Western Museums Association Annual Meeting 2015

In my capacity as Assistant Registrar at the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, this year I attended for the first time the 80th annual meeting of the Westerns Museum Association at the Fairmont Hotel in San Jose, California, held October 24-27, 2015.

Our new logo for the UC Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive
Our new logo for the UC Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive
WMA 80th Annual Meeting, San Jose: Listen, Learn, Lead
WMA 80th Annual Meeting, San Jose: Listen, Learn, Lead

Instead of registering as an attendee, I signed on as a volunteer. In my opinion, the event has been much more rewarding this way–I keep busy, meet almost everyone who comes through the door, go to sessions I might not otherwise attend but end up enjoying and learning from, and learn first-hand how challenging organizing and running such events can be. There has been an amazing team working for months behind the scenes putting this event together and making sure everyone’s needs are met to the extent possible. I have gained a true appreciation for what goes into making this kind of gathering happen.

My first task was the day before the conference even started–helping to assemble the registration packets for the 500+ attendees and speakers. After a stop at Philz Coffee for fuel, I made my way to the Fairmont Hotel to join the assembly team.

Philz in San Jose; when you see a Philz, you gotta stop!
Philz in San Jose; when you see a Philz, you gotta stop!
My problem at Philz--deciding what to try.
My problem at Philz–deciding what to try.

Assembling more than 500 packets is a serious  operation!

The Fairmont Hotel, San Jose
The Fairmont Hotel, San Jose

IMG_9068 IMG_9070 IMG_9072 IMG_9074

Opening day “pre-conference” events included trips to Runnymeade Sculpture Garden, the 49ers Museum and the Splendid Heritage Collection as well as workshops such as CSI: Registrars, Using Design Thinking to Develop Visitor-Centered Experiences, and Tips and Tricks to Ramping Up Your Career at Any Level.

Runnymede 49ers splendid

Sunday, we got down to serious business. The Exhibit Hall Networking Lunch got everyone together for food and networking. Concurrent sessions in the areas of community engagement, collections, leadership, visitor experience, development and technology ran through the afternoon, followed by a Culture Crawl on South First Street. The scavenger hunt style tour of the public art in San Jose has people out collecting clues, including the one where I was the volunteer helper at the mural The Heart of the Valley.

exhibition hall networking luncheon mewseums acme

Turning Outward: Museums and Libraries as Sites for Community Innovation and Revitalization.
Turning Outward: Museums and Libraries as Sites for Community Innovation and Revitalization.

culture crawl

Your friendly conference volunteer
Your friendly conference volunteer

On Monday, the Poster Session provided 8 individuals the opportunity to present their research and ideas.

BAMPFA's own Rachael Dickson preparing her poster on Museums without Walls: The Intersection of Art Museums and Public Art.
BAMPFA’s own Rachael Dickson preparing her poster on Museums without Walls: The Intersection of Art Museums and Public Art.
Maya Makker of the Computer History Museum on Public Users, Private Knowledge: Crowdsourcing and the Changing Role of Museum Expertise.
Maya Makker of the Computer History Museum on Public Users, Private Knowledge: Crowdsourcing and the Changing Role of Museum Expertise.

Another BAMPFA favorite, Program Manager Sean Carson, was on the panel for the session The Morning After: Educating and Engaging Beyond the Party.

BAMPFA Program Manager Sean Carson
BAMPFA Program Manager Sean Carson

My particular favorite session was Dust: Our Dirty Little Secret, with moderator and registrar Rebekah Monahan from the Woodbury Art Museum and panelists Melissa Hempel, Director/Curator of the Woodbury and Sheridan College Professor of Visual Arts Tawni Shuler. Dust–I’ll just say it’s very scary stuff and you are better off not knowing what’s in it. If you have an interest in freaking yourself out, I recommend The Secret Life of Dust by Hannah Holmes.

dust dust 2

On Tuesday, I was able to snag a coveted ticket to the Registrars Luncheon, the annual business meeting of the Registrars Committee Western Region (RCWR). We are a fun crowd!

registrawrs reg 2

Registrars Committee Western Region Board Chair Clare Haggarty getting the raffle drawing ready to go.
Registrars Committee Western Region Board Chair Clare Haggarty getting the raffle drawing ready to go.

