Deconstructing Exhibits: What is an Exhibit Anyway?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What are the main subject areas of interest in this film and what are the main themes and ideas being addressed? Could it be said that there are certain.
Advertisements

Advertising & Promotion Research 7. Objectives 1.Purpose/Methods of Ad Research 2.Secondary Data Sources (Yahoogle?!) 3.Purpose/Methods of Copy Research.
REPORTING STUDENT LEARNING. GCO or General Curriculum Outcomes GCO’s are outcomes that all students are expected to meet. The General Curriculum Outcomes.
IB CRITERIA FOR RESEARCH WORKBOOKS SKETCHBOOKS. CRITERION A CULTURAL & CONTEXTUAL RESEARCH.
Open All Areas Partners: difficult to find them (internal and external) and to get them to commit, different goals, coordination of the cooperation, different.
Module 2: Assessment in Creative Arts © 2006 Curriculum K-12 Directorate, NSW Department of Education and Training.
Computer Engineering 203 R Smith Communications 1/ What is communications? Correctly conveying information and understanding from one individual.
Teaching Multimedia. Multimedia is media that uses multiple forms of information content and information processing (e.g. text, audio, graphics, animation,
LOGO DESIGN. WHAT IS A LOGO? A logo is a symbol that is supposed to help us easily identify a company. A strong logo can make the company instantly recognizable.
National History Day Leadership and Legacy How to Choose Your Topic and Your Format.
PHOTOGRAPHY IN THE CLASSROOM Joel Turner TED 5351.
Drama Methods & Education Douglas Gosse, Drama in Education At the University of Winnipeg  The University of Winnipeg has an excellent Education.
Elements and Principles of Design Introduction
Fact or Fiction: Teaching with Historical Fiction
1. Develops ideas, plans, and produces artworks that serve specific functions (e.g., expressive, social, and utilitarian).
Evaluating Educational Technology and Integration Strategies By: Dakota Tucker, Derrick Haney, Demi Ford, and Kent Elmore Chapter 7.
Elements of a Short Story
How do medical illustration authors hook and hold readers? Medical illustrators hook and hold readers through the use of pictures Some of the pictures.
As you enter today… In your sketchbook, answer the following: How do you know a drawing / artwork is successful? What is Art? What are the Elements of.
Copyright © 2006 Thomson Business and Economics. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Advertising and Promotion Research.
Principles of Design.
Oral Tradition and Native American Literature: An Ohio 4th Grade Teaching Unit Theme Michele Beery Svetlana Kincaid Alice Teeters Cantessa Wallace.
“ Building Visual Literacy” Teaching American History in Miami-Dade County September 22, 2012 Fran Macko, Ph.D.
The serious benefits of fun Manchester Art Gallery Dec 3 rd, 2013.
Multimedia Design 1. 2 Objectives By completion of this session, you will be able to: Organize your multimedia project Develop Flowcharts and Storyboards.
One way to inspire or inform others is with a multimedia presentation, which combines sounds, visuals, and text.
Balance and Weighing Name ____________________________.
Principles of Design and Photography. The principles of design help us organize and arrange the elements of art in our photographs. Unlike, the elements.
Advertising and Promotion Research
Narrative Film EvaluationName:8MM1 Work HabitsCollaborationPlanning Shot types & camera angles Wow! You used class time wisely while working towards a.
Integrating Technology & Media Into Instruction: The ASSURE Model
Game Design Theory Pertemuan 3 Matakuliah: T0944-Game Design and Programming Tahun: 2010.
Literacy I can recall main info, know where to look for it, make inferences linked to evidence, show awareness of characters’ intentions, adapt speech.
+ CULTURAL FRAMEWORK + REFRESH ON FORMAL FRAMEWORK.
INTRODUCTION: REVIEW. What is Art?  Form of expression with aesthetic  Organize perception  A work of art is the visual expression of an idea or experience.
ARTDIRECTION BASIC DESIGN PRINCIPLES. PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN The combination of design elements.
Symbol Cards Accountable Talk Jig Saw Accountable Talk: Text Based discussion Creating our virtual classroom Stage 1 – Setting the stage for Learning –Goals,
MASSACHUSETTS ART CURRICULUM FRAMEWORK Sarah Walker and Chelsea Greene.
Copywriting and Design. Advertising Writing Style Copy should be as simple as possible Should have a clear focus and try to convey only one selling point.
Audiovisual Literacy. • Educated • Cultured • Able to read and write What is LITERACY?
Media Literacy. Purpose To gain an understanding for the role that media plays in our lives To be able to analyze various forms of media text To make.
Inquiry-Based Learning How It Looks, Sounds and Feels.
1 PP 7.2 CORE COMPETENCIES FOR RIVER BASIN PLANNERS.
The PYP Exhibition Information. Purpose a celebration of the transition of learner from primary to middle school an in-depth, collaborative inquiry demonstrate.
C PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN Janie Salazar 7 th period.
Key Competencies.
Directing The Basics. The director's vision shapes the look and feel of a film. He or she is the creative force that pulls a film together, responsible.
Introduction to Art.
Common Core State Standards in English/Language Arts What science teachers need to know.
1 Key Roles of River Basin Planners Integrators of Knowledge and People Trade-offs analysts and presenters Communicators and Facilitators CORE COMPETENCIES.
Extemporaneous Speaking Skills By: Tom Farmer. Does anyone know what Extemporaneous speaking skills is or what it means? Does anyone know what Extemporaneous.
The Principles of Art Visual Arts 8
Bloom’s Taxonomy Benjamin Samuel Bloom He was one of the greatest minds to influence the field of education. He was born on February 21, 1913 in Lansford,
Introducing Drama. Victorian Curriculum F–10 Released in September 2015 as a central component of the Education State Provides a stable foundation for.
Planning and Organizing Chapter 13. The Planning Function Planning for a business should stem from the company’s Business Plan – The business plan sets.
1 How To Make Effective Presentations? or “Hints on ECLT5820 Project Presentation” Michael R. Lyu
Beginning Social Communication High School: Lesson Five.
HU 300: ART AND HUMANITIES, THE 20 TH CENTURY AND BEYOND Welcome!
Expanding audiences USING ONLINE/DIGITAL CONTENT.
Beginning Social Communication Middle School: Lesson two.
Fundamental Elements of Theater Advanced Humanities.
CPUT Libraries Information literacy in the new curriculum M.Moll.
IB Assessments CRITERION!!!.
Design and Layout (part two)
Open All Areas Difficulties met in the process
Frameworks for Describing/Constructing Literacy
Properties of Art The categories we use to evaluate art when we are performing the steps of criticism.
Six Elements of Literary Nonfiction
Sculptural Fundamentals
Nanotechnology & Society
Presentation transcript:

