Museums Archives - Art Business News https://artbusinessnews.com/category/museums/ The art industry's news leader since 1977 Tue, 22 Jul 2025 20:34:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://artbusinessnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/ABN-site-Icon-100-48x48.jpg Museums Archives - Art Business News https://artbusinessnews.com/category/museums/ 32 32 Review: Santa Fe Art Week 2025 https://artbusinessnews.com/2025/07/review-santa-fe-art-week-2025/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2025/07/review-santa-fe-art-week-2025/#respond Tue, 22 Jul 2025 20:18:22 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=16269 The post Review: Santa Fe Art Week 2025 appeared first on Art Business News.

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Art Santa Fe

https://redwoodartgroup.com/art-santa-fe
July 11 – 13, 2025

Celebrating its 25th anniversary, Art Santa Fe welcomed over 80 exhibitors, including galleries, independent artists, and dealers presenting contemporary and decorative works across painting, sculpture, photography, jewelry, glass, and more!
Art Santa Fe 2025 delivered a thoughtful, celebratory fair with broad appeal for collectors, designers, and art-lovers seeking approachable works and design-minded pieces. Attendees kept commenting it was the best looking Art Santa Fe yet! Here’s to 25 more years.

IFAM

https://folkartmarket.org/
July 10-13, 2025

IFAM 2025 featured  approximately 150 master folk artists and cooperatives from 57 countries. Artists achieved $3.88 million in sales, setting an organizational record and underscoring the market’s global economic impact. The market feels like a fun art party and has something for everyone.
IFAM 2025 was a powerful celebration of global folk art—blending cultural exchange, economic empowerment, and creative education in a festive, inclusive atmosphere. With immersive programming and significant sales success, it underscored the potential of folk art markets to transcend commerce and foster connection.

SITE Santa Fe
SITE Santa Fe

SITE Santa Fe

https://www.sitesantafe.org/en/
https://www.sitesantafe.org/en/once-within-a-time/
Once Within a Time
June 27, 2025 – January 12, 2026
 
Once Within a Time is a meandering narrative collage that reimagines Santa Fe as both artifact and stage—a living archive of stories, mythologies, and artistic interventions. Whether discovered within the SITE building or in unexpected local storefronts, each stop offers a glimpse into how personal histories loop into collective memory.
The exhibition foregrounds storytelling—both oral and visual—by pairing contemporary artworks with historical or fictional characters connected to Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico. Many commissions are site-specific, activating the distinctiveness of each venue with immersive installations and narrative encounters

Timeless Mucha: The Magic of Line
Timeless Mucha: The Magic of Line

Museum of New Mexico Foundation

Vladem
https://www.museumfoundation.org/

Timeless Mucha: The Magic of Line
June 20, 2025 – September 21, 2025
Timeless Mucha: The Magic of Line is a beautifully curated, historically rich retrospective celebrating Mucha not only as an emblem of Art Nouveau, but also as a pioneer in mass‑visual communication. The exhibition’s layout bridges early works and global legacy, making it both informative and immersive. If you can’t make it to Santa Fe, its next stop will be  Nelson‑Atkins Museum, Kansas City (April–August 2026).

Organized by the Mucha Foundation, this ambitious show features over 100 works from the Mucha Trust Collection, highlighting Alphonse Mucha’s development—from student drawings and book illustrations to his iconic posters and designs that created the Art Nouveau movement.

And in a fun twist it also explores the 1960s–70s revival of his aesthetic, showing its influence on psychedelic rock posters (e.g., Grateful Dead, Rolling Stones), comic books, and Japanese manga.

Eugenie Shonnard: Breaking the Mold
Eugenie Shonnard: Breaking the Mold

Museum of New Mexico Foundation

https://www.museumfoundation.org/
Eugenie Shonnard: Breaking the Mold

March 8 – September 1, 2025
“Eugenie Shonnard: Breaking the Mold” marks the inaugural posthumous exhibition of Eugenie Shonnard (1886–1978), a pioneering woman sculptor whose career carved a place for itself in American Modernism—especially within the artistic landscape of the Southwest

Breaking the Mold is a compelling and deeply research-driven exhibition that reclaims Eugenie Shonnard’s place in American art history—especially within the Southwest. It reveals her convergence of European Modernist training with local iconography and forms, and showcases her inventive spirit through material innovation and formal sensitivity.

A Circle Nothing Can Break
A Circle Nothing Can Break

Georgia O’Keefe Museum

https://www.okeeffemuseum.org/
A Circle Nothing Can Break
November 11, 2024 – March 1, 2026
This exhibition begins with a quote from a letter to her future husband Alfred Stieglitz, with Georgia comparing their relationship to “a circle that nothing can break”.  This quote shows the importance of one of O’Keeffe’s most evocative motifs—the circle. It surveys key moments in her career when circular shapes and spirals emerge in her abstractions—first in the formative 1910s, and again in her late-period work during the 1970s, after a long hiatus from such themes.

The show features early works created under Alfred Stieglitz’s influence in New York and those from later challenging periods—including post-Stieglitz grief and her late creative revival—offering emotional and formal continuity through this simple but expressive geometric form

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Art Treks: Summer Exhibitions in Chicago https://artbusinessnews.com/2025/07/art-treks-summer-exhibitions-chicago/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2025/07/art-treks-summer-exhibitions-chicago/#respond Tue, 22 Jul 2025 16:31:42 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=16271 The post Art Treks: Summer Exhibitions in Chicago appeared first on Art Business News.

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A trip to Chicago this summer proved to have an amazing array of varied art exhibitions. With something for everyone…If you find yourself in the midwest anywhere near these institutions be sure to check these out for yourself.

Frida Kahlo’s Month in Paris: A Friendship with Mary Reynolds
Frida Kahlo’s Month in Paris: A Friendship with Mary Reynolds

Chicago Art Institute

Frida Kahlo’s Month in Paris: A Friendship with Mary Reynolds
https://www.artic.edu/exhibitions/10397/frida-kahlo-s-month-in-paris-a-frie…
Mar 29–Jul 13, 2025

Did you see it? Maybe you missed it — but this great exhibit on Kahlo was a very intimate show that outlined a friendship and leaves one wondering the influence this connection had on the future work of both artists. The exhibition centered on a specific era: Kahlo’s brief stay in Paris in early 1939, where she became ill and stayed with Mary Reynolds, an avant-garde American bookbinder and partner of Marcel Duchamp. Much of the show was comprised of approximately 100 objects, including seven major self‑portraits by Kahlo, Reynolds’s unique bookbindings, letters by Kahlo, photographs, works on paper, and prints.

The beautifully staged objects and letters offered a glimpse into Kahlo’s mindset and community during a transformative period.

For more on the exhibit check out:

Book: Frida Kahlo’s Month in Paris — A Friendship with Mary Reynolds

Click here for an excerpt.

