[accessibleimage] TV, art, theater, MFA
- From: Lisa Yayla <fnugg@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: accessibleimage@xxxxxxxxxxxxx, art_beyond_sight_learning_tools@xxxxxxxxxx, Access to Art Museums <artbeyondsightmuseums@xxxxxxxxxx>, Art Beyond Sight Educators List <art_beyond_sight_educators@xxxxxxxxxx>, art_beyond_sight_advocacy@xxxxxxxxxx, art_beyond_sight_theory_and_research@xxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Wed, 11 Apr 2007 13:30:22 +0200
Hi,
A few more links and articles. More television too. Documentary series
in UK, NEW SHOOTS. One, Sight Seeing Blind directed by Amar Latif.
Article about the MFA in Boston, winners of an art exhibition, and grant
to Theatre for the Blind
Regards,
LIsa
http://www.goupstate.com/article/20070318/NEWS/703180315/-1/LIFE
Art winners
Published March 18, 2007
Artists' Guild of Spartanburg recently announced the winners in its
juried youth art exhibition.
...Other honorable mentions were given to Victoria Plexico, Dorman High
School; Heather Stuart, Boiling Springs High School; Carole Garrison,
Dorman High School and Latarcia Roper, South Carolina School for the
Deaf and the Blind.
article
http://media.www.dailyfreepress.com/media/storage/paper87/news/2007/03/21/Spotlight/While.Art.Is.An.EyesOnly.Experience.For.Most.The.Mfa.Opens.Its.Doors.And.Invites-2784320.shtml
While art is an eyes-only experience for most, the MFA opens its doors
and invites the visually impaired to have a hands-on experience.
Posted: 3/21/07
Marjorie Thompson's violet-gloved hand hovered patiently over Giovanni
Pietro's Saint Peter Martyr. Her sight guide responsively steadied her
reach toward the Renaissance sculptor's figure of the apostle. He led
her hand across each fold and furrow of its gilded wooden cloak.
After a moment, he released Thompson's hand and allowed her to freely
explore the surface as he spoke to a small group at the Museum of Fine
Arts Boston.
Thompson's face tightened and her expression became inquisitive as her
hand traveled to the figure's foot.
"No . . . no he's kneeling. Look -- look at his foot! He's kneeling!"
She interjected with a discovery that contradicted the guide's statement
that the figure was upright. As she felt his sandal-clad toes touching
the ground in the relief sculpture, the guide came back for a closer
look and re-examined the set of notes he gripped.
Thompson is blind, but she can successfully stump the visually unimpaired.
A FEELING FOR FORM
Those with visual disabilities now have more options for satisfying
their desire for artistic enrichment. The MFA has opened its doors to
those who observe with their eyes shut, proving that sightless and
visionless are not necessarily synonymous.
"Twenty-five years ago, a visitor who was blind came in and said 'What
do you got for me?' and we said, 'What do you want to see?'" said Ruth
Kahn, the accessibility coordinator for the MFA.
"And we kind of just took it from there. We now cater to people with all
sorts of disabilities."
A Feeling for Form is a program that offers two or three exhibition
tours each month at the museum. While participants can now reach out and
touch everything from Mino da Fiesole's A Roman Emperor to Pier Jacopo
Alarai Bonacolsi's Bust of Cleopatra in the current Renaissance-themed
"Donatello to Giambologna" exhibit, which runs through July, Kahn noted
that the available options are limitless.
"This is only one of many," she said. "In the past we've led groups
through Egyptian exhibits, classical objects and Asian and African
collections."
The 15 tour participants were divided into groups of two or three on a
recent afternoon and assisted by sight guides and tour guides who led
them through each display.
"[The guides] wrote scripts, general information about the physical
aspect of the pieces," Kahn said, "What it looks like, general shapes,
techniques, materials."
"A Feeling for Form means that we're fulfilling our mission to open
doors to everyone," she continued. "Art is universal. The blind, deaf --
art is for everybody. We're thinking and hoping that they come back soon."
Kahn also emphasized the importance of selectivity to maintaining
intimacy on the tours.
"Only people with guides and gloves can get in," she said.
Phyllis Robbins, a guide for the exhibit, has a personal connection to
her job. After many years working with the blind at the MFA, she still
considers her profession exciting.
"When I have a person who is touching a piece of art, I can feel their
excitement-I feel it and sense it and see it on their face," she said.
When asked which piece draws the most attention, Robbins answered sincerely.
"All of the Madonna and Child pieces," she said. "They bring a response
like nothing else can -- a love that comes through, and everyone can
relate to that."
OPENING MINDS
One afternoon in early March, the participants and sight guides hailed
from the Carroll Center for the Blind in Newton, a private, nonprofit
rehabilitation center that serves the blind and visually impaired.
Participants were between 20 and 50 years old, and the severity of each
person's condition ranged from complete blindness to low vision,
according to spokeswoman Naomi Zabot. She noted that even one of the
staff members has totally lost his vision.
"They're all part of an independent living program," Zabot said. "It's
three months long and every two weeks or so, another person graduates.
Each is on his or her own schedule, and every time someone new comes,
the dynamic changes."
"We're just trying to teach people how to be independent," she
continued. "Simple things like how to cook, how to clean -- everything
that you and I can do is sometimes almost impossible for someone who's
just become blind."
The Carroll Center recently held an alumni spring dance, a Braille
literacy celebration and a five kilometer run, but Zabot said even with
available opportunities, trips outside the institution are often met
with reluctance, fear and frustration.
"People are in all different stages, and it's a big thing to get up and
go out," she said. "A few are excited, but a lot of people don't usually
take advantage of the opportunities -- they think it's just something
they have to do."
"I understand it's a process, and it can be intimidating, but you have
to ask yourself: Are you going to go out and experience life, or are you
just going to stop living?" she said.
