Wednesday, December 15, 2010

What One Piece of Advice Would You Give to an Aspiring Museum Professional?



Lucky me! I'll be teaching the Exhibition Development and Evaluation course at Bank Street College starting in January, and I'd like to tap into the "wisdom of the crowd."

Think back to the start of your museum career --- what do you wish you knew then, that you know now?
 
Leave the best piece(s) of advice that I can share with my class of aspiring museum professionals in the "Comments" section below.

Thanks!

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

A "Post Exhibition" Museum?


What if your museum stopped making exhibitions?  

This is, in only some ways, a rhetorical question since many museums have lost the internal capacity to actually develop, design, prototype, and fabricate their own exhibit components and exhibitions.  Worse yet, some museums were intentionally designed (architecturally or managerially) to never have any internal capacity to create (or perhaps more importantly, repair or improve) their exhibitions.

But leaving the notions and importance of internal capacity aside, are traditional conceptions of exhibitions actually holding museums back from expanding their reach to younger, non-white audiences, and people who wouldn't even normally consider visiting a museum at all?  (Check out the work of Reach Advisors to examine the unsettling demographic trends around traditional museum visitors and visitation.)

If the compelling value that museums offer are the dynamic duo of "stories and stuff" how can we repackage narrative formats and object presentations in ways that move past parades of casework and frames in Art and History Museums, side shows of phenomena or relics in Science Centers and Natural History Museums, or candy-colored collections of miniature structures (or heaven forfend grocery stores!) in Children's Museums?

I'm not suggesting that museums give up objects or narrative, just the way they combine and "package" those elements.  In the short attention span world of Twitter and the post economic crash world of, well, now,  does it really still make sense to spend several years and several million dollars to mount a major exhibition that will likely remain largely unchanged for the length of its run?

I'd say no, but what do you say?   Where are the museums (or non-museums) that are presenting narrative and physical objects in "post exhibition" ways?

"Object Theatres" in museums (especially at Science North in Canada) were a stab at this, and "moving museums" like Maria Mortati's San Francisco Mobile Museum project are focusing on people and their stories without a lot of the infrastructure of traditional museum projects.

Last, but not least, are there viable digital tools that can reconcile and bridge virtual worlds and objects, especially the authentic objects that still seem to be an essential part of the museum experience?  (Rather than degenerating into a discussion of "shiny new toys." --->  Oh! oh! let's buy ten iPads and figure out how we can use them in the museum!)

Lots of questions and ideas buzzing around my head!  Please help me gather these woolly thoughts into a more cohesive tapestry of "post exhibition" ideas by adding your own thoughts or examples into the "Comments" Section below so I can do a follow-up posting or article that can pull more of these ideas about "post exhibition" museums together.

Thanks!

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Ponoko + Google SketchUp = Your Personal Design Factory!


The fine folks at Ponoko (the company that creates real stuff from your digital designs) have a contest going with the equally fine folks from Google SketchUp.

The aim of the contest is to create "how-tos" or "Instructables" that show how you can use your Google SketchUp designs to create real stuff using Ponoko's tools.  (Ponoko basically lets you run your own personal factory to fabricate your digital designs into a variety of physical materials and finishes.)

You can find out more about the contest here.  But hurry! The entry deadline is December 17th.

Even if you don't enter the contest, it is worthwhile for any museum maker or designer to check out both Ponoko and Google SketchUp.

Don't miss out on any ExhibiTricks posts! It's easy to get updates via email or your favorite news reader. Just click the "Free Updates" link on the right side of the blog. P.S. If you receive ExhibiTricks via email (or Facebook or LinkedIn) you will need to click HERE to go to the main ExhibiTricks page to make comments or view multimedia features (like videos!)

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

A Bulgarian (Museum) Revolution



What would you do if you lived in a country that had no Children's Museums or Science Centers?

That's currently the state of affairs in Bulgaria.  Fortunately for the Bulgarian Museum community, and Bulgarian museum visitors in particular, a determined and resourceful young woman named Vessela Gertcheva is working to change all that.  In fact, Vessela and her colleagues in the museum and cultural sectors are on the brink of a true Bulgarian Museum Revolution.

I just returned from a trip to Bulgaria where I was part of a three-person consulting team (myself, Deborah Edward, and Sally Yerkovich) funded by the America for Bulgaria Foundation, under the direction of the New Bulgarian University, to observe and provide advice on the pilot project designed to develop five "Children's Corners" (really small interactive exhibition areas designed to introduce children and family groups to hands-on exhibits) into five different museums around Bulgaria.

Vessela is spearheading the "Children's Corners" project as a way to build public awareness for the possibilities of interactive learning spaces in Bulgaria, and to ultimately pave the way for a free-standing Bulgarian Children's Museum there.  In this blog posting, I'll share some of the experiences of my trip to Bulgaria, as well as some of the museum and exhibit ideas I came away with.

But first, a little background.  Everyone I told about my trip before I actually left for Bulgaria was surprised and/or fascinated by my destination.  But most people (including myself, originally) weren't really sure where Bulgaria was located.  So, here's a map:




Bulgaria is bordered to the south by Greece and Turkey, to the west by Macedonia, to the north by Romania, and to the east by the Black Sea.  My sense of central Sofia, the capital, was that there were a few beautiful buildings surrounded by much blocky, oppressive architecture reflective of the Soviet-dominated, totalitarian past of Bulgaria.  This is changing since Bulgaria's entry into the European Union, but slowly.