Gustave Caillebotte: Painting His World
Gustave Caillebotte: Painting His World

Gustave Caillebotte: Painting His World

https://www.artic.edu/exhibitions/10068/gustave-caillebotte-painting-his-wo…

Jun 29–Oct 5, 2025

This major review of over 120 works—paintings, drawings, and photographs—shows Caillebotte’s creative evolution from the mid‑1870s through his death in 1894.  Previously the exhibition was at Musée d’Orsay in October 2024 and then toured the Getty before opening in Chicago. At first the work seemed familiar but I couldn’t place anything specific I had seen before but as the show progressed I kept stumbling upon Caillebotte’s very familiar masterpieces. Including: Paris Street; Rainy Day (1877), Floor Scrapers (1875) and the recently acquired Boating Party.

Caillebotte’s private world—his family, social circle, athletic pursuits, and the city he loved all come into beautiful focus here. If you enjoy Impressionism and someone who sees the beauty in everyday things this is a must-see show.

Paul Pfeiffer: Prologue to the Story of the Birth of Freedom
Paul Pfeiffer: Prologue to the Story of the Birth of Freedom

Museum of Contemporary Art

https://mcachicago.org/

Paul Pfeiffer: Prologue to the Story of the Birth of Freedom
May 03, 2025 – August 31, 2025
https://visit.mcachicago.org/exhibitions/paul-pfeiffer-prologue-to-the-stor…

Paul Pfeiffer: Prologue to the Story of the Birth of Freedom is a compelling, conceptually rich exhibition that invites the viewer into a critical re-examination of mass media. Each space the show exists in creates new ways to confront a viewer. As you try to understand what is being shown to you, one often finds the humor in the sad concepts explored. Whether through disembodied basketball players, floating trophies, or erased celebrities,  It’s an immersive journey into media criticism—and an aesthetic experience that redefines what a video‐centric retrospective can be.

 

 

Wafaa Bilal: Indulge Me
Wafaa Bilal: Indulge Me
Wafaa Bilal: Indulge Me
Feb 01, 2025 – Oct 19, 2025

 

Wafaa Bilal: Indulge Me is a provocative and haunting career survey that leverages immersive design and media to expolore war, surveillance, and cultural exploitation. Whether examining geopolitics through paintballs, implantable cameras, or orbiting busts, the exhibition forces viewers to confront their role in global systems of power. It’s a bold reflection on how art can engage, implicate, and subvert. Don’t miss the game Bilal developed, that let’s one decide who to shoot as you wander a compound.

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World Renowned Opera Gallery Showcases Sculptor Masters at the Continuum in Miami Beach https://artbusinessnews.com/2023/12/world-renowned-opera-gallery-showcases-sculptor-masters-at-the-continuum-in-miami-beach/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2023/12/world-renowned-opera-gallery-showcases-sculptor-masters-at-the-continuum-in-miami-beach/#respond Thu, 21 Dec 2023 22:10:43 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=14496 Since 2021, the Continuum, South Florida’s premier resort-style oceanfront condominium residences located in Miami Beach, has formed a unique alliance with one of the world’s leading galleries to present hand-picked collections of work by today’s leaders in modern and contemporary art. Beginning in December this year, in time for Miami Art Week. and running until the end of February 2024,…

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Since 2021, the Continuum, South Florida’s premier resort-style oceanfront condominium residences located in Miami Beach, has formed a unique alliance with one of the world’s leading galleries to present hand-picked collections of work by today’s leaders in modern and contemporary art.

Beginning in December this year, in time for Miami Art Week. and running until the end of February 2024, Opera Gallery will showcase the gallery’s most coveted artists in a rotating exhibit of thirteen sculptures by individual contemporary masters from various nations, presenting the latest in artistic expressionism shown within the grounds of the Continuum property. Five artists represented by Opera Gallery, have been hand-picked for their notoriety and prominence within the fine art industry, for a series of installations – both inside the buildings and on the lawns. The sculptures present themes and characters from today’s pop culture, together with abstract designs using mixed media and metals that exemplify brilliance in engineered craftsmanship.

“We are delighted to continue our association with one of today’s most celebrated international galleries,” says Rishi Idnani, Managing Director at the Continuum.  “This is the fourth year we are showcasing the very best the fine art world has to offer within the property, adding a world class collection of work by some of today’s most creative masterminds in modern day art.  We pride ourselves on representing artistic excellence, and this continued collaboration with Opera Gallery enhances the aesthetic experience at the Continuum for our residents.”

The work by Valay Shende, an Indian sculptor, will be presented inside the Grand Lobby of the Continuum, featuring detailed characters created by stainless steel discs and mixed media that depict popular superhero characters, including Catwoman, Hulk and Spiderman, among other fictional figurines.

Totem by Xavier Mascaro courtesy of Opera Gallery

Considered as a major representative of the new generation of Iberian sculpture, the work of French artist, Xavier Mascaró, will be presented in the lobby at the Continuum, as well as on the lawns throughout the property. Over the past ten years, his installations and figurative sculptures of cast iron, copper and bronze have become iconic and are regularly exhibited in public spaces and galleries around the world.  Mascaro’s giant heads and cross-legged figurines reflect his themes from Spanish art history, coupled with his exploration of universal myths and beliefs based on ancient civilizations.

Vitrina como Pretexto III by Manolo Valdes courtesy of Opera Gallery

Manolo Valdés is one of the most internationally established contemporary Spanish sculptors.  In both paintings and sculptures, he inflates the figure’s size, abstracting form and minimizing detail, while incorporating roughly applied paint and unusual materials. The timelessness of the image as the axis of the visual experience is the determining factor in his creations. In his works, image and matter are fused in a body of work that wanders between Pop Art and material art, as a continuous search for reinvention.  The abstract work of Manolo Valdés will be featured inside the buildings at the Continuum, as well as at select outdoor locations on the property’s grounds.

Expanding Gestures by Pieter Obels courtesy of Opera Gallery

Dutch sculptor, Pieter Obels, works with Corten steel, yet his works convey light and grace as he bends the steel into extraordinarily delicate and winding shapes. Obels aim is to create totally organic forms with an extreme yet somehow innate sense of plasticity. This sense of a natural rhythm makes his sculptures sit with a total oneness in any natural surroundings.  Obels’ sculpture, entitled “Expanding Gestures,” will be featured within the grounds of the Continuum in 2024.

German artist Rotraut, began her early work focused on drawing and painting. Beginning in the 1990s, she shifted to sculpture as her primary medium, with many of her works known as monumental sculptures in bright, primary colors. Rotraut’s sculptures and paintings have been displayed frequently at Art Basel in both Switzerland in the U.S., and many of her works have been sold at auction, including the sculpture UNTITLED which sold for $225,000 at Sotheby’s in 2018.  Rotraut’s impressive metallic green sculpture, also untitled, is currently exhibited outdoors at the Continuum, juxtaposed brightly against the foliage of the grounds with an elegance that inspires.