"They look like they're enjoying it, though, so I'm really excited to
see if their opinions change."
Zabot attributed a revived field trip program to fellow Carroll Center
staff member and rehabilitation director Rabih Dow.
"He's great. He organizes a lot of things in the summertime when it
starts to get nice out. He's especially interested in cultural
opportunities," she said.
"I'm here to be independent," said Marjorie Thompson, a Carroll Center
student. "They like to take people out into the world, and I'm ready and
willing. We're living people -- we're humans as well."
THE MIND'S EYE
"Can you feel it? It's almost like a ridge, like a weave," guide Meghan
Melvin told student Sarah Dingelhoff, explaining the texture of the
leaves and grasses in Rest on the Flight into Egypt, a 17th century
sculpture beside Donatello's Madonna of the Clouds, one of the few
Plexiglas-protected pieces in the exhibition.
"I'm really able to feel what the sculpture is with my hands,"
Dingelhoff said.
"I'm so excited and it is a very interesting exhibit. It's like history
and art itself are coming together."
Across the room, guide Paul Dunslap led a group through the history of
the 16th century Bust of Aristotle in bronze and walked them through
Virgin Adoring the Child.
"See if you can feel the features -- the nose, the eyes, the forehead.
Can you feel the little toes?" he inquired. "It's quite three-dimensional."
"I'm just interested in the conservation of art," Carroll Center student
Joanne Eno said.
"The forensics -- I want to know the additive versus the subtractive.
The science of it all. I want to visualize it."
Eno, only recently blind, voiced her gratitude for the guides and their
effort.
"I don't know that I'd have the patience to do all of this," she said.
As student Carlos Monteiro, of the Cape Verde Islands off the coast of
west Africa, passed through the exhibit he said he felt liberated.
"I was so excited to hear about the program," he said. "It's great that
legally blind people can feel safe and that they can depend on things
like this to get out."
Nearing the end of the tour, Melvin and Dingelhoff approached Angel, a
15th century piece.
Dingelhoff's fingers explored the figure along its arm to an
outstretched hand.
"It's almost like he's reaching, like he's guiding you toward
something," Melvin said.
"Now feel the wings," she instructed. "Each feather is like a tiny
little eggshell, like a little piece of the whole. Work your way through
the texture -- all the curves and the lines."
Dingelhoff maneuvered her hand to the bulge behind the figure's arm. She
stopped and looked confused, and it was clear she knew the figure was
incomplete. The wing was broken.
"Maybe the angel fell from grace and got his wing broken," she said.
"But I guess that's only my interpretation. Everyone has their own."
excerpt
*Theatres Receive Grants for Hearing-Impaired*
http://www.backstage.com/bso/news_reviews/stage/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003566866
which will help pay for open captioning or sign-language interpretation.
No single grant exceeded $5,000.
The program, TAP-Plus, was started in 1999 and has given a 158 grants
totaling more than $330,000 to 68 organizations around the state.
Other theatres receiving the grants were the New York Shakespeare
Festival, Playwrights Horizons, Theatre by the Blind
excerpt
http://www.netribution.co.uk/2/content/view/1162/182/
NEW SHOOTS- Taking Disability in New Creative Directions
A new series of documentary films from Maverick Television is about to
air on Channel 4 that takes disability into new creative directions. The
show, New Shoots, airs at 8.25 on Sunday mornings, repeated at 5.40am
Saturdays, presenting 12 debut documentaries all coming from disabled
directors. The first run of the show begins on Sunday 8^th April. .....
Sightseeing Blind, the second offering in the series, must have been
pretty familiar territory for director Amar Latif who has the same
disability as one of his characters, Linda, a blind school dinner lady
from Bradford. She's guided on an art appreciation holiday around
Florence by Hashi, a Brixton nightclub bouncer. What begins as a clear
case of the blind leading the blind opens our eyes to the problems that
are central to the lives of people with this disability. Hashi seems
dismissive of some of Linda's concerns and rather brusquely feels she
needs to break away from dependency.
Strangely enough, it works and as Linda's confidence grows so does her
enjoyment of her art lovers holiday. Hashi finally realises his place is
to be Linda's eyes, not her prop and he gives a wonderful flowing
description of the renaissance painting "The Creation of Venus" with a
girl in the buff in the middle, with her long auburny-yellow hair
hanging down as her modesty, using it to cover her private parts. Not
Brian Sewell exactly, but true enough, never the less. A most enjoyable
film and I wish I was Linda's eyes, surrounded by such breathtaking
beauty and to discuss what classical Italian sculpture feels like, as
Hashi did. This kind of second sight revelation needs to be in prime
time, not a disability dawn ghetto. Airs April 15^th , 8.25am
Biography
http://www.amarlatif.com/
Amar is a director of documentary films, most recently for Channel 4 TV.
He was seen by millions on the BBC2 four-part TV series, “Beyond
Boundaries” (Series 1), a ground - breaking jungle endurance expedition
across Central America. The series was shown worldwide. This was a
gruelling 220 mile trek across the rugged interior of Nicaragua, from
the Atlantic to the Pacific coast. He and the group of fellow travellers
made history by taking a route that had never previously been
undertaken, and had to sleep in tents and hammocks in the open jungle.
Amar had to ford swollen rivers, cut through dense undergrowth, cross
waterfalls, climb an active volcano and navigate the second largest lake
in Latin America, terrain populated by crocodiles, anacondas and the
world’s only species of freshwater shark. There were strictly no
concessions made in the rigors of the expedition on the grounds of
disability. The aim was to challenge common preconceptions about
disability, aspirations and achievement. Amar sought to prove that
disabled people need not merely follow in the wake of the able-bodied,
but can in fact sometimes be trail-blazers!
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