Deconstructing Exhibits: What is an Exhibit Anyway?

What is an exhibit anyway? To exhibit: to present for others to see To present in a public exhibition or contest To give evidence or an instance of; demonstrate To present or introduce officially To put something on public display Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

What does an exhibit do? An exhibit raises issues visually (and maybe with other senses) so that they can be grasped quickly. Creates “call-outs” Can ‘call-outs’ readily be identified by the visitor? The thoughts, feelings, and responses as you experience the exhibition as a visitor

The reinvented museum meets its test: the authority of exhibits “Authenticity is not about factuality of reality. It is about authority. Objects have no authority; people do… Authenticity – authority – enforces the social contract between audience and museum, a socially agreed upon reality that exists only as long as the confidence in the voice of the exhibition holds.” (Crew & Sims p.163) Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

The reinvented museum meets its test: the authority of exhibits “Although curators might hold authority over interpretations stemming from their technical and scholarly knowledge, that does not necessarily qualify them to speak to meanings that are based on nonscholarly criteria of knowing” (Lisa Roberts “Changing Practices of Interpretation”) Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

McLean “Dynamics of Dialogue” Embracing the tensions “Museums are both temple and forum….exhibitions are about people communicating with each other. By embracing the tensions inherent in a dialogue,…we will become better able to articulate our issues in common.” Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

Recall your favorite exhibit: What made it so memorable or enjoyable? Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

First - Some basic ways to think about exhibits Duration Scale Modes of communication Process Space Experience Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

On the matter of representation To represent: To stand for; symbolize To indicate or communicate by signs or symbols To depict in art; portray To present clearly to the mind To draw attention to by way of remonstrance or protest To describe or put forward (a person or thing) as an embodiment of a specified quality To serve as an example of Museum exhibits often are “models” of very complex concepts and realities. Selection of objects, label text, arrangement, and design all carry value and have an impact on the viewer

Kinds of exhibits: Duration Permanent Temporary Traveling Mobile / Portable

Kinds of Exhibits: Scale Range of scale: Blockbuster –large size (# objects, sq.ft.) –high profile –big budget Small, temporary –Few or single object focus –Low budget –Low tech (little media) –Few interactives

Kinds of exhibits: modes of communication Not mutually exclusive : –Emotive (Aesthetic and Evocative) –Didactic –Interactive/ Participatory I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand.

Other ways to think about exhibits: what makes them effective? As a process As a designed space As an experience Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

The Rules of Display Simplicity: ‘ cleanness’ and lack of complication Simplicity is difficult Emphasis: the stress or prominence given to an idea, object, or design element. If all elements are of equal interest, no one of them will receive attention. Unity: singleness of effect or style, related style, or totality of related parts Repetition and consistency are crucial. Balance: the "weight force" or influence countering the effect of another element in the display Determining the visual weight of various design elements is difficult. Derived from Sally Lancaster’s Exhibits in the LibraryExhibits in the Library

Exhibits as process: exhibits are authored, designed, created by people Exhibit Development staff (museum staff, exhibit design firm, or combination) Curator-centric model –Curator as expert and author with support team of assistants, designer, educator, registrar Team model –“Core” team (curator, designer, exhibit developer, educator) –Broader team (adding one or more of the following: fund raising/development, marketing, collections manager, facilities manager, museum store manager (if merchandising is an issue), school programs coordinator, media specialists (web designer, etc.) Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

Exhibits as process: How are exhibits created? Models for thinking about exhibit development –Film production Varied roles on the production team Story boarding process –Plot line and drama –Visual communication –Research paper Main message, point of view Supported with scholarly research –Amusement park ride Planned experience, drama Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

How are museum exhibits different from other models (films, research papers, amusement rides)? Different goals Different tools Different relationship with the community Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

An exhibit mission statement? Mission statements vs. plans Elements of an exhibit mission statement should reflect the museum’s mission statement

Exhibit goals “Objects, ideas, and people are met in the interpretive exhibition, a kinds of narrative form. It is a narrative concerned with re- presenting the past, making present that which is not usually present” (Crew and Sims, p.173) Learning outcomes (changes in visitor knowledge, skills, attitudes, etc.) Experience design (what visitors will do and feel, how they will interact Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

Exhibits as a designed space: The toolkit Objects Images Text Media Interactives Props Live interpreters Audience Design of Ambience/environment Infrastructure Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?

An exercise: Deconstruct two online exhibits Discuss Civil War and Edison examples Duluth Lynchings Online Resource An award-winning Minnesota Historical Society virtual exhibit Native American Art: Irish American Trade A British Museum exhibit that is the focus of an IUPUI MSTD class and a possible Eiteljorg exhibit Deconstructing exhibits: What is an exhibit anyway?