Blogs Field Guide

Out in the Open: The Conversationalist’s Café

Taylor Baldry wants to put conversation at the center of the dining experience. Or rather, Baldry is really only concerned with conversation, hold the food. Baldry and conversationalist-in-crime Wayne Fuller will be at Open Field this summer serving conversation topics on printed menus and hosting passersby to an evening of tasty conversation at The Conversationalist’s [...]

The Conversationalist’s Café. Photo courtesy of Taylor Baldry.

Taylor Baldry wants to put conversation at the center of the dining experience. Or rather, Baldry is really only concerned with conversation, hold the food. Baldry and conversationalist-in-crime Wayne Fuller will be at Open Field this summer serving conversation topics on printed menus and hosting passersby to an evening of tasty conversation at The Conversationalist’s Café.

 

The café’s memorable signage. Photo courtesy of Taylor Baldry

 

Baldry first conceived of this project after living abroad for two years as a way to spark witty banter and meaningful conversation with strangers in Minneapolis in an age riddled with digital distance. Interested in face-to-face communication rather than social media, Baldry has set out on a mission to bring back the antiquated art of conversation. Not only does Baldry envisage the project as art of social engagement, but he also sees the project as a practical lesson and tool for those who want to hone their conversational skills. On his website, he offers talking tips for those interested; and his topics of conversation are widely approachable, light-hearted and designed to make you smile. When The Conversationalist’s Café is not gracing Open Field, Baldry and Fuller can often be found at Lake Calhoun with their card tables, a menu of topics, and an earnest desire to strike up a good conversation among strangers; so keep your eyes peeled on the Conversationalist’s website for dates throughout town. The Conversationalist’s Café will hit Open Field on four Thursdays this summer: June 7th, July 5th, and August 2nd, from 5:00-8:00 pm. August 9th will be a special 1980′s-themed evening from 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm.

 

First Free Saturday and Open Phenology

By Emily Wack           Red Admiral Butterfly on Korean Angelica in the Arlene Grossman Memorial Arbor An artist, birder, and Walker staffer, Abigail Anderson is guest curator of Open Laboratory at June’s Free First Saturday. Here, she talks about citizen science, the value of observation, and what inspired her to organize a day of activities [...]

By Emily Wack
          Red Admiral Butterfly on Korean Angelica in the Arlene Grossman Memorial Arbor

An artist, birder, and Walker staffer, Abigail Anderson is guest curator of Open Laboratory at June’s Free First Saturday. Here, she talks about citizen science, the value of observation, and what inspired her to organize a day of activities based around the myriad intersections of science, nature, and art.

Last summer you had a project in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden called Open Phenology. So first, what does “phenology” mean?

It is a branch of science that studies the timing of life cycle events, especially as they are tied to the changing seasons. I observed and tracked natural phenomena, such as migrating warblers, wispy cottonwood tree seeds floating in the air, or the waxing and waning chorus of cicadas, as they unfolded all around the Walker campus.

How can a lot of people do phenology in just one day—like during Free First Saturday, for example?

I like to say that phenology requires constant vigilance.  It’s about visiting a place every day to see what makes the place different today than it was yesterday. For my part at Open Laboratory, I’m hoping that kids get excited about this challenge and take it with them when the day is done.  Maybe it starts with an impressive new vocabulary word.  And from there, it leads to an inquisitive state of mind and sharing their discoveries with the people in their lives.  When we spend time observing nature, we become aware of how everything is interconnected.  And being aware of these interconnections is especially empowering for kids because it motivated them to ask more questions and get invested in their investigations.

So what is the connection between citizen science and art?

I once heard an artist remark that art and science are both fields that generate knowl­edge. Especially with contemporary art, there’s an emphasis on posing questions and investigating ideas. It’s a speculative endeavor motivated by the possibility of discov­ery—like science.

What’s the appeal of citizen science?

It’s exciting to take science out of the laboratory and integrate it into our daily lives. People become invested when they become investigators! This type of science can mobilize neighborhoods, spread awareness, and build advocacy for issues beyond the professional scientific community.

Young Gray Squirrel in the Minimalist Courtyard of the Minneapolis Sculture Garden

After experiencing Open Laboratory, what do you hope people take away at the end of the day?

