Showing posts with label tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tours. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

On Museums


I have found that art museums are, for the most part, fairly quiet places. They seem to operate on the same dynamics of a library. For example, though museum workers rarely will, the environment has somehow conditioned me to expect someone to raise a finger to their lips and “shh!” me if I breathe too loudly. When I read about the debates on the concepts of art during the 19th century—what is art? is art moral or immoral? is the artist insane for making a splatter-painting and asking $5,000 for it?—I imagine that many of these thinkers had lengthy and animated conversations in front of works of art and museum patrons. It seems like back then art museums used to be more warm and invigorating, their works the subject of thoughtful conversation. Today, museums have evolved into colder spaces for hushed whisperings and silent reflection.

Part of the museum experience is allowing the art to sink in and permeate your mind. I honestly can’t do that by just standing in front of a painting and looking at it in silence. Okay, so I understand that some people like to concentrate quietly on the painting before them, but I feel that many others like to delve actively into the art to make it more alive for them. Furthermore, talking about a painting or sculpture with others allows for different insights into the work. For example, I might only talk about the artist’s use of shadows and how they might reflect a darker personality, whereas one of my friends might point out the quality of light in the work and how it serves to illuminate the combat between good and evil. That interpretation actually widens my horizons on the matter, which is important when discussing the different messages a work of art can impart. And yes, we can talk about the painting outside the museum, but once you’ve seen more than 800 works, how can you bring that single canvas to the forefront of your brain (unless you’ve got a photographic memory, in which case, you’re incredibly lucky) and talk about it in detail?

So what can we do if we want to have those spirited gallery sessions of yesteryear? GMOA has programs for group tours and interactive art sessions. We’ve had a plethora of student groups who have already come through and there are other events such as Family Day for families to gain a greater appreciation for art through activities, discussions and seminars. We’ve even gone a step further to implement the Artful Conversation program, which invites patrons to join Carissa DiCindio, our curator of education, to discuss one of the pieces in the galleries—all of these certainly amount to a step in the right direction, but what about for the rest of the museum community? Should curators install soundproof glass chambers to separate the “talkies” and the “silents”? Should there be loud days and quiet days during the week? Or should each work be put online for viewers to scroll through and discuss/silently regard at their leisure? GMOA has even begun work on a new collections database that will eventually put many of its works online. Ironically, while there is no easy answer when it comes to art, the question still inspires very passionate discussion, which is a good start.


Wednesday, April 20, 2011

GMOA in the News


Gordon Szymanski from the Red & Black contributed a nice article that ran today on our exhibition "The American Scene on Paper: Prints and Drawings from the Schoen Collection." His take is that it's not just for art people, but for anyone who's interested in history, geography, travel and so on. The exhibition closes May 2, so you have about a week and a half left to come see it if you haven't yet. Today's Tour at Two focuses on it and is a great opportunity to view the 153 prints and drawings it encompasses with the help of a well-educated guide.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Old Athens Cemetery Restoration


Brave the heat this Sunday to learn about the restoration efforts taking place in the Old Athens Cemetery on Jackson Street. The beautiful, historic burial ground hosts the final resting places of the earliest residents of Athens. Bought in 1801 by Governor John Milledge for the University, people were allowed to be buried there for free. Many interesting people rest there, from Revolutionary soldiers to Dr. Moses Waddell, president of UGA from 1819-1829. The large trees and serene atmosphere make it a place to reflect on history and nature.


Janine Duncan, a campus planning coordinator for the UGA grounds department, will lead the discussion and walking tour following. Discoveries, clean up, and restoration will be discussed in room 116 of the Visual Arts building (the old Lamar Dodd building), directly to the north (towards Downtown). This will be an informative and interesting event to attend if you are curious about the state of the cemetery and its restoration.


The event is sponsored by the Athens Historical Society and the Georgia Museum of Art. Please meet in room 116 at 3:00 p.m. this Sunday, June 20. For more information on the cemetery, go to http://bit.ly/9ei5rG.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

The Journey of Kerry James Marshall

"De Style" by Kerry James Marshall

Artist Kerry James Marshall was born in 1955 in Birmingham, Ala. When he was a child, he moved with his family moved to California (first to Watts, and then to Los Angeles) so his father could find a better job.

Marshall’s third-grade teacher sparked his interest in art. The next year, he started to learn about technique at the library and from John Ggnagy’s “Learn to Draw” television programs.

Although these events were important in Marshall’s interest in art, he says what had “the most profound impact” was his experience visiting a museum.

Marshall went on a fifth-grade field trip to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, where he could finally see works about which he had read. He viewed two paintings by Paolo Callari Veronese and states that they were “beyond.” Marshall also saw a Senufo figure in the African Art section and says, “something about it was haunting.”

Marshall received a BFA from Otis Art Institute in 1978 and was awarded an honorary doctorate in 1999. His paintings and other works reflect the Civil Rights movement and African American popular culture. In 1997, Marshall won a MacArthur Genius Grant.

Marshall’s journey really shows the importance of exposing children to art. An experience as simple as a tour of a museum can change influence a child to become an artist. In fact, GMOA ensures that every fifth-grade class in Athens-Clarke County has the opportunity to visit the museum, thanks to the support of Buddy and Lucy Allen.

Check out the PBS Art 21 feature on Marshall.

Monday, March 01, 2010

The National Galleries of Scotland and The High

The High Museum in Atlanta has garnered a sizable amount of press in the past couple of years, mostly due to its collaboration with the Louvre, an enterprise meant to generate income for the Louvre and bring attention to the High with the Louvre’s powerful name. The High is engaging in a similar 4-year project with the National Galleries of Scotland (NGS). The exhibition opens October 16 and will include Titian’s two Dianas.

According to theartnewspaper.com, “the two Titians have never left the UK since their arrival in 1798. They will form the centrepiece of an exhibition on ‘Venetian Masterpieces from the National Galleries of Scotland’. After its presentation in Atlanta, the show will go to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (opening 5 February 2011) and the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston (21 May 2011).”

Although the NGS director-general, John Leighton, admitted that this campaign was mostly about raising money for the galleries’ pricey renovation, the High and Atlanta dwellers will definitely benefit from this rare tour.