The rotating exhibit presented in partnership with Opera Gallery will be at the Continuum in Miami Beach from December 1st until February 29th, 2024.

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Future of Museums – The Museum of the Future https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/12/future-of-museums-the-museum-of-the-future/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/12/future-of-museums-the-museum-of-the-future/#respond Wed, 22 Dec 2021 03:16:05 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=13029 Museums face complex challenges. As places where our historic heritage is preserved and where artworks are showcased, their scientific and cultural dimensions are fundamental. They play an important educational, social, and economic role, and they are drawn into debates on key social issues. Some of these issues concern them directly, while others lie outside their scope—but they are questions that…

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Museums face complex challenges. As places where our historic heritage is preserved and where artworks are showcased, their scientific and cultural dimensions are fundamental. They play an important educational, social, and economic role, and they are drawn into debates on key social issues. Some of these issues concern them directly, while others lie outside their scope—but they are questions that no museum can avoid: inclusiveness, sectarianism, restitution, climate change, and so on.

Their complexity means that these questions are tackled by experts, who tend to forget what is essential—namely that museums are for the general public.

We work for the public, and the visitor is our central concern. This may seem obvious as, armed with statistics, we trumpet our successes and our visitor footfall. The risks we refer to are things like overcrowding and commercialization. The reality, however, is very different.

All too often, museums stand empty. A recent study on cultural practices carried out by the French Ministry of Culture shows that 71% of French adults never set foot in museums. This study, carried out every ten years, highlights long-term trends: in 1974 the figure was 72%. Progress has indeed been disappointing given that so many major new museums have opened over the past fifty years: the Pompidou Centre, the Musée d’Orsay, the Musée du Quai Branly, Louvre Lens and Pompidou Metz to name but a few.

This is all the more disappointing as, in parallel with the emergence of so many new museums, increased emphasis on mediation and a new focus on artistic and cultural education in schools were supposed to attract a broader spectrum of visitors.

And yet the endless queues at the entrance to the Louvre and popular exhibitions tend to refute this observation. How can a visible increase in footfall be squared with a deeper sense of disenchantment? Three factors come into play:

  • School groups flock to museums; this is obviously a very good thing, although when children grow up most of them fail to
  • Tourism attracts visitors from far This is also a very good thing, although people will visit a museum thousands of miles from home, they may never set foot in a local gallery or museum.
  • Regular visitors keep coming back. This concerns a minority of visitors who make the most of the wide range of museums on offer. Cultured urbanites obsessed by how long they must wait in line to see the Morozov Collection are unaware of the chasm that separates them from the rest of

A “winner takes all” situation emerges. Major museums and prestigious exhibitions generate long queues, whereas elsewhere museums are empty and most people never visit them. We need to understand this apathy. The challenge is to spark interest and to foster a desire to discover what museums have to offer.

Somewhere in France, when the lockdown was over, I saw that the pavement cafés were full of people—but I was one of the few visitors to the remarkable museum nearby. Why should this be? Is the admission fee too expensive? Do people not have enough time on their hands? If so, why are theme parks, immersive experiences, and sporting events, which are more expensive and time- consuming, so popular?

For France Museums, which supports museum projects, this is a crucial question. How can we make people want to visit and return to museums? “The museum,” said Sherman Lee, “is a primary source of wonder and delight for mind and heart.” How can we ensure that his words continue to ring true?

We must hammer home the message that a museum is a place unlike any other. Its grand ambition—and its extraordinary presumption—is to defy time and space.

Michel Foucault coined the paradoxical concept of the heterotopia, or realized utopia. He believed that the museum, as an example of a heterotopia, “aims to enclose all times, all epochs, all forms and all tastes in one place, so as to constitute a place of all times which itself exists outside of time and is out of reach of its jaws”.

What can we learn from this? The museum must not become an ordinary place. It must offer wondrous experiences; it must provide insights into the mysteries of creation; it must invite us to embark on new journeys.

The Bestiary – Immersive installation at the heart of the new Louvre Abu Dhabi exhibition: Dragon and Phoenix – Centuries of Exchange between Chinese and Islamic Worlds
© Louvre Abu Dhabi, France Muséums, 2021. Réalisation Drôle de Trame

This is a daunting ambition. Though the museum must never be ordinary, each visitor must feel as if they are on familiar ground. The museum is a place for integration and sharing where the notion of community is key. It is a place that is open to difference and intelligence. It is a place of communion, not of luxury. This must be its fundamental approach at a time when fundamental values are being called into question: the equal right of all human beings to dignity, freedom of thought and expression, and respect for others. To paraphrase Roland Barthes: “The artwork puts no pressure on the viewer. It speaks to the truth of emotions, not of ideas: it is thus never arrogant, never coercive […]”.

The challenge that faces any museum is to avoid the idea that it is merely there to present a collection. Its artworks serve a much broader purpose: the museum uses them to create a sensory experience that conveys a particular message and brings stories to life. The curator and art historian Henri Loyrette often tells the story of the writer Charles Péguy, who went to the Louvre as a student and experienced what he called a “promotion of being” leading to an “immediate perception of the long and visible trajectory of humanity”.

It is our job, as museum professionals, to ensure that visitors can enjoy a similar experience. We must provide an environment that sparks the kind of aesthetic emotion that only the original artwork can make us feel. It is an environment that must welcome us, guide us, inspire us, excite us, and take us on a journey. The way artworks are presented, the place where they are displayed, the interpretive resources that enrich the experience, and the visitor journey comprising all the different aspects of that experience. All of these components together make up a coherent system.

Caption: Louvre Abu Dhabi exhibition Abstraction & Calligraphy (2021) © Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi Photo by Seeing Things – Ismail Noor 2

It is an open-ended system: visitor expectations today are not the same as they were fifty years ago. It is a system that must reach beyond the boundaries of the museum: the idea is to reach out locally and globally using the range of tools that modern technology has made available. It is an open system that can host all forms of art: music, film, dance, theatre and so on.

For the magic to work, the relationship between the visitor and the artwork must be nurtured and never curtailed. The artwork must function as an artwork: as Nelson Goodman says, “while most of the users of a library know how to read the books there, many visitors to the museums do not know how to see, or how to see in terms of, the works there. […] Making works work is the museum’s major mission […] The myths of the innocent eye, the insular intellect, the mindless emotion are obsolete. Clearly, works of science work in this way too, as do the collections of museums of science and natural history […] Museums of different kinds do have some different problems, but their common end is improvement in the comprehension of the worlds we live in. Somehow, the immutable work and the volatile viewer must be reconciled. Attention must be held long enough for a work to work”.