I hope that many are surprised by the abundance and diversity of nature in an ur­ban setting, or that they discover curiosity is worth celebrating in and of itself. And whether they’re onlookers or active participants, they are the “citizens” in citizen science—after all, the subject of science is nothing less than the world we all share.

Can families with little or no science background still enjoy Open Laboratory?

Yes, of course! That’s exactly what it’s about: citizens learning alongside scientists.  The day’s activities will get parents and kids asking questions and building knowledge together. Experts from the Science Museum of Minnesota will be in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden with microscopes to help families examine, observe, and document findings in the garden.  And be sure to visit the pond near Spoonbridge and Cherry where a naturalist from Westwood Hills Nature Center will help families identify critters living in and near the water.

How can families use citizen science after Open Laboratory?

Carry on the curiosity and get exciting about noticing natural phenomena in your daily lives.  If families are interested in participating in a citizen science project, I recommend getting online and checking out SciStarter or Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Citizen Science Central.  Choose a project and start being citizen scientists!

Young Mourning Dove spotted in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden

What kind of animals can visitors spot in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden?

If I were you, I’d start by listening.  Try standing still with your eyes closed and listening to bird sounds coming from all around.  Birds commonly seen in the Sculpture Garden  include Mourning Doves, American Robins, and Common Grackles.  Challenge yourself to recognize these birds by the sounds they make.  Train your ears using the recordings on AllAboutBirds.org.  Listen to Mourning Doves here, American Robins here, and Common Grackles here. Keep your eyes trained on the low walls built around the Garden’s four courtyards – that’s where you’ll see Thirteen-lined Ground Squirrels going in and out of their burrows.  Lastly, water is an essential part of animal habitat, so I recommend a slow stroll around the pond.  There you might see dragonflies, butterflies, water striders, tadpoles, and ducks, for example.

What kinds of plants can visitors expect to see?

Start with the Linden trees that shade the grande allée – the path at the Garden’s entrance with a view of Spoonbridge and Cherry in the distance. These trees have tiny pale green flowers that are fragrant once the blooms open. If you find Dan Graham’s sculpture titled Two-way Mirror Punched Steel Hedge Labyrinth, notice how the artist used plants to make a kind of wall.  The plant used here is arborvitae and it is very common in landscaping (look around you).  This plant has a sweet, pine scent – can you smell it?  If you get to the far north edge of the Garden, walk through the Arbor to find nasturtium, clematis, and more.

Buds on a Linden Tree in the Minneapolis Sculture Garden

Thinking Inside the Box: Twin Cities Art Museum Guide Collaborative Symposium

by Misa Chappell   Tour Guides love to talk, especially to one another. Sadly, we rarely have the opportunity. And so once every two to three years we eagerly convene for a good dose of shoptalk at the Twin Cities Art Museum Guide Symposium. This year felt especially momentous given the changing landscape of cultural [...]

by Misa Chappell
 

Tour Guides love to talk, especially to one another. Sadly, we rarely have the opportunity. And so once every two to three years we eagerly convene for a good dose of shoptalk at the Twin Cities Art Museum Guide Symposium. This year felt especially momentous given the changing landscape of cultural institutions and the evolving role of museum education (evidenced by the recent New York Times article, “From Show and Look to Show and Teach,” in which our very own Director of Education and Curator of Public Practice Sarah Schultz was quoted). We had a lot to discuss.

The symposium began with a galvanizing keynote speech by Kelly McKinley, Director of Education Programming at the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto. Titled “Crafting Relationships One Conversation at a Time,” McKinley addressed the particular challenges that museum education faces today, and outlined new strategies to connect with our public. What can we do with what we already have? What can we make better?

