Showing posts with label Web site. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Web site. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

An "Amazon for the arts"



CultureLabel is a new online shop offering items from more than 70 museum shops, galleries, artists and culture institutions around the world. United Kingdom politicians see the site as a “tool for museums’ survival” and are backing the business. Its creators have called it an “Amazon for the arts” because of the wide array of art-related products.

The site was co-founded by Peter Tullin and Simon Cronshaw, has seven staff members and works with outsourced software and Web designers. CultureLabel has a variety of items, from simple and inexpensive to large and pricey. Such pieces as an Andy Warhol magic cube and an Anish Kapoor limited-edition print are available.

This Andy Warhol magic cube is available on CulturLabel from the Tate.

Popular brands on CultureLabel include the British Museum, the Royal Academy of Arts and the Museum of London. The company is attempting to do more than just sell museum items. CultureLabel is helping the Courtauld Gallery (London) sell e-tickets for exhibitions, developing an iPhone application for the Museum of London and digitally publishing a catalogue for Oxford’s Ashmolean.

Executive chairman David Gilbert said that CultureLabel is currently trying to get three (unnamed) U.S. institutions involved. Click here to learn more about the site and keep it in mind for the next gift-giving occasion! 

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Get Your Art Fix For Free... Offline and Online




Recently, many of us have had to reconsider visits to museums, which can be pricey. Museum attendance throughout the United States has ebbed, probably because the economy forestalls discretionary spending. I have a temporary solution for those of us who find the monetary burden too heavy but would rather not sacrifice a healthy interaction with the art world. First, I exhibit several Web sites, which could accompany this one, where art enthusiasts can find information on art shows (usually free) going on in Athens. I’ve also posted a handful of ways to interact with the art world through the Internet. Although this solution offers a highly constricted interaction with artistic mediums, it can help if your pocketbook won’t allow art purchasing and museum visiting. The Internet, of course, is not an adequate surrogate for firsthand interaction with art, but it can be an edifying assistant to the physical experience of visiting a museum and a convenient way to stay informed.  My primary objective in visiting art Web sites is to gain a more thorough understanding of the pieces I’ve interacted or hope to interact with; perhaps these sites will reveal fruitful results for your curious art mind. 

First, let’s explore the free, tangible options available to us in Athens:

One of my favorite art venues in Athens has to be the friendly White Tiger Gourmet in the Boulevard area. Not only do you have the option to munch on delicious typically southern dishes, but, without paying an entrance fee, you can admire the eclectic array of typically southern art. Recently, “Morning Gravy,” a show featuring works by the Lines brothers, has garnered attention for its whimsical, handsome photography. Look for more shows by local artists in this venue.

For those stationed in Athens and its surrounding areas looking for great, mostly free exhibitions, the Web sites of Flagpole, the alternative newsweekly in Athens; Athens Music and Arts, a tumblr blog written by Athens local Julie Phillips that gives an overview of local cultural events; and the Railroad Arts District blog, which also covers Athens’ cultural events, offer insightful details on upcoming shows.

The following Web sites serve a slightly more didactic purpose. The Met podcast and the WYNC radio station casts are both auditory options available to you on the Internet. The BBC also provides sound bites and podcasts based around culture and the arts. The Flavorpill Web site, which offers cultural goings-on, links its readers to the Met podcast, which gives a thorough look at American paintings, among other analyses. For a more "judicial" look at ethical and legal questions surrounding art, the Art Law Blog does just fine in raising these questions. Finally, I’d like to mention the crude but entertaining and comprehensive c-monster culture blog and the reasonably well organized art:21 blog. The former gives international updates on happenings in the art world with an intuitive navigational format. The latter falls into the informational update category, abandoning the sensational stories seen in c-monster (e.g., curator gets fired for spending too much time looking at racy Modigliani paintings; sentenced to three years in prison) for a more level-headed rundown of contemporary art.

In the vein of art news blogs, ArtDaily.com offers the most exhilarating images and viewer-interactive options but not necessarily in-depth original analysis of art. Art in America magazine publishes articles similar to those found at Art Daily but perhaps in a less flashy way. However, for those who are looking for videos, large images and thrilling stories that you can tell your grandma (unlike those on c-monster), it wins the art site race by far—containing, for example, a video deconstruction of Picasso’s “Guernica.” The Daily Beast also satisfies some of those same impulsive and entertaining urges. Although these Web sites feature sensational art stories, the avid art critic can also find something intriguing among well-thought-out, well-written pieces on contemporary art and questions concerning ethical issues in the art world.  For another interactive Web experience check out the BBC Leonardo studio. Art:21, the aforementioned PBS television show covering contemporary art, posts its shows online. 

And, of course, when GMOA’s renovations are complete and we reopen to the public in January 2011, you can indulge in our own fascinating collection... for free! For more information or suggestions regarding blogs and Web sites featuring art coverage, email me at au79f14@uga.edu or leave a comment.


Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Refreshing


Going through our back email issues of Art Daily, we saw this article about the redesign of the Toledo Museum of Art's Web site, as part of a larger rebranding that institution is undergoing. Some things Toledo incorporated in its new design are online class registration, a Web calendar powered by Google, a redesigned newsroom with downloadable press releases and more, links to Facebook and Twitter and an online museum store. We've already incorporated some of these into our site, especially the last three, but we're about to kick our Web site redesign into high gear. We didn't get any responses the last time we asked this question, but here goes again: what would you like to see incorporated into GMOA's new Web site. We clearly plan to streamline the design, and we're working on adding a searchable collections database, including searchable databases for the archives associated with the Daura Center and more. Plus we plan to add RSS feeds to the calendar. What else would be helpful? Or pretty?