To paraphrase Roland Barthes who, referring to works of literature, recalled the importance that should be accorded to the reader: “An exhibition is made up of multiple works from several cultures that enter into a dialogue, parody one another or compete with one another; but there is a point at which this multiplicity comes together: that point is not the curator but the viewer (…) The unity of an exhibition lies not in its origin, but in its audience”.

Caption: Interactive world map from the Louvre Abu Dhabi Exhibition : Rembrandt, Vermeer & the dutch
Golden age (2019)
© Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dhabi Photography by Jonathan Gibbons

Interactive world map from the Louvre Abu Dhabi Exhibition : Rembrandt, Vermeer & the Dutch Golden Age 2019 (Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dhabi Photography by Jonathan Gibbons)

The challenge facing the museum is to include all visitors while fighting tooth and nail against the dangers of sectarianism and essentialism. Equality in dignity and rights, a living principle of humanism, is reflected in the equality in dignity and rights of every artwork. This in turn is a living principle of the universalism embodied by the Louvre Lens and Louvre Abu Dhabi.

The “heterotopian” museum is a hybrid, welcoming, radiant, exacting, enjoyable and scholarly place. Today’s museum, if it intends to open its arms to the public, is not like the museums of yesteryear. It is a complex system that requires cutting-edge expertise of a kind offered by France Museums.

Set up to bring together French national museums to work on the pioneering Louvre Abu Dhabi project, France Muséums capitalizes on this unparalleled experience, using its expertise and that of its partner network to run museum- and heritage-related projects. The shortcomings of many museum projects are not due to lack of resources, ambition, or talent; they arise from a failure to ask questions, to define expectations and to formulate goals. The job of France Museums is to help support projects from concept to implementation. These challenges have led us to organize a symposium in the French Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai, accessible both physically and remotely, on January 15, 2022. This will be an ideal opportunity for numerous experts in the field to shed new light on these questions.

Author’s bio: Herve Barbaret is the Chief Executive Officer of France Museums. Prior to his appointment at Agence France-Muséums, Barbaret has been General Secretary at the French Ministry of Culture since June 2017. He has been assisting the French Minister of Culture by both managing the ministry, which employs 750 public servants, and implementing transversal cultural policies. Throughout his career, he has developed on-the ground managerial expertise as well as a high-level relational skill in both administrative and business sectors.

Hervé Barbaret has more than 15 years of experience in the cultural field where he held various positions such as Deputy General Director at the Cité de l’architecture et du Patrimoine (2004-2007, a cultural institution in charge of promoting architecture), Managing Director of Musée du Louvre (2009-2015), member of the Boards of Directors of Agence France-Muséums, Louvre Lens and of the Louvre Endowment Fund. He has been involved in major cultural projects: the creation of the Cité de l’architecture et du patrimoine, the Musée du Louvre’s Department of Islamic Art, the birth of Louvre Lens and Louvre Abu Dhabi, a project he has been supporting during its prefiguration phase and cherishing for many years.

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Connecting to a Broader Community at Sun Valley Museum of Art https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/11/connecting-to-a-broader-community-at-sun-valley-museum-of-art/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/11/connecting-to-a-broader-community-at-sun-valley-museum-of-art/#respond Thu, 04 Nov 2021 00:28:53 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=12843 Sun Valley Museum of Art was founded in 1971 on the premise that our rural community would only be made whole with vibrant arts programming. For the past 50 years, SVMoA has served as the Wood River Valley’s cultural anchor, bringing learners of all ages together for shared arts and educational experiences. Since 1971, we’ve welcomed 52 Grammy winners to…

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Sun Valley Museum of Art was founded in 1971 on the premise that our rural community would only be made whole with vibrant arts programming. For the past 50 years, SVMoA has served as the Wood River Valley’s cultural anchor, bringing learners of all ages together for shared arts and educational experiences.

Image Courtesy of SVMoA
Image Courtesy of SVMoA

Since 1971, we’ve welcomed 52 Grammy winners to perform in our small town—including Willie Nelson, James Taylor, Ray Charles, Carole King, and Brandi Carlile.  We’ve featured 800 artists, 91 of whom were Guggenheim Fellows and 11 whom were MacArthur Genius Award winners.

Image Courtesy of SVMoA
Image Courtesy of SVMoA

What SVMoA is most proud of is its commitment to arts education: we’ve given more than $1 million in arts scholarships to 638 local students and 75 teachers.

As the only American Alliance of Museums accredited museum within a hundred-mile radius (and one of 5 institutions in Idaho), SVMoA has a responsibility to reach as broad of an audience as possible—from retirees to teachers, to young entrepreneurs, to the seasonal work force, to immigrant families to students.

More than 24% of Blaine County’s population has roots primarily in Mexico and Peru. The valley’s Spanish-speaking population is a significant part of the local labor, school and church populations, but few local organizations provide Spanish-language or bilingual cultural events.

“While SVMoA has a longstanding presence in all of the valley’s schools, a goal for the coming years is to develop programs that serve a broader swath of the adult community, including the Spanish-speaking community,” said SVMoA Artistic Director Kristin Poole. “We’re committed to serving the whole of our community while nurturing ways to better see and understand one another and our shared experience.”

Image Courtesy of SVMoA
Image Courtesy of SVMoA

Intent on building projects with the community rather than for them, SVMoA staff have been working with a small group of leaders in the Latinx community. Together they have developed a year-long multi-disciplinary project on Día de los Muertos to bring people together in shared celebration of traditions.

“The project will engage Spanish and English-speaking audiences in making, learning about, and celebrating this important and diverse holiday while cultivating an understanding of its meaning and nurturing respect for traditions that are familiar to some and new to others,” continued Poole. “Because our audience looks to SVMoA to provide meaningful context around the ideas we are examining, we’ll bring scholars and authors to the valley who can elucidate the how, why, and history behind these traditions. We’re so excited to see these projects and partnerships come to life over the next 10 years.”

During celebrations of the Mexican holiday El Día de los Muertos (the Day of the Dead), families welcome back the souls of their deceased relatives for a reunion that includes food, drink, prayer, and parades. As part of the festivities, families and communities come together to create altars or ofrendas to honor the deceased. Traditional ofrendas are rich with symbolism and often include photographs, candles, food items favored by the deceased, and personal mementos.  They are both an offering and a place of gathering.

SVMoA’s Día de los Muertos project will take place over the course of one year starting with an event on October 30, 2021. SVMoA will invite organizations and individuals to create altars honoring a specific individual of their choosing or a well-known Mexican artist. An expanded multi-day celebration in October 2022 will feature the creation of six public altars, including one by a commissioned artist.  Both events will welcome the whole community and include food and music.  Lectures by Mexican scholars and authors will lead up to the 2022 celebration, including internationally celebrated author Sandra Cisneros.