We are all familiar with the concept of “experiential learning” at the Walker – it’s a cornerstone of the art center’s mission. Now it is the driving focus for most museums. Why? Because museums face more competition for an audience than ever. There are still the usual crowd-pilfering suspects—sports, movies, shopping malls—but McKinley pointed out that we also have to contend with the lure of the couch. With the mind-boggling array of technologies available to the average consumer, art is accessible with just one click, so what is the point of leaving the house only to deal with parking, admission fees and tired feet? With the Google Art Project alone, a person can peruse the collections of over 155 institutions in their pajamas. Clearly, museums need to come up with more compelling reasons to get people off the couch!
Museum educators must face the fact that new technologies will continue to develop, offering people information however and whenever they want it. The authority of a museum is no longer paramount, and a passive audience is becoming extinct. People want to customize their experience at a high level, make their own meaning and craft their own significance. They no longer want to simply learn, they want to participate. Even the word education sounds suspiciously “school-y.” The new contextual model of learning is personal, physical, and socio-cultural. Its goal is to facilitate connections between people and art. In order to continue to build relationships, increase participation, and grow our audience, museum practitioners must look into the assets that we already have: our people.

Drawing Club on Walker's Open Field. Open Field transforms the Walker Art Center’s big, green yard into a cultural commons. The space is designed in the spirit of the “gift economy,” to explore what happens when people get together to share and exchange skills and interests, to create something new, or delve into the unknown.

With those provocative ideas planted in our minds, the tour guides settled into a seriously stimulating afternoon. It was hard to choose which breakout sessions to attend with the enticing array of titles such as “Evidence of Impact: What does visitor research tell us?,” “iPads on Tour,” “Complexities of Touring: addressing cultural misconceptions and intrusive questions,” and “Engaging Resistant Visitors: How Can We Draw Mr. X into the Tour?” But no matter: every discussion was thought provoking, even the ones in the hallway on the way to the bathroom!  One particularly rich session was “Evidence of Impact: What Does Visitor Research Tell Us” led by the Walker’s Curt Lund. Participants took turns articulating their concept of what it means to learn within a tour context. A few of the answers included “creating an experience,” “engaging in conversation,” “inspiring a sense of wonder.” I was especially impressed by how visitor research can define the big ideas that can shape our practice. Lund left us with a short but comprehensive list of online resources about learning in museums. I can’t wait to start reading more.

Getting children and adults alike to talk dance and collaboration in Dance Works I: Merce Cunningham/Robert Rauschenberg

Here are some of the most salient threads of the day:

Customization and personalization: The idea of museum authority has been displaced. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing—it opens new venues for dialogue. Tour customization occurs on both the analog level in the form of special groups, multisensory tours, and motivation types and on the technological level by adding iPads, iPhones, user-generated content, Facebook and Twitter to our arsenal.

Semantics: Recently the Minneapolis Institute of Arts changed the name of the Department of Education to the Department of Learning. This simple adjustment indicates a shift in focus from the internal to the external. Calling the audience guests or facilitators instead of visitors is more inclusive.  Many museums have done away with the somewhat archaic word docent in favor of the user-friendly tour guide. We might also be known as facilitators, i.e., catalysts for an experience of your own making. 

 
Accessibility: The advent of multisensory tours for visually or hearing impaired and those with memory loss/dementia indicates a new sense of altruism in museum learning. This kind of tour puts the tour guide in a similar position as their audience as a fellow-explorer in search of a mutual experience. By way of illustration, McKinley cited a tour for the visually impaired in which the tour guide passed around a piece of felt to convey the bleeding colors of a Mark Rothko painting.

Participants interact with Sherrie Levine's La Fortune (after Man Ray: 3)

Community Outreach: Museums should be good neighbors and fulfill their civic duty. According to McKinley, “your neighbors need to think you’re a great museum, otherwise it doesn’t even matter if you’re a world class museum!” The Walker tour guides in the crowd exchanged glances: we know that we could do better in this regard. Initiatives such as free museum passes to new citizens, more free admission days, increased youth group access and partnerships with the VA hospital are all interesting possibilities.  

New Kinds of Tours: The museum-going audience might not have time or inclination for a full-length tour. Different kinds of tours can engage unlikely people, including socially oriented versions like our evening Think and a Drink events or tour guides on call. Linking museum departments with a tour is another way to capture a specific audience, something the Walker has explored, for example, with pre-performance gallery tours. McKinley introduced the idea that audience motivation was more important than tour content, personal interest, or guide knowledge. Tours aimed at different motivational identities, such as the explorer, art aficionado, recharger or reluctant companion were much more likely to hit a bulls-eye.

