Archive for the ‘museum’ Category

Lee Mingwei

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Artist Lee Mingwei recently installed his latest participatory artwork, ‘The Moving Garden’, at the Brooklyn Museum in New York. Located in the museum’s lobby, the piece includes a 45 ft. long table filled with roses. The purpose of the piece is simple, and yet really powerful. Mingwei asks that if you take a rose, you fulfill two missions. One is to take a detour on the way to your next destination and the second is to give the rose to a stranger along the way. I love projects that get visitors interacting, but also extend beyond the gallery walls.  Incorporating projects into the public realm is exciting and I see it is as a vastly untapped method for cultural institutions to reach new audiences and have an impact on their communities.  Lee Mingwei is new to me and browsing through the amazing projects on his website is inspirational – take some time to explore his work.

You can follow participants’ stories of giving and receiving through Twitter at #mygardengift.

Bookmark 1: Museum of Lost Interactions

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

I bookmarked the Museum of Lost Interactions (MoLI) website three years ago when the exhibition was about Forgotten Chairs.  Led by professor Graham Pullin, design students at the University of Dundee examine the history of interaction design before our digital age.  In a Museum of Jurassic Technology-esque way, the students then research and exhibit their findings.  Recent exhibitions have included Curious Timepieces and Hats from the Attic. The artifacts presented are a blend of historical fiction, social inquiry and design innovation.  For each display, the students create supporting material for the exhibit; including photos, documentaries and re-creations of the forgotten devices.

I love MoLI because of its specificity – it was designed as an assignment for a University course, but has grown into something much richer.  I am also interested because of the incorporation of design fiction.  Exhibits are about connecting people with information and each other – the methods used to do this are completely open, whether it be from history books, the imagination or an intriguing blend of both.

Blu Dot Swap Meet

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011

I’m not usually into re-posting something from my other site, Designklub, over here, but this campaign is genius.  Blu Dot, the cool furniture company from Minnesota, is hosting a Swap Meet on their website.  People select an item from the Blu Dot collection that they would like to own and post a reasonable trade.  If Blu Dot likes the offer, they will swap them for it.  Easy and awesome.

I would love to see a museum or cultural venue try this: why not swap some memberships for volunteer time, or art skills, or merchandising help in the shop, or landscaping assistance, or anything?  Why not up the ante and swap off the deaccessions for some serious skills or goods (event planning services, chairs for your lobby)?  Swap a day at the museum for you and 30 friends for carpentry work. Libraries always have book sales.  Maybe they should try some swapping instead to encourage some civic engagement.

Makerbot Residency

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

I recently saw a headline about an upcoming project with the amazing 3-D printing machines called Makerbots.  I got really excited about the story, then realized I completely misunderstood it after reading the actual article.  The real story is that Makerbot is hosting an artist-in-residence to use the machines and make useful/beautiful/awesome things.  That’s cool.

I had thought the Makerbot was the artist-in-residence and I was already imagining all the incredible opportunities for people (as in everybody) to learn about 3-D printing and design.   After all, it may not be too long into the future before every home has a Makerbot to fulfill its household design needs.  Why can’t a tool have a residency and let visitors become the artists/designers and activators?  I would love for a museum, school, gallery or any public space to host Makerbot for a residency and let people interact and create with it.   OK, there’s the idea, what institution wants to collaborate to host it?

DAM Untitled Review

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Last weekend Poesy & Praxis took part in the Denver Art Museum’s monthly Untitled program.  This after hours event has been going on for several years, so visitors typically have been to one before, or at least have heard about it from friends.  They know that Untitled is a place to do things, make things and share things, which is a nice starting point when you want people to participate. For me it was an interesting look into how larger museums grapple with visitor participation among many departments, interests and goals.  At the DCM I basically did whatever I liked; working with DAM provided some really useful insight into the more common issues museums face when planning participatory programming. And it was a lot of fun, thanks Lindsey!

The theme for this month’s Untitled was Pledge; relating to artists’ creative commitments and manifestos, with a dose of dust bunnies too.  Some of the activities we planned were really ambitious, (like the crowd created Untitled campaign), while others were successful because of their simplicity.  One such event was the pledge name tag.  Conceived as a way for strangers to interact and to encourage conversation, the name tags were the first thing people saw when they came in the door.  Many of them were pre-printed with prompts such as “I pledge to…talk to a stanger while standing in front of a painting.”  We also had blank ones available for the folks who wanted to come up with their own promise to fulfill.  Visitors could also choose to have their photo taken with their pledge, which was then projected on to one of DAM’s huge white walls (top photo, right).

The projection idea worked great; I heard several people talking about their pledges, or wanting to make one, after seeing the photos flick by.  Showcasing the participants seemed to be a form of positive peer pressure that got others involved.  If I did it again though, I wouldn’t let people write their own pledge.  Not because “playing more guitar” isn’t a worthy ambition, but the point was to get people connecting in the space and to the space.  If the tags only offered three or four pledges to choose from, people still could have selected what they felt comfortable with, but it would have created more common goals.  Then maybe those conversations in front of the paintings could have happened, (and maybe they did).