Image Courtesy of SVMoA
Image Courtesy of SVMoA

“As we celebrate our 50th year it has been a great honor to look back and find those touchstones that have been through-lines for the organization: the commitment to education, the desire to be responsive to the community as it grows and evolves, the deeply felt belief that the exploration of ideas through the arts allows us to understand ourselves and our world better,” said Poole. “As we look forward, we will carry this tradition of enriching the Wood River community.”

SVMoA looks to this quote by Holland Cotter on what it means to be a 21st century museum: “The new museum won’t be defined by architectural glamour or by a market-vetted collection, though it may have these. Structurally porous and perpetually in progress, it will be defined by its own role as a shaper of values, and by the broad audience it attracts.”

Image Courtesy of SVMoA
Image Courtesy of SVMoA

As SVMoA looks forward to the next 50 years, it will be a 21st century museum for this community—a hub for activity and debate where programs are not restricted to the space of the museum and partnerships with other local nonprofits can result in a fuller exploration of ideas that matter to the people who live here.

“We want to listen to each other and also welcome and encourage perspectives that are new or different—provide a window into cultures, peoples, ideas that are not typically represented in this rural mountain town,” explained Poole. “We hope to be a museum that is of, by, and for its community.”

Author Bio: Kristin Poole has served as Artistic Director at SVMoA since 1997 where she leads programming for the accredited Museum. Kris focuses on The Museum’s multidisciplinary approach and explores relevant topics through visual art exhibitions, humanities lectures, seminars, music, film and theatre performances. A curator and art historian, Poole also develops exhibitions and lectures and writes on topics related to modernism, American Craft and contemporary art. She has served as a member of the Ketchum Arts Commission and is past Board president and current Board member of Visit Sun Valley. In 2018 she received the 2018 Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts in recognition of her contributions to arts and culture in the state of Idaho. Kris holds an MA in Modern Art History from the University of Chicago and a BA in Studio Art and English from Denison University.

About Sun Valley Museum of Art

Nonprofit Sun Valley Museum of Art (SVMoA), formerly Sun Valley Center for the Arts, has nurtured curiosity, sparked conversation and engaged the Blaine County community since 1971. Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, SVMoA reaches an annual audience of 40,000 with its mission to enrich the community through transformative arts and education experiences. SVMoA’s diverse programming includes visual arts exhibitions, lectures, concerts, classes, performances, play readings and BIG IDEA multidisciplinary projects. SVMoA enhances K–12 arts education in local schools with elementary school theatre education, student exhibition tours, professional artist residencies, arts-based classroom enrichment projects, and student and teacher scholarships. To learn more about Sun Valley Museum of Art, explore upcoming events, become a member, or get involved, visit svmoa.org.

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Fine Arts in the Context of Media Culture https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/06/fine-arts-in-the-context-of-media-culture/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/06/fine-arts-in-the-context-of-media-culture/#respond Wed, 09 Jun 2021 19:17:56 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=12418 The onset of technological advancements has dramatically impacted human society and the modes of socialization. While all fields have embraced change to accommodate this paradigm shift, mass culture has dealt the most significant blow on the fine arts industry. Besides changing the form and view of fine arts, media culture has redefined the audience of fine art and enabled budding…

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The onset of technological advancements has dramatically impacted human society and the modes of socialization. While all fields have embraced change to accommodate this paradigm shift, mass culture has dealt the most significant blow on the fine arts industry.

Besides changing the form and view of fine arts, media culture has redefined the audience of fine art and enabled budding artists to unleash their creativity. This article views the impact of media culture on fine arts and the views of various professionals.

Who are These Professionals?

We sampled four professionals with vast exposure in either field for a better glance into the relationship between fine arts and media culture. Our research entails the views of Lee RaineeSandra ArnoldDaron Fogelson, and Eyal Gever.

Rainee is the director of internet and technological research for the Pew Research Center. Their publication (Impact of Mass Media on Fine Arts) with Kristin Thomson and Kristen Purcell outlines the benefits and threats posed by mass media to the fine arts industry.

Doron is the vice president for media and entertainment practice at dataart.com and has vast software development and business analysis exposure. Eyal Gever is an Israeli 3D digital sculptor, and Sandra Arnold an author at AmericanVideotape.com with vast exposure to media culture.

What are Mass Culture and Fine Arts?

To understand the correlation between fine arts and media culture, we must define each field. Media culture refers to the overall impact and intellectual direction provided by mass media.

This refers to the culture that arises under the influence of mass media. On the other hand, fine arts mainly hold an aesthetic value and have a minor functional role.

Image via Pexels
Image via Pexels

The Impact of Media Culture on Fine Arts 

  1. Access to a Larger Audience

The strive for new clients is a primary goal for many private establishments. Unlike previous years, visits to galleries and art showrooms have been on a constant drop.

This is mainly because millennials have been accustomed to socializing and transacting on online social platforms. Fogelson cites millennials as the primary online consumers of fine art, necessitating an outreach approach that promotes optimal interactions with millennials.

Unlike traditional galleries, mass media exposes fine art to larger specific audiences, thus promoting individual styles. According to Gever, this helps diversify the art industry compared to the traditional dogmatic approach, where gallery owners determined what was suitable for the audience.

The sophistication of technology allows budding artists to break into the field and gain exposure without being overshadowed by famous works.

Unlike showrooms where renowned artists had better chances of landing a spot on the gallery walls, media culture creates room for different styles and tastes and connects artists to the right audience.

  1. Monetization of Artwork

At an Artist’s Level

Although media culture ranks as an excellent tool for maximizing the consumer base of fine arts, it is more limiting to individual growth. First, arts have been leveraged as tools for advertisement (Impact of Mass Media on Fine Arts, 2013), thus offer the most benefits to large corporations and established graphic designers.

Even worse, the saturation of fine arts has presented artists with a challenge to monetize their work. This is significantly due to the plethora of royalty-free art platforms, which have instilled consumers with the notion that art should be free.

The publication further shows that fine arts exposure on digital platforms has caused decreased attendance at in-person events, thus crippling ticket sales at art galleries and expositions.

Sandra Arnold implores media culture for serving as a leeway for novice artists to realize optimal growth. Consequentially, this lowers the value of fine art and makes it hard for artists to earn a living from their skills.

However, talent exposure to a specific audience provides quality support, which artists require to advance their careers. Gever identifies one such benefit of media culture: it allows artists to enjoy crowdfunding and pursue their interests.

pexels
Image via Pexels

Art Galleries and Museums

Although media culture is associated with the downfall of galleries, Fogelson offers a neat approach that allows art galleries to expose their work to a larger audience and gain more income. Fogelson suggests the gamification of museums in virtual realities similar to Minecraft. This approach would appeal to millennials and broaden the sources of income to range from in-game purchases to licensing of cultural assets.