A Walker Art Center Teen Art Council member engages visitors in a gallery conversation

New Kinds of Tour Guide: Tour guides no longer need to be art history experts. Instead there is a move to recruit guides who reflect the community’s diversity, as well specialist guides, graduate students, and part-timers. Again, the focus is no longer on content. We have transitioned from information imparter to conversation/experience facilitator. Information feeds rather than drives the tour experience.

So how do Tour Guides move forward? I intend to carry on McKinley’s uplifting claim that it all comes down to the people and the art and forging a connection between the two. Our opportunity lies in our people, and the symposium proved we are a mighty group indeed. Let’s keep the dialog going.

 

 

 

“Lifelike” Redux: A Six-Year-Old Re-creates the Exhibition, by Hand

By Emma Cohen Six-year old Ella and her grandmother Karen were on their way home from the Walker discussing the many amazing and interesting things they saw. Grandma Karen, picking up on Ella’s excitement, suggested making a work of art when they got back home.  But Ella was quick to offer a more ambitious idea: [...]

By Emma Cohen

Six-year old Ella and her grandmother Karen were on their way home from the Walker discussing the many amazing and interesting things they saw. Grandma Karen, picking up on Ella’s excitement, suggested making a work of art when they got back home.  But Ella was quick to offer a more ambitious idea: “Let’s make the museum!” Inspired by Lifelike, the pair used a combination of household items and handmade objects to make their own version of the exhibition.  When we got word of their undertaking we had to see it for ourselves. Here is what we found…

Robert Therrien made Walker visitors feel small by making his No title (Folding table and chairs, brown) larger than life. Ella also created a shockingly new sense of scale–but in a creatively different way:

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Viewfinder: Experiencing Cunningham Through Your Own Body

by Susan Rotilie Last Wednesday evening a group of 18 people joined tour guide Lucy Yogerst and me for a tour of Dance Works I: Merce Cunningham/Robert Rauschenberg. It was a tag-team tour in which Lucy and I shared our enthusiasm for the installation of costumes, sets, videos, and artifacts that are part of Walker’s recent acquisition [...]

by Susan Rotilie

Last Wednesday evening a group of 18 people joined tour guide Lucy Yogerst and me for a tour of Dance Works I: Merce Cunningham/Robert Rauschenberg. It was a tag-team tour in which Lucy and I shared our enthusiasm for the installation of costumes, sets, videos, and artifacts that are part of Walker’s recent acquisition of the Cunningham Dance Company archives. We told stories and viewed objects related to the long and rich collaboration between the choreographer Cunningham and artist Rauschenberg.

In the end, however, it was clear that the typical gallery experience of looking at displays and discussing them lacked the vitality and life the objects had originally embodied when part of a performance. So, what did we do? We took a risk that is not usually part of our tours.

Suggestions for Movement (p2)

Inspired by a gallery guide written by associate director of education, Susy Bielak and research fellow, Abigail Sebaly, along with a tour plan for high school students developed by tour guide Marvel Gregoire, we invited our group to channel Cunningham, Rauschenberg, and their third collaborator, composer John Cage, to create a performance piece together. We focused on a response to Rauschenberg’s’ set piece Tantric Geography for the 1977 dance Travelogue. The work is a linear sculptural composition incorporating Duchampian bicycle wheels with chairs facing different directions installed diagonally across the gallery space. Five volunteers stepped up and they were asked to isolate a small gesture inspired by a word such as curve, tilt, twist, or arch (or not). They moved along the set piece, pausing, turning the direction of each chair, and repeating their gesture. The rest of the group, inspired by John Cage, provided a sound scape of voice- and body-generated “music” to accompany the dance.

We may not have reached the level of art or dance of the artists inspiring us, and our only audience was the gallery monitor Ann Norberg, but the experience was kind of magic and our tour ended with applause, laughter, and camaraderie.

Maybe you think sound making and movement in the gallery is reserved for school kids, or you feel unprepared to break out of your own inhibitions; however, in the case of the Dance Works exhibitions, alternative ways of experiencing the galleries seem to be called for. Moving beyond simply looking and talking about objects to a place where the art is experienced through our bodies and spirit leads to a new level of engagement with these artifacts, and an in-your-bones understanding of the rich collaboration from which they were created. And you don’t have to be a dancer or part of a guided tour to have this experience. The gallery cards with suggestions for moving through the space in Dance Works I are free for the taking right inside the entrance to the Medtronic Gallery. Come on….get moving!

