BahVideo.com
The Fruits of Diversity
The Fruits of Diversity | BahVideo.com
Watch The Fruits of Diversity

The Fruits of Diversity

0 of 5 Stars
In a panel that offers a bounty of visual and aural pleasures, a museum curator and two artists describe how their work “dissolves boundaries,” in the words of moderator Adele Naude Santos, often “leading to new frontiers.” When she joined Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts in 2001, Elliot Bostwick Davis faced the unique challenge of developing a new wing devoted to art of the Americas. This meant not just designing a space, but figuring out ways of presenting beloved, old masterpieces along with thousands of new works from ancient to modern times, for a new interpretation of American art. Stepping through a rich slide show, Davis recounts how she broke with Museum convention of grouping media together (Boston furniture, American silver), and created a space where visitors travel through time, from ground floor levels and first millennium artwork, to top floors and contemporary art from North, Central and South America. Davis aimed to demonstrate innovation from different periods, weaving together “strands of art” in a way that might capture the attention of a museum-goer, who typically “spends less than 30 seconds looking at any object.” Walter Hood credits the first generation of African-American landscape architects who had the “burden of representing their race,” for giving him “the freedom to improvise.” In a range of settings, Hood has set out to “reshape the old and familiar into something new.” In Macon, Georgia, for instance, in a neighborhood “polarized between blacks and whites,” Hood placed cotton bales in a parking lot with a clear view of a Daughters of the Confederacy obelisk. He helped restore a long-fallow Oakland, California museum, evoking the area’s vegetable cannery history by placing giant spinach tins in the lobby. Hood juxtaposed past and present, “creating a new aesthetic,” in a Pittsburgh hill district once