By embracing this approach, art museums could retain their publicity and gain the upper hand in event planning. Additionally, galleries could make the most of virtual events, thus exposing their work to a larger audience.

This allows for flexibility in operations, efficient ticket sales and also paves the way for digital arts.

  1. A Threat to Traditional Artistry

Like Sandra Arnold, many artists feel that media culture is slowly ridding art of the human touch. Unlike traditional artists, modern artists rely on a mouse, a touchpad, and a computer to create enigmatic output.

Even worse, there is a surge of AI projects which can produce quality art with little human intervention. This may impair judgment of quality art and make it hard for artists to gain a reputation in the field.

  1. A Boost in Creativity

Media culture has greatly revolutionized art to meet the demands of the current audience. Besides connecting artists to relevant markets, media culture grants artists all the essential tools to bring their creativity to life.

Final Verdict

Although the fine arts are essential for their aesthetic appeal, today they are significantly driven by mass culture. While the former threatens the traditional arts field, it offers an excellent chance for fine art to grow in value and popularity.

For this, artists have to collaborate with current and upcoming technologies and adapt to the changes in consumer demands.

Author Bio: Timothy Miller is an author with vast exposure to software development, online art markets, and AI. Owing to his exposure, Miller offers academic and expert help on Mypaperwriter.com, thus helps students and employers resolve various challenges.

References:

Section 6: Overall Impact of Technology on the Arts. (2013). Retrieved 20 May 2021, from https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2013/01/04/section-6-overall-impact-of-technology-on-the-arts/

Gever, E. (2012). Technology and art: Engineering the future. Retrieved 20 May 2021, from https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-19576763

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Museum of Wild and Newfangled Art Hosts New Online Biennial https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/04/museum-of-wild-and-newfangled-art-hosts-new-online-biennial/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/04/museum-of-wild-and-newfangled-art-hosts-new-online-biennial/#respond Fri, 30 Apr 2021 22:17:22 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=12244 This past year has taken a toll on in-person art events, to say the least. From galleries to museums to art fairs, experiencing live art seems to be a thing of the past and has unfortunately led to more struggling artists now more than ever. But in a time full of darkness, there is a beacon of light for both…

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This past year has taken a toll on in-person art events, to say the least. From galleries to museums to art fairs, experiencing live art seems to be a thing of the past and has unfortunately led to more struggling artists now more than ever.

But in a time full of darkness, there is a beacon of light for both art lovers and artists as The Museum of Wild and Newfangled Art (mowna) announces their new online Biennial, a museum born out of the pandemic and specifically designed for the digital age. Launching Friday, April 30, 2021, the show will run until September 22, 2021, and features an international pool of artists selected from 44 countries throughout the world.

Planes of resistance Blanket Consent by Linda Rebeiz
Planes of resistance Blanket Consent by Linda Rebeiz

Co-founders Cari Ann and Joey Zaza created this new online Biennial with the goal of supporting artists by not only showcasing their work, but also helping them make a living. In fact, 70% of the profits earned by the museum through membership sales, store sales, and ticket sales go directly to the artists!

The Museum spent the greater half of January and February selecting artists to participate in their new online Biennial and they are proud to announce they will be supporting over 100 artists on their digital platform with over 20 hours of content to be viewed from images, paintings, drawings, videos, fashion, sculptures, photography, and much more.

Co-founder Joey Zaza says “there’s nowhere else that you can see this collection of art, in this way. There are hours of artwork to explore, play with, and listen to, twenty-four hours a day.”

Above Sea Level by Zhongyao Wang
Above Sea Level by Zhongyao Wang

Featured works include “The Lockdown”, a VR sonic memory installation by Mana Saei, “Planes of resistance” an empathy experiment to explore the world from the vantage point of a black woman using autobiographical acrylic compositions and sound by Linda Rebeiz, a Lebanese-Senegalese artist living in Accra, Ghana, “ERRANDS”, a portrait series documenting our shared shelter-in-place experiences by Zachary Handler of Baltimore, Maryland who will perform 3 slots of portraits per week for the month of May to museum guests, first come, first serve. “Susan” is an interactive augmented/virtual reality and video sculpture web experience by Sue Roh, a Brooklyn-based Korean-American multimedia artist navigating the IRL and URL. “Black Man in America” is a film by Vance Brown and Justina Kamiel Grayman from New York, NY. An interactive new-media installation, “AuxeticBreath”, visualizes the rhythmic respiratory rate, as well as tidal volume of collective human breaths using soft robotics covered with auxetic structures by Hyejun Younof Salzburg, Austria. “PETSCII leaks” by ailadi, an Italian artist whose works have been viewed hundreds of millions of times, are a series of ASCII inspired gif comics. A series of experimental music videos from the opera “The Magic Hummingbird” by Joseph Martin Waters from San Diego, CA will also be shown.

To kick off the Biennial, mowna will host a special screening of the feature doc The Faithful: The King, The Pope, The Princess, by Annie Berman on April 30th at 9 pm Eastern Time. The opening event will also be followed by a Q&A and a first look at the entrance to the Biennial!

Tickets and museum memberships can be purchased on their website, https://www.mowna.org/.

Doses of Feelings Blue mood blue heart by Gianlluca Carneiro
Doses of Feelings Blue mood blue heart by Gianlluca Carneiro

About mowna

mowna seeks to create an ever changing, fun, thoughtful, beautifully designed space to encourage awareness and mindfulness through the exhibition and experience of art and serves the public’s need for art for the highest good of all. By addressing the current needs of not only the artist but also the audience, mowna is breaking barriers within the global art community.

mowna offers the preservation of artworks through an online collection that is an educational resource and archive for its members and its artists, and aims to find, display, and support wild and newfangled art through the incorporation of innovative new technologies and mediums. mowna provides artists with financial compensation for their art and expands awareness of their talents via a sustainable platform where they can flourish.

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Bove Jewelers Converts Store Into Art Museum https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/01/bove-jewlers-converts-store-into-art-museum/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2021/01/bove-jewlers-converts-store-into-art-museum/#respond Thu, 07 Jan 2021 02:00:48 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=11957 2020 was a difficult year for the art industry with numerous art museums and galleries around the country closing their doors due to COVID-19. In response to these closures, Bove Jewelers, the premier jewelry store in Chester County, Pennsylvania, has converted its store into an art museum to give their customers a chance to view fine art, while shopping for…

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2020 was a difficult year for the art industry with numerous art museums and galleries around the country closing their doors due to COVID-19. In response to these closures, Bove Jewelers, the premier jewelry store in Chester County, Pennsylvania, has converted its store into an art museum to give their customers a chance to view fine art, while shopping for fine jewelry. The exhibit, which is free for visitors, will remain open through January 11th and showcases original artwork from some of history’s most famous artists, including Vincent Van Gogh, Marc Chagall, Georges Seurat, Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, Edgar Degas, Erte’, and Andy Warhol.