Viewfinder posts are your opportunity to “show & tell” about the everyday arts happenings, interesting sights and sounds made or as seen by Minnesota artists, because art is where you find it. Submit your own informal, first-person responses to the art around you to katie(at)mnartists.org, and we may well publish your piece here on the blog. (Guidelines: 300 words or less, not about your own event/work, and please include an image, media, video, or audio file, and one sentence about yourself.)

Viewfinder: Kids on Ron Mueck

by Emma Cohen          At our April Free First Saturday event, we asked kids what they thought about the artworks in the exhibition Lifelike. Here is what Annie, age 6, said about one of her favorites:     Ron Mueck, Crouching Boy in Mirror Pick one word to describe this work of art: Real. Why did [...]

by Emma Cohen    
    
At our April Free First Saturday event, we asked kids what they thought about the artworks in the exhibition Lifelike. Here is what Annie, age 6, said about one of her favorites:
   
Ron Mueck, Crouching Boy in Mirror

Pick one word to describe this work of art: Real.

Why did you pick that word? It looks so real because of hands and nails.

Tell us if there is something you don’t like and why.  His underwear is showing.

What does it make you think about?  Going under water.

Make up a story about this work of art… He is sitting like that because he wants to see sea creatures.

 

We’re collecting young people’s thoughts on art all the time. What does your child have to say? Come visit the Walker, pick up an ArtThink worksheet, and let him tell us what he thinks!

 

Viewfinder posts are your opportunity to “show & tell” about the everyday arts happenings, interesting sights and sounds made or as seen by Minnesota artists, because art is where you find it.  Submit your own informal, first-person responses to the art around you to katie(at)mnartists.org, and we may well publish your piece here on the blog. (Guidelines: 300 words or less, not about your own event/work, and please include an image, media, video, or audio file, and one sentence about yourself.)

Getting to Know the Walker’s John Greenwald

    If you’re a frequent Walker visitor you’ve maybe met John Greenwald. He’s one of our guards and is often poised to greet people as they enter the art center by the Garden Café, or encourage them as they breathlessly but enthusiastically reach the final brick steps that carry one from the 1971 building to the 2005  expansion. When [...]

 

 

Courtesy of Courage Center

If you’re a frequent Walker visitor you’ve maybe met John Greenwald. He’s one of our guards and is often poised to greet people as they enter the art center by the Garden Café, or encourage them as they breathlessly but enthusiastically reach the final brick steps that carry one from the 1971 building to the 2005  expansion. When he’s not present in one of the Walker’s public spaces he’s in the galleries to, as he says, “protect the art from overly enthusiastic viewers.” John’s kind and always game for humor.

Something that I learned recently about my colleague is that he’s had a 24-year relationship with Courage Centerparticipating in the organization’s Transitional Rehabilitation Program and Vocational Services. It was Courage Center that helped link John to Common Sense Building Services, the company that provides the Walker with its great team of guards. Courage Center has also been a great partner to the Walker’s Education and Community Programs department over the years, assessing the work we do and offering suggestions for making it evermore inclusive.

To learn more about John and what lead him to the Walker, take a look at Our Stories: John Greenwald, a recent profile in  Courage Center’s May newsletter. And the next time you’re at the Walker seek out John and chat him up about an artwork you encounter during your visit.

 

Open Field Info Session This Thursday!

This Thursday, May 10th programmers Sarah Schultz, Scott Stulen and Lindsay Kaplan host a casual informational session at the Walker for anyone interested in programming an activity on Open Field this summer.  Whether you have already submitted a proposal or are just curious about the project, come down to the Walker to take part. The [...]

This Thursday, May 10th programmers Sarah Schultz, Scott Stulen and Lindsay Kaplan host a casual informational session at the Walker for anyone interested in programming an activity on Open Field this summer.  Whether you have already submitted a proposal or are just curious about the project, come down to the Walker to take part.