Another BAMPFA presenter was Stephanie Cannizzo on Curating and Caring for the Conceptual with co-panelists Jill Sterret from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and artist Jennifer Brandon, moderated by Beth Dungan.

Stephanie Cannizzo seaking on the Yoko Ono exhibition Grapefruit that she curated for BAMPFA.
Stephanie Cannizzo speaking on the Yoko Ono exhibition Grapefruit that she curated for BAMPFA.

The conference is winding down this afternoon, but I thought I’d end with some glimpses of the abundant museum and public art offerings in San Jose. It’s not just for techies!

Tech Museum of Innovation
Tech Museum of Innovation
San Jose Museum of Art
San Jose Museum of Art

IMG_9064 public art 1IMG_9142

Mouse’s Kittens–Ready for Their Debut, or, They Leave the Foster Nest

Today was weigh-in for the foster kittens; got them bundled into the carrier and over to the East Bay SPCA, where the wonderful Mimi put them on the scales to see if each was at the 2 pound benchmark for spay/neuter and the adoption floor!

We don't like this carrier thing.
We don’t like this carrier thing.

Last night all 4 of them got to take a field trip into Bob’s big office room, where they ran and played and caused general mayhem. They had been going in one at a time for a chance to have some “me” time, but this time it was kitten party!

Sugar Glider checks things out
Sugar Glider checks things out
Ratticus tries to hide under the piano in order to launch a strike on his brother
Ratticus tries to hide under the piano in order to launch a strike on his brother
Ferret's not so sure she wants to leave the sofa
Ferret’s not so sure she wants to leave the sofa
Maybe the cabinet is a little too high up for little Chinchilla
Maybe the cabinet is a little too high up for little Chinchilla
Or maybe not
Or maybe not

I spent a little time with them this morning before taking them down to see Mimi. It was hard to make myself get going; I could spend hours in my pajamas sitting on the floor playing with kittens. And some day maybe I will have time to with another litter of kittens. But for now, maybe I will get some studying done!

The brothers in a peaceful moment
The brothers in a peaceful moment
Handsome Ratticus
Handsome Ratticus
Gotta get up to 2 pounds!
Gotta get up to 2 pounds!
Chinchilla adores the crinkle tube
Chinchilla adores the crinkle tube
Sugar Glider, looking so grown up
Sugar Glider, looking so grown up

Here we go, weigh-in!

2.1 lbs
2.1 pounds
Just over 2 lbs, the littlest makes it!
Just over 2 pounds, the littlest makes it!
2.4 pounds
2.5 pounds!
Ratticus wouldn't sit still but he was somewhere around the 2.5 pound mark.
Ratticus wouldn’t sit still but he was somewhere around the 2.5 pound mark.

I’m really going to miss them but they are all 4 wonderful cats with their individual, quirky personalities. I know they will all find wonderful homes! Thank you to Robert Ward for letting me fill the house with kittens! And thank you to everyone at the East Bay SPCA for working tirelessly to find homes for cats and dogs in our community. Adopt a shelter pet!

Kitten Chronicles–7 weeks old!

Wow, the foster kittens have become exhaustingly active in the last couple of weeks! They are quite a handful (two handsful at this point). Mother Mouse went back to the East Bay SPCA to start getting ready to find her forever home. It sounds sad to separate her from the kittens, but believe me, she was ready! And they have been fine. In fact, little Chinchilla, the mama’s girl, has become much less shy and more adventurous. We miss Mouse, of course, and I will check on her progress at the SPCA to make sure she’s doing well.

Sweet mother mouse with Chinchilla
Sweet mother Mouse with Chinchilla

The 4 little rascals will be with us for at least another week; they have to be at least 8 weeks old and weigh 2 pounds each before they can enter the adoption process. I think Ratticus will for sure hit the weight target; he is the biggest (and turning into a little bit of a bully!).

