lorna, a Buffalo native as well as an astute historian, spoke about the city’s history with an ease that would make you think she’d lived here since its founding.

In addition to seeing some other architectural treasure like Louis Sullivan’s Guaranty Building, we made a brief trip to the Forest Lawn Cemetery. Millard Fillmore’s grave was impressive, but the highlight of the cemetery was definitely the tombstone of Rick James, Mr. Superfreak himself. There is an extremely goofy picture of me next to it striking a Rick James pose, but I can’t bring myself to post it. Maybe with a little prodding I could be persuaded to share.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Connecting to Collections Forum: Day 1


Today’s sessions at the Connecting to Collections Forum in Buffalo, NY were completely varied but consistently engaging, covering everything from “going green” to volunteerism. Much of it was “nuts and bolts,” so I won’t recount it all here, but if you’re interested, the talks will be available online at the IMLS website, as are previous forum sessions. There is also a great video making the case for the preservation and conservation of our cultural heritage that you can watch here.

As one of today’s speakers put it, “we understand the world through our images…and together we must preserve these extraordinary resources for future generations.” In their wisdom, the organizers of the forum made the best case for our cause--for me, anyway--by starting the day with docent-led tours of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, one of the nation’s great collections of modern and contemporary art. Seeing some modern art history college textbooks in the gift shop, I half-jokingly asked if they used them in lieu of a collections catalogue. They do not, but appreciated the joke anyway.