The more ambitious activity was to have the crowd brainstorm, design and plan the first Untitled of 2012.  We decided that for the first hour of the evening, visitors could post their ideas for an Untitled theme up on a wall (middle photo, right).  Once the hour was up, a DAM staff member (the Untitled coordinator) came by and selected the three themes she thought had the most potential.  At that point things switched gears and the area became a campaign headquarters, where visitors could pledge their allegiance to one of the three themes by writing letters of support (with ideas on activities and artwork related to the theme), making buttons, signing petitions or whatever else they could dream up.  There was a lot going on.

The key to this area was staffing.  It would have been useful to have a little more help here, not only to catch the confused newcomer, but also to draw more people in.  From my experience, some people need that personal invitation (or explanation), but feel perfectly comfortble once they are in.  The people we did catch got really involved and had fun.  People appreciated being given a job that had a tangible result (creating the programming for a future Untitled).  The highlight of the night was a group of four teenagers, who not only embraced the idea of the Untitled campaign, they took it to the streets (or in this case the galleries).   One of them was the mastermind behind one of the theme suggestions, “Anonymous,” and he/she (sorry I don’t know which person it was!)  took ownership to get the idea selected.  The group made hats, posters and badges, then went into the galleries, talking to people about the theme and having them sign their campaign petition.  How awesome is that?  I came across them in the contemporary art gallery and it almost brought a little tear to my eye.  They had already collected over 50 signatures and were chatting away with some nearby adults.  The fact they had self-motivated to continue their campaign and used it as a way to interact with strangers was exactly what the museum had hoped for.  Who knows what their experience would have been like if Untitled hadn’t been happening, but I think it’s safe to say this was a visit they would remember.

Preview: Pledge Allegiance

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

On Friday Poesy & Praxis will help at the first Untitled event of the year at the Denver Art Museum.  One activity we are really looking forward to is ‘Pledge Allegiance: Campaign Headquarters’.  DAM is opening up the creative process for the first Untitled of next year, creating a 100% crowd curated event.  From 6-7, visitors will be able to pitch their ideas for a theme on a giant post-it wall.  DAM staff will select their top 3 choices and from there things switch into campaign mode.

Participants can join one of the three groups battling it out with letter writing campaigns, button making, poster waving and petitions.  Each camp will offer suggestions for activities to go with the theme, along with related art works from the collections.  At the end of the night only one campaign will prevail…

Preview: Untitled at DAM

Monday, January 24th, 2011

This is a busy week at Poesy & Praxis, as we prepare for two events this weekend.  We are so excited to be helping with the first Untitled event of the year at the Denver Art Museum.  Untitled is a monthly after hours happening at DAM that includes inventive and offbeat programming that, “feels less like a field trip and more like a night out.”

This month’s theme is Pledge, with an eye towards allegiance, stick-to-itiveness, and a dose of dust bunnies. Poesy & Praxis helped design some of the participatory programming that will take place throughout the evening.  As a sneak preview, we are going to profile one of the activities each day this week and will report back next week with some of highlights and lessons learned.

First up is Megan Quicke’s ‘Choose Your Own Creatifesto Workshop’.  Megan is local Denverite who came up with the idea of having a Power Year, where she quit her job and spent 365 days devoted to her creative pursuits.  Lots of great things have materialized from that year, including a book in the works, coffee adventures and more.

For Untitled, Megan will be leading small groups of 1-4 people on specialized tours of the collections; helping participants to find inspiration (and motivation) using the museum as a resource.  She has all sorts of activities designed to help her temporary disciples find their path, we’ll let you know what happens!

Lisa Anne Auerbach: Campaign Sweaters

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

I love this project from Lisa Anne Auerbach and the Aspen Art Museum.  During the 2008 presidential campaign Auerbach created a collection of sweaters with slogans from historical bids for office.  The pieces were on display in shops around town, but also at the museum, where they were available for check out.  Visitors could borrow the campaign sweater of their choice and wear it about town for a few hours.

Tales of Things

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

This seems like a good post to start the new year because it is filled with possibility. Last year, an Oxfam charity shop in Manchester, England did an interesting experiment with RFID tags and QR codes. They allowed people donating goods to record the stories (or histories) of their items. These recordings were then made available in the store through a hacked iphone that read the item-associated RFID tags, but they were also accessible to any device that could read QR codes (those barcode looking squares available in many smartphone apps).

The project was part of a larger effort by several UK universities to create a site, called Tales of Things, for sharing personal and social histories.  While there are several obvious ways these kinds of tags can be used in museum-type settings, it is interesting to ponder other uses as well.  Imagine buying a product that has been tagged in every step of the production and transportation process.  Relatives passing down stories of family heirlooms.  Or, as this article in the NY Times pointed out, your tagged tennis racquet updating your location on Foursquare.  The future is scary and awesome.

Enchanted Palace

Thursday, December 30th, 2010

Receiving lots of end of the year love from Nina Simon and Peter Linett.  Nina was kind enough to list Poesy & Praxis on her list of new blog discoveries, (thanks Nina!).  For newcomers, Poesy & Praxis is a studio that does freelance curatorial work and ideation around participatory/engaging cultural experiences.  If you have questions or thoughts, please email!

Also, Peter Linett invited me to post about the Enchanted Palace exhibition, currently on show at Kensington Palace.  You can read the full review here.  Out of a full year of visiting museums and shows in London this was one of the highlights.

For more museum related links you can also follow me on Twitter (@designklub).  I also do freelance writing about modern design so Tweets are usually mixed topics.