Ratticus, King of the Kitten Kingdom
Ratticus, King of the Kitten Kingdom

Sugar Glider isn’t too far behind. He’s a little mellower than his brother, and the one who inherited his mama’s sweet loud purr. He’s also a lap cat in the making. And who doesn’t love an orange tabby?

Sugar Glider, loves the crinkle tube
Sugar Glider, loves the crinkle tube

Miss Ferret is the one who looks most like her mama Mouse; a slightly exotic face and lean and lanky. Also very proud like her mama. But she can keep up with her crazy brothers, too!

Ferret, the belle of the ball
Ferret, the belle of the ball

And last, but never least (I am the youngest of 4 human siblings, so I identify with her) is Chinchilla, finally catching up size-wise and blossoming into an acrobat but still a bit of a loner.

Chinchilla, loves a good shoe box
Chinchilla, loves a good shoe box

Like all sisters, Ferret and Chinchilla love a good get together, usually involving towels. They are growing up in the guest bathroom, so maybe that makes sense!

Fun with towels
Fun with towels
Chinchilla in her corner
Chinchilla in her corner
Ferret, having second thoughts
Ferret, having second thoughts

And of course, boys will be boys.

Crinkle tube fight!
Crinkle tube fight!

It’s getting hard to get all 4 in 1 picture; here is today’s best effort.

Kitten mayhem!
Kitten mayhem!

In another week, we will see if they are ready for the next stage in getting their forever familes. Update to come!

Bueller, Bueller, Bueller…Chicago, part 2, the Art Institute

Warning: this is going to be a long post! But it will mostly be photos. If a picture paints a thousand words and you are at an art museum…

Founded in 1879 as both a museum and a school for the fine arts, the Art Institite of Chicago’s permanent home was built in 1893 at the intersection of Michigan Avenue and Adams Street as a joint effort with the City of Chicago for the World’s Columbian Exhibition. The collection of the Art Institute of Chicago encompasses more than 5,000 years of human expression from cultures around the world and contains more than 260,000 works of art. The museum holds works of art ranging from early Japanese prints to modern American art. It is principally known for one of the United States’ finest collection of paintings produced in Western culture. It is the second largest museum in the United States, after the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

The AIC in 1893.
The AIC in 1893.

AIC map

The AIC in 2015.
The AIC in 2015.

That building still serves as the entryway, flanked by the bronze lions sculpted by Edward Kemeys. commissioned as a gift from Mrs. Henry Field (Florence Lathrop Field).  While their official designations are the North Lion and the South Lion, Kemeys referred to them as On the Prowl (North) and Stands in Attitude of Defiance (South). Since all I knew about Chicago before this visit was from the John Hughes movies of the 1980s, I, of course, first saw them in the iconic AIC visit scenes from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.

On the Prowl (North)
On the Prowl (North)
In an Attitude of Defiance (South)
In an Attitude of Defiance (South)

FBDO

Ferris, Sloane,and Cameron approach the AIC
Ferris, Sloane,and Cameron approach the AIC

Despite my mission of taking a Ferris photo in front of the impressionist painting A Sunday on La Grande Jatte by Georges Suerat, I did allow myself to enjoy an exhibit on Chicago architectural history outside of the Impressionist Galleries.

overview overview 2 flw adler sullivan flw detail label

And then my Ferris Bueller moment, finally!

Ferris clip 1
Cameron with the Seurat
my moment
Me with the Seurat

I am not the only one who bases museum visits on pop cultural references; the museum has a handout on how to do the Ferris Bueller tour of the museum!

tour 1 tour 2

My second mission was to visit the Thorne miniature rooms, which I know from the beautiful book that was a gift from Robert Ward after he visited the miniature rooms and knew it was a collection that I would love. From the AIC website: “The 68 Thorne Miniature Rooms enable one to glimpse elements of European interiors from the late 13th century to the 1930s and American furnishings from the 17th century to the 1930s. Painstakingly constructed on a scale of one inch to one foot, these fascinating models were conceived by Mrs. James Ward Thorne of Chicago and constructed between 1932 and 1940 by master craftsmen according to her specifications.”

The rooms are very difficult to get good pictures of as they are behind glazing (understably; I would be able to resist touching!). An overview of the gallery:

overview 2 panel 1 panel 2

Here are just a few of my favorites; I apologize for the poor quality of the images.

