Wednesday, May 18, 2022

PG: Y13 Art Exhibition


Hi! Last week was Year 13 students' art exhibition at Durham Sixth Form Centre. Students from the art department showcase their artworks and sketchbooks to the public after working on their art concept for a year. Many of them visited with their parents and the evening was fabulous. A few weeks prior to the exhibition, I asked them about their art interests and helped out with the installation. The students are committed to their interests and possess good work ethics so it was very pleasant to interact with them.



























Friday, April 29, 2022

PG: Work Placement

Hi! This week, I've started my work placement in Durham Sixth Form Centre (DSFC). This work placement is part of my Critical Curatorship module. We went through an interview with the lecturer and confirmed our placement last year. My first day was filled with lesson observations in Fine Art class, Graphics lesson, Textiles, Photography and Foundation year. The A-level art students are very pleasant and talented. I was beyond delighted to interact with the students and the artist/ designer-in-residence. 

During the first week, I joined artists Theresa Easton and Theresa Poulton on the fourth of a six-week programme of workshops to learn more about anti-racism. I learnt about the recently launched African Lives in Northern England project to raise awareness and access the of the resources.


Programme Prospectus


Graphic Studio

Textiles and Design

Photography

Fine Art



Anti-racism workshop through Printmaking



Year 12 Students photographing their work for documentation


Wednesday, April 20, 2022

PG: Gallery Text

Hi! Sharing some guidelines about art label text. This document is available online. The examples listed in the guidelines are artworks from the V&A museum, to explain more about what it means. Of course, not all information are relevant to our teaching context. 


After a module of sharpening our sensibility in the art museum, I would like to think that I have learnt to look at things with a more critical eye, which also means I can spend many hours in the museum. One unusual aspect (for me) when browsing some museum sites online is the presence of a note under the display caption of the artwork image: Does this text contain inaccurate information or language that you feel we should improve or change? We would like to hear from you. It's unusual for me because I would like to think that before an establishment published any document, it should be error-free and I suppose research has to be done first. However, the sheer volume of artworks in the museum is beyond my imagination. I spend three hours walking to different galleries in the museum and in the midst of it, I did not even take a break. Imagine my surprise when I chanced upon a phrase (inspired by the death of...) on the museum webpage which made me felt uneasy and I thought maybe changes could be made. I wrote in to Tate and voila! it was changed within a week. The problematic phrase in the original description wasn't all incorrect because it was actually quoted in a journal article, but the audience wouldn't know because most visitors will not read every painting in-depth, unless for a purpose (Moore, 2008, p. 211). Hence, what is displayed online or even on-site, has to be as direct as possible and also taking into considerations how the visitors interpret the displayed information. 


After



Before


Moore, Jane. (March 2008) 'What Sir Luke Fildes' 1887 Painting The Doctor can teach us about the practice of medicine today', British Journal of General Practice, pp. 210-213.  

Friday, February 18, 2022

PG: History of Museums

Hi!

We've been reading about the history of museums and so I thought I should consolidate some of my learning here. I used to look at Singaporean artist, Donna Ong's art installation, and wondered about the space needed to store her vast collection of objects/ images. In one of her art installations, I remember seeing an open chest titled cabinets of curiosity, it was filled to the brim with objects.

Did you know that museums started out as an early, private Renaissance collections? They were known as Wunderkammern and Kunstkammern of the 16th and 17th centuries, often seen as "distant antecedents of art and natural history museums". These famous cabinets of curiosity laid the foundations for museum collections, including science and enthographic collections. Besides showing the wealth and knowledge of the private collectors, the collections also aim to inspire and instil awe at the "rarity and novelty" of the assemblage. Sometimes, these early modern collections combined natural and man-made objects, "raising important questions about natural things and artefacts".

The British Museum was established in 1753 "as the world's first, public museum", even then, the "public" in this context meant that only the scholars and 'gentlemen' entries were based on request only. This implies that only those who are well-verse in the written language will have access to the museum. Essentially, screening illiterate people out the premises. 

To set the context, we need to travel back in time. More museums were created in the 19th centuries partly due of the need for nation-building. The social classes lived radically different lives so one could not assume that people would naturally identify with each other in a nation. Thus, in many Western European countries, nation-building efforts went hand-in-hand with colonialism. Palais du Louvre was a precedent for new museums across Europe to instil the idea that spaces shared by different groups of people might be a means to create a sense of belonging for its citizens. When the South Kensington Museum (now known as the Victoria & Albert Museum) opened in 1857 in London, the "opening hours were argued by social campaigners to be arranged so that the working class people could visit" (Mason 2018). Henry Cole organised The Great Exhibition, housed in the Crystal Palace at Hyde Park, in 1851, setting a "benchmark in changing popular attitudes towards Britain's colonial possessions" (Barringer 1998). During the 19th century, London was the world's biggest city, social reformers then used museums as a way to align the working class with the elites, and "distract them form drink and radical politics" (Bennett 1995). Thus, the development of museums and galleries was related to ideas about civilisation and self-education.

According to MacKenzie, the 19th centuries museums were often build with wealth acquired from colonialism, and these acquisitions allow them "to expand into overseas territories". But, it poses problems even to the present. Even though the objects obtained could be through treaties or seized through force, what was acquired through legal means could have been deemed illegal or unethical in today's terms. Due to the fact that the acquiring country at that time was a colonial power, the descendants of the colonised people may exercise their rights now to say that their former colonisers no longer have the right to own the object(s). When an object is taken out of its cultural context, the meaning may be altered depending on how it is presented in a cultural institution. 

                                        
Bennett, Tony. The Birth of the Museum: History, Theory, Politics. Routledge, 1995.
Gerritsen, Anne, and Giorgio, Riello. The Global Lives of Things: The Material Culture of Connections in the Early Modern World. Routledge, 2016.MacKenzie, J.M. Museums and Empire: Natural History, Human Cultures and Colonial Identities. Manchester University Press. 2009. 
Mason, Rhiannon, et al. Museum and Gallery Studies: The Basics. Routledge, 2018.

Sunday, January 30, 2022

PG: Fieldtrips

Hi! These few weeks have been quite intense due to multiple deadlines. During the Christmas break, I went to London and visited some art exhibitions. British Library is impressive. The sheer amount of arts and cultures in London and what the city can offer are unfathomable. My class had a few lessons in museum/gallery and we were encouraged to visit others on our own. Some lessons were conducted by the curators and in the most recent class, we did a compare and contrast based on three galleries within the same premise (see worksheet questions below). Talk about the sweet spot in having a balance of theoretical and hands-on work. With only eleven course mates, it was quite easy to exchange ideas since most of our assignments are based on our interests given general guidelines.