Similarly, the Bulgarian museums we visited were decidedly "old school."  Large buildings whose interiors were dominated by rows and floors of artifacts and objects in glass cases (or as our Bulgarian hosts charmingly described them, "cages.")  While many of these traditional Bulgarian museums provided interesting staffed programs (such as weekend bazaars or the popular annual "European Bat Night" at the National Museum of Natural History) museum staff have become increasingly interested in exploring ways for integrating interactive exhibit areas geared toward children and families into their museums.



The first of the five Children's Corners opened in September 2010 at the Regional Museum of History in Blagoevgrad, in the southwestern part of Bulgaria.  Having seen the finished gallery, I am very impressed and think that the Blagoevgrad exhibition raises the bar high for the succeeding four galleries in this project to match.  (You can read my entire review and see a batch of pictures from the Blagoevgrad installation by clicking over to the ExhibiFiles website.) 



I also learned a new exhibit trick from our Bulgarian museum colleagues: their animal track stamping component makes use of "Moon Sand" in the central stamping area, which makes for sharper track impressions as well as limiting some degree of the messiness associated with traditional loose sand.



In visiting the other museum sites that will be creating their own Children's Corners, and by meeting with their directors and curatorial staff, I was struck by several things:

• It is exceedingly difficult to imagine the possibilities or develop interactive exhibit ideas if neither you, nor your visitors, have directly experienced a hands-on gallery or museum.  This is a key part of both the challenge, and the revolution, inherent in the Children's Corner project.  Fortunately, the completed gallery in Blagoevgrad is already serving as a model and benchmark to Bulgarian museum professionals and visitors alike.

• Prototyping and testing your ideas is the most effective way to achieve good results.  There was a little bit of the tendency in Bulgaria (as there is in the U.S. and elsewhere in the museum world) to want to design and develop the interactive children's exhibitions inside meeting rooms with a quorum of experts.  Fortunately, by the end of our trip to Bulgaria, our hosts seemed to be warming up to the notion of using prototyping as a way to answer exhibit design and development questions.

• Failure IS an option.  As I often say to my kids, "It's o.k. to make mistakes, as long as you learn from them, and don't keep repeating the same mistakes over and over."   There is an enormous degree of professional pride and pressure at stake for the Bulgarian Children's Corner project sites --- which might make some people decide to stick with very safe exhibit design and development choices.   Fortunately, the vast majority of project partners we came in contact with seem to realize that this is a time and opportunity that favors choices that may be difficult and risky.

We really are witnessing the start of a truly exciting museum revolution in Bulgaria, and I can't wait to see what happens next!  (Feel free to contact me with question or to request addition details about my work in Bulgaria.)



Don't miss out on any ExhibiTricks posts! It's easy to get updates via email or your favorite news reader. Just click the "Free Updates" link on the right side of the blog. P.S. If you receive ExhibiTricks via email (or Facebook or LinkedIn) you will need to click HERE to go to the main ExhibiTricks page to make comments or view multimedia features (like videos!)

Monday, November 15, 2010

Stretch Your Exhibit Dollars with the Exhibits Exchange Group


Here's a chance to stretch your exhibit dollars:

Join the free "Exhibits Exchange" Google Group.

The Exhibits Exchange Group is a place to find, post, sell, barter, or exchange "Used but Usable" exhibit elements.  Check out a new batch of postings placed by Kathy Krafft from the Sciencenter in Ithaca, NY.

Please let friends and colleagues know about the group --- the more group members, and the more postings of "used but usable" exhibits, the better the entire experience will be for everyone!

Feel free to contact me if you have questions about the group.



Don't miss out on any ExhibiTricks posts! It's easy to get updates via email or your favorite news reader. Just click the "Free Updates" link on the right side of the blog. P.S. If you receive ExhibiTricks via email (or Facebook or LinkedIn) you will need to click HERE to go to the main ExhibiTricks page to make comments or view multimedia features (like videos!)

Sunday, November 14, 2010

On the Road to Sofia



I'm off to Bulgaria to work with museum folks under the auspices of the New Bulgarian University and the Ministry of Culture.  We will work on ways to design and develop new exhibits and experiences that will be more engaging and interesting for children and family audiences inside existing Bulgarian museums.

I'm really looking forward to the new things I will learn from our Bulgarian museum exhibit design colleagues!

I hope to be able to post pictures and updates while I am in Bulgaria, but in the meantime I thought I would commend to your attention this previous ExhibiTricks post  --- an interview I had with Harry White --- to give a European perspective on the museum biz.

Harry has recently shifted his work from Techniquest in Wales to the @Bristol museum, but the insights and responses he offers to my interview questions still offer great food for thought.

Click over to the interview now, and stay tuned for the Bulgarian updates!



Don't miss out on any ExhibiTricks posts! It's easy to get updates via email or your favorite news reader. Just click the "Free Updates" link on the right side of the blog. P.S. If you receive ExhibiTricks via email (or Facebook or LinkedIn) you will need to click HERE to go to the main ExhibiTricks page to make comments or view multimedia features (like videos!)