The evening’s agenda includes discussing tips for creating and marketing a successful program on the field and sharing important guidelines for planning your activity.  The session will take place in the Art Lab at 6pm followed by refreshments in the Open Field grove (weather permitting). This session is free and open to the public, so come on out and see how you can play a role in our summer adventure!

Check out the Open Field website for more information.

Hope to see you Thursday!

Viewfinder: Kids on Vija Celmins

by Emma Cohen At our April Free First Saturday event, we asked kids what they thought about the artworks in the exhibition Lifelike. Here is what Faye, age 10, and Megan, age 11, had to say about one of their favorites: Vija Celmins, Eggs Pick one word to describe this work of art: Outstanding Why [...]

by Emma Cohen

At our April Free First Saturday event, we asked kids what they thought about the artworks in the exhibition Lifelike. Here is what Faye, age 10, and Megan, age 11, had to say about one of their favorites:

Vija Celmins, Eggs

Pick one word to describe this work of art: Outstanding

Why did you pick that word? Has different shading and a pop of color.

Tell us if there is something you don’t like and why. It looks like it’s smudged. The yellow is “runny.”

What does it make you think about?  Breakfast at Bakers Square.

Make up a story about this work of art… There was a man and a woman that were in a fight and the man was cooking and on purpose he “popped” [the egg].

 

We’re collecting young people’s thoughts on art all the time. What does your child have to say? Come visit the Walker, pick up an ArtThink worksheet, and let her tell us what she thinks!

 

Viewfinder posts are your opportunity to “show & tell” about the everyday arts happenings, interesting sights and sounds made or as seen by Minnesota artists, because art is where you find it.  Submit your own informal, first-person responses to the art around you to katie(at)mnartists.org, and we may well publish your piece here on the blog. (Guidelines: 300 words or less, not about your own event/work, and please include an image, media, video, or audio file, and one sentence about yourself.)

Viewfinder: Kids on Robert Therrien

By Emma Cohen At our April Free First Saturday event, we asked kids what they thought about the artworks in the exhibition Lifelike. Here is what some of them said about one of their favorites: Robert Therrien, Folding Table and Chairs Pick one word to describe this work of art: Huge. Why? It isn’t tiny. [...]

By Emma Cohen

At our April Free First Saturday event, we asked kids what they thought about the artworks in the exhibition Lifelike. Here is what some of them said about one of their favorites:

Robert Therrien, Folding Table and Chairs

Pick one word to describe this work of art:

Huge. Why? It isn’t tiny. –Becca, age 6

Interesting. Why? The artist looked from an interesting perspective, and it made me feel as if I was very small. –Noor, age 10

Giant. Why? I picked giant because the table and the chairs look like a giant could sit on them. –Ahlea, age 7

 

Tell us if there is something you don’t like and why.

I don’t like that we want to sit on it [and aren't allowed to]. Because I think that it would be really fun to sit on it. –Oslbar, age 10

I feel too small. –Niyema, age 7

It reminds me of giants. I do not like giants.—Katherine, age 7

 

Make up a story about this work of art…

One day in a forest far away, two giants had a basket of food and couldn’t find any place to eat. They walked and walked until they found a giant table and 3 chairs. They said that this would be good and sat down to eat. The End. –Oslbar, age 10

Once upon a time there was a table and chairs and then I turned very small and I liked being very small , so I stayed like that. The end.—Jacob, age 6

Once upon a time there was a man named Robert Therrien. Robert Therrien saw a giant crying. He asked him why he was crying and the giant said, “I don’t have any chairs or table.” The man gave him some chairs and a table. –Alhea, age 7

 

We’re collecting young people’s thoughts on art all the time. What does your child have to say? Come visit the Walker, pick up an ArtThink worksheet, and let her tell us what she thinks!

 

Viewfinder posts are your opportunity to “show & tell” about the everyday arts happenings, interesting sights and sounds made or as seen by Minnesota artists, because art is where you find it.  Submit your own informal, first-person responses to the art around you to katie(at)mnartists.org, and we may well publish your piece here on the blog. (Guidelines: 300 words or less, not about your own event/work, and please include an image, media, video, or audio file, and one sentence about yourself.)