Bove Jewelers Exhibit 2

Bove Jewelers owners and avid art enthusiasts, Bob and Matt Strehlau, have been saddened by the closing of museums and galleries around the country and were inspired to do something about it. The two wanted to provide the beauty of art and spread holiday cheer to their community by creating their own art museum. Bove customers donated pieces from their personal collections to help create the exhibit.

“Art is the perfect way to escape reality, and be pulled into an artist’s world,” says owner Bob Strehlau who has “always drawn inspiration, solace, and peace from art.” Bob hopes that their store can offer people a place to escape reality, after enduring such a challenging year. “This can be the perfect way for people to refresh their mindset as we enter a new year.” Customers will be able to shop fine jewelry while admiring pieces from well-known artists, including Banksy and Dali.

Bove Jewelers Exhibit 1

The art exhibit also includes Van Gogh’s painting, “Landscape with Tree,” and Warhol’s painting of John Lennon. The store is following all the precautionary guidelines suggested by the CDC and the exhibit will remain at 50% capacity.

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Your Virtual Can-Dos: Here Are 8 Virtual Museum Tours & Interesting Events to Enjoy https://artbusinessnews.com/2020/12/your-virtual-can-dos-here-are-8-virtual-museum-tours-interesting-events-to-enjoy/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2020/12/your-virtual-can-dos-here-are-8-virtual-museum-tours-interesting-events-to-enjoy/#respond Fri, 11 Dec 2020 17:42:11 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=11924 Today’s world is marked by uncertainty, stress, negative feelings, and lockdown measures. This year has been a challenging one, a year that taught us how to live purposefully, to look inside us, and take care of the dear ones. Everything has changed, including the way we travel and see art. Most industries were affected by this global pandemic and the…

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Today’s world is marked by uncertainty, stress, negative feelings, and lockdown measures. This year has been a challenging one, a year that taught us how to live purposefully, to look inside us, and take care of the dear ones. Everything has changed, including the way we travel and see art. Most industries were affected by this global pandemic and the restrictions that followed, and many businesses were brought to a halt.

However, others managed to handle these difficult times and switched to online. This year has been a tough one not only because of these abrupt changes but because of the effects they’ve had on people’s mental health. Not being able to travel, to meet with your friends, and needing to spend so much time inside drained some people of energy and positivity. Mental health problems are on the rise, but so are the solutions that can help people manage these times successfully.

Even though we are not allowed to travel as we did before, there are new options available. You can explore art museums, fairs, and events from the comfort of your own home. Think about the most popular museums and places and the huge queue from the entrance. Now you don’t have to wait in the queue or travel to enjoy them because a new door has opened.

We will share 8 virtual museum tours and interesting events you can attend while lounging comfortably on your couch.

1. Machu Picchu, Peru

Machu Picchu, Peru
Machu Picchu, Peru

You have probably heard about Machu Picchu and the mysteries that surround it. Built in the 15th century, this Inca citadel was later abandoned. Maybe one of the most astonishing things about Machu Picchu is the fact that it is located on a 2430-meter mountain range, in the Andes Mountains.

Taking into consideration the fact that the walls and buildings were built without mortar and they are arranged according to astronomical principles, Machu Picchu became an international attraction. More than 2,500 visitors a day and more than half a million annually were visiting this Inca citadel until 2020.

Now, you can explore the astonishing beauty of Machu Picchu and admire the panoramic views online. This UNESCO Heritage Site can be visited in 360-degree views. During this tour, you will also find out more about its history and mysteries because the voice of a narrator will tell you the story of this Inca settlement.

2. Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam

Van Gogh Museum
Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam

Who has not heard about the famous Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh, known for cutting his ear and his unmistakable painting style? He painted over 2,000 artworks, most of them dating from the last two years of his life. Some of these famous paintings can be admired at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. Here you can find out more about his life, relationship with his brother Theo, and the most used techniques in painting.

Van Gogh Museum can be explored from the comfort of your home. It represents the largest collection of artworks by this tragic painter and you can get the chance to see over 700 paintings and drawings, as well as over 750 personal letters.

3. Great Wall of China

The Great Wall of China is one of the wonders you must see at least once in your life. These incredible artworks created by humans in secluded and inaccessible places arouse your admiration for the human race. However, the Great Wall of China is threatened by climate change and people are trying to preserve it by offering virtual tours. If you head straight to Google’s project Heritage on the Edge and you can explore it in 3D.

4. The Louvre, Paris

Louvre, Paris
Louvre, Paris

We can all remember those endless and discouraging queues in front of the Louvre. It is one of the most famous and visited museums in the world, every year seeing millions of international visitors. However, due to the current restrictions, the Louvre is closed for visitors. But, exploring it through a virtual tour is now possible. You can explore Egyptian artifacts, admire DaVinci’s Mona Lisa, the statue of Venus de Milo, the Code of Hammurabi, and more than 30,000 individual artworks.

5. Guggenheim Museum, New York City

Guggenheim Museum, New York
Guggenheim Museum, New York

On the list of the most visited and popular museums of the world, the Guggenheim Museum ranks near the Louvre. The architecture of the museum is a monument to modernism that houses art collections and special exhibitions. Guggenheim Museum in New York is a must-see for every age, having lots of exhibitions and galleries to admire, but also amazing architecture, both inside and outside the building. Here you can see artworks by Pablo Picasso, Henri Rousseau, or Paul Cezanne.

6. Georgia Aquarium, Atlanta

Georgia Aquarium
Georgia Aquarium, Atlanta

Georgia Aquarium is one of the most amazing aquariums in the world. In fact, it is the largest aquarium in the western world, being the only institution outside Asia that houses whale sharks. You can explore the amazing underwater life with a live tour of the aquarium. It has seven major galleries you can visit and learn more about thousands of animals and species you can now see virtually.

7. The Broad, Los Angeles

The Broad is a contemporary art museum in Los Angeles that houses over 200 artworks of the Broad’s collection. Even though the museum generally offers free admission to its galleries, it’s now closed due to the current state of the world. However, you can virtually explore the galleries of The Broad museum, and its most popular room, the Infinite Mirrored Room of Yayoi Kusama. Now you can spend all day in the twinkling abyss of the infinite.

8. A Trip to Mars

Even though real trips to Mars are not available, NASA has teamed up with Google to offer people all over the world a virtual tour to Mars. The Red Planet has always aroused humanity’s interest and now you can explore it in a 3D Virtual Tour and find out more about its surface and history. Thanks to technology, you can explore outer space without leaving your home. How wonderful is this?