English bedchamber
English bedchamber
A selfie in front of an English linrary
A selfie in front of an English library
French Modern (1930s)
French Modern (1930s)
New Mexico kitchen
New Mexico kitchen
California Living circa 1935-1940
California Living circa 1935-1940
California Modern circa 1940
California Modern circa 1940

Traversing the museum, you go through the art and cultures of the world.

China, Equestrienne, Tang Dynasty, 8th century
China, Equestrienne, Tang Dynasty, 8th century
India, Shiva as Lord of the Dance, circa 1000
India, Shiva as Lord of the Dance, circa 1000
India, Twenty-Armed Dancing God Ganesha, Remover of Obstacles, 11th century
India, Twenty-Armed Dancing God Ganesha, Remover of Obstacles, 11th century
Japan, Shukongojin, 12th-14th centuries
Japan, Shukongojin, 12th-14th centuries
Byzantine, northern Syria, Mosaic fragment with leopard, 450-500
Byzantine, northern Syria, Mosaic fragment with leopard, 450-500

rome 2 rome 2 panel

Some of the “Greatest Hits” at the AIC:

The American Windows, Marc Chagall, dedicated 1977
The American Windows, Marc Chagall, dedicated 1977
American Gothic, Grant Wood, 1930
American Gothic, Grant Wood, 1930
Edward Hopper, Nighthawks, 1942
Edward Hopper, Nighthawks, 1942

I was particularly drawn to a selection of works by one of my favorite painters, Georgia O’Keeffe, in the Paul and Gabriella Rosenbaum Gallery, a gallery dedicated to Georgia O’Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz.  O’Keeffe studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago beginning in 1905.

Yellow Hickory Leaves with Daisy, 1928
Yellow Hickory Leaves with Daisy, 1928
Red Hills with Flowers, 1937
Red Hills with Flowers, 1937
Red and Pink Rocks and Teeth, 1938
Red and Pink Rocks and Teeth, 1938
Cow's Skull with Calico Roses, 1931
Cow’s Skull with Calico Roses, 1931
Blue and Green Music, 1921
Blue and Green Music, 1921
Black Cross, New Mexico,1929
Black Cross, New Mexico, 1929

And now, for a few things that I call Weird and Creepy for lack of a better description.

Statue of a Young Satyr Wearing a Theater Mask of Silenos, Roman, 1st century AD
Statue of a Young Satyr Wearing a Theater Mask of Silenos, Roman, 1st century AD

architectural creepy kid

Ivan Albright, Picture of Dorian Gray, 1943-1944 (painted for the 1945 movie adaptation)
Ivan Albright, Picture of Dorian Gray, 1943-1944 (painted for the 1945 movie adaptation)
Ivan Albright, Into the World There Came a Soul Called Ida, 1929-1930
Ivan Albright, Into the World There Came a Soul Called Ida, 1929-1930

And the final category, which I call Things I Like.

Auguste Préault, Le Silence, 1842-1843
Auguste Préault, Le Silence, 1842-1843
Jean-Auguste Barre, Mary of Burgundy, circa 1840
Jean-Auguste Barre, Mary of Burgundy, circa 1840

I was thinking Mary of Burgundy seemed like a kick-ass kind of gal, but then I read on the label that this sculpture depicts her in the moment before her tragic and fatal fall.

Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Interrupted Reading, circe 1870
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Interrupted Reading, circa 1870
John Bradley Storrs, Ceres, 1928
John Bradley Storrs, Ceres, 1928
Turkey, linen cover, 17th century
Turkey, linen cover, 17th century
Eastern Iran or Afghanistan, Incense burner in the form of a lion, 11th century
Eastern Iran or Afghanistan, Incense burner in the form of a lion, 11th century
Charles Ray, Silver, 2015
Charles Ray, Silver, 2015

And, of course, we exit through the gift shop! Yes, money was spent.

shop 1 shop 2

That concludes our whirlwind tour of the Art Institute of Chicago. Still to come: The Chicago Cultural Center, the Palmer House, and more!