Jan. 5th, 2011

kestrell: (Default)
Kes: As this article points out, Western culture tends to think of all art as visual, even that which specifically seems to invite touch, such as sculpture. I'm intrigued by the idea that blind people should come to an artwork with no background information though--I'm not sure I get the justification for this.

A feel for art
Natasha Wong
Friday, December 31, 2010
http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=36&art_id=106577&sid=30777379&con_type=1&d_str=20101231

Auguste Rodin, the French genius in modeling human forms, often referred to his sculptures as une affaire de creux et de bosses - a case of hollows and bumps.

Despite the fact that art, especially sculpture, has a tactile quality, museum displays often come with a huge Do Not Touch sign.

But not at the Touching Art: Louvres Sculptures in Movement exhibition now on an Asian tour to Hong Kong. You are encouraged to appreciate art by touching and running your hands around it.

Endorsed by the Tactile Gallery at the Louvre Museum in Paris, the exhibition is on view at the Hong Kong Museum of Art.

The Tactile Gallery, opened in 1995, is targeted mainly at the blind and visually impaired. It is the only space in the Louvre where visitors can touch artworks with their hands with no stop signs, no guards or alarms.
continued below cut )
kestrell: (Default)
Posted to the Art_beyond_sight_advocacy list
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/art_beyond_sight_advocacy_nfbnet.org

Audio Description Course - Spring 2011
Study Audio Description at Montgomery College this Spring!

Audio Description is a literary art form. It's a type of poetry--a haiku. It provides a verbal version of the visual--the visual is made verbal, and aural, and oral. Using words that are succinct, vivid, and imaginative, describers convey the visual image from television and film that is not fully accessible to a significant segment of the population * and not fully realized by the rest of us--the rest of us, sighted folks who see but who may not observe.

Audio describers provide services in various multi-media settings, including theater, television, video, film, exhibits, museums, and educational venues--but also at circuses, rodeos, ice skating exhibitions and myriad sports events.
Instructor Joel Snyder, President of Audio Description Associates, LLC www.audiodescribe.com jsnyder@audiodescribe.com
Course details at http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?llr=tswsbvdab&v=001QYDB14zrJ4_6HSSmGIJGLP5z26zPXBgpGadKzt9LHcxZON8cK4nfZG06eY16p1msigIH1VyXlXqWLxt3BEFukG-mdL7AsPHpgvosha94xZcENi3TdLoGmg%3D%3D
kestrell: (Default)
I was just Googgling about Tom Stoppard's "Arcadia" and found an ad for "Arcadia" to begin on Broadway in February. I'm unlikely to make it but thought others might appreciate a heads up.

Broadway Previews Begin 2/25/2011. Buy Your Tickets Now!
www.arcadiabroadway.com

February 2024

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