Conclusion

The world has changed, and it will continue to evolve in ways we cannot even imagine. For the moment, there are travel restrictions. And for people who love exploring new places and meeting new cultures, this is a major drawback and disappointment. However, to stop the spread of the virus, these restrictions are necessary.

Choosing to see the full part of the glass is important during these times, and it can foster more positive experiences. Virtual tours can be a saving option, especially because you can choose what iconic and historical place you want to explore. You can choose from a wide variety of historical sites, museums, aquariums, and iconic places that can be explored for free, from the comfort of your own home. Give it a try — start exploring and visiting virtually.

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Author Bio: Michael Gorman is a highly skilled freelance writer and proofreader from the UK who offers the essay writer at a dissertation writing service and essay writing service uk. Being interested in everyday development, he writes various blog posts and discovers new aspects of human existence every day. Michael loves traveling, history, and deciphering myths of the ancient world. Feel free to contact him via Facebook or check his Twitter. 

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India’s Museum of Art and Photography Creates a New Story https://artbusinessnews.com/2020/11/indias-museum-of-art-and-photography-creates-a-new-story/ https://artbusinessnews.com/2020/11/indias-museum-of-art-and-photography-creates-a-new-story/#respond Mon, 23 Nov 2020 23:29:04 +0000 https://artbusinessnews.com/?p=11915 One overcast day in September, thirteen people who identify themselves as transwomen, picked up paintbrushes and in just ten days transformed a dusty building site into the brightest corner on one of Bangalore’s busiest roads.  The vivacious and colorful mural called ‘The Story of Bangalore’ was designed and painted by the Aravani Art Project, a collective that uses public art…

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One overcast day in September, thirteen people who identify themselves as transwomen, picked up paintbrushes and in just ten days transformed a dusty building site into the brightest corner on one of Bangalore’s busiest roads. 

The vivacious and colorful mural called ‘The Story of Bangalore’ was designed and painted by the Aravani Art Project, a collective that uses public art and wall art projects to spotlight the relationship between transwomen and women in public spaces. The Project was commissioned by the Museum of Art & Photography (MAP), whose flagship building is just being built and will open to the public sometime next year. Hugging a corner of MAP’s building site, the mural captures the myriad communities that live and breathe in the vibrant, urban landscape of the city—from migrant workers who have built the glass-facade buildings in the city’s technology parks to the IT workforce that populate them,  Bengaluru’s techies who have arrived here from different parts of the country and the world. The city’s traffic cops are also instantly recognizable in the mural with their distinctive cowboy hats, standing companionably alongside a person from the trans community. The entire artwork visually weaves together the stories and aspirations of hundreds of people who have made Bengaluru their home.

It is also an apt reflection of MAP’s vision of what the museum hopes to be, which is a space for unlocking stories for the community, through their extensive collection; narratives that the audience would want to hear, share and inspire others. And the mural begins that mission. It has caused masked commuters on their hurried way to pause mid-step, smile, and capture the scene with their phones, evoking a storm of selfies and social media posts that personalize their response. 

Sanjay Roy drives past the mural every day on his way to work and was actually able to follow its progress through the execution period, as the shapes and colors took form. He remarked, “During this time of the pandemic, as we head to our workspaces with a slight fear of the unknown, it was wonderful to see this burst of color emerge through an otherwise gloomy outlook. What was once an eyesore of construction-in-progress is now wrapped in a colorful mural depicting scenes of Bangalore that is so much more pleasing to the eye. I wish this lovely idea would be extended to all constructions across the city. It has also been fun trying to work out who is who in the Bangalore story on the mural.”

Photo by Shreya Chitre
Photo by Shreya Chitre

The mural and collaboration bring to focus a pertinent shift in the definition of a museum to one that is inclusive, diverse, and a driver of social development.  Museums today can no longer pose as institutions where objects are merely stored and occasionally exhibited. Instead, a museum needs to be a space for ideas and conversations that are initiated through its collections, commissions, and collaborations, to enable and spark audience engagement in multiple ways. This is at the very core of MAP’s ideology. Determined for museums to play a positive role in society, MAP’s vision — to bring art into the heart of the community — provides a framework for its strategy right from curatorial direction to programming, commissions, education, and outreach. Preserving the nation’s rich artistic heritage, of course, remains the primary goal for MAP; however, the museum also hopes to drive forward the positive role of a cultural institution in the shaping and progression of society.

Photo by Shreya Chitre
Photo by Shreya Chitre

As reflected even in ICOM’s (International Council of Museum) theme for this year’s International Museum Day, the issue of inclusivity is ubiquitous in the art community. With an aim to be institutions of social justice rather than just social value, museums all over the world are now pivoting their outlook and narrative to reflect the voices of people and communities from all walks of life, to make their collections, and the world of art in general, accessible to a wider audience. MAP believes that the role of art and culture as a soft power of global diplomacy needs to be utilized and emphasized, especially in the recent extremely polarized environment. 

MAP wants the public to move away from viewing museums as relics of the past, or storehouses of objects. On the contrary, museums need to be interactive and engaging spaces of storytelling, communication, ideas, and cultural exchange. Museums can and need to play a significant role in impacting and sensitizing the next generation to the heritage of a society, community, and nation. The collaboration with the Aravani Art Project is just one such step in MAP’s efforts to bridge the gap between museums and the community. 

Even prior to its official opening, MAP has carved an integral space for itself in the city by expanding its activities and outreach initiatives, such as a variety of educational programs, beyond the four walls of a traditional museum space. A timely pivot to the digital realm in the past few months and the introduction of a flurry of engaging workshops, seminars, and study packs, appealing to young children, teens as well as adults, has added another dimension to the whole cause of integration, inclusion, and accessibility in MAP’s mission. The soon-to-launch physical building of MAP will also offer a 360-degree approach to accessibility for people with special needs, in order to ensure a more holistic experience for visitors. 

Museums have great potential and responsibility to create engaging and meaningful experiences for their varied audience. Now, more than ever, museums and cultural institutions are being challenged to reinforce their relevance and social impact, and it is extremely important to make people aware of the power that lies within the scope of art, history, and culture to shape modern society. With the Aravani Art Project’s bright, exuberant, and thought-provoking imagery of the relation between the transgender community and the urban landscape of Bengaluru, MAP hopes to create ripples of ideological and perspectival change throughout the nation. 

Priscilla Roxburgh and Krittika Kumari are on staff at the Museum of Art & Photography.

About Aravani Art Project:

The Aravani Art Project is a women and transwomen art collective based in Bangalore, Karnataka. The project aims to create safe spaces for alternate voices through art. It has provided the third gender, outsiders to many communities, with an open platform to express their views about transgender rights and equality to a larger audience. Their projects include street art and art festivals in different public spaces in order to sensitize people and encourage exchange, discussion, openness, and debate surrounding gender identities. The project, in their own words, has given the transgenders the confidence to step out and interact with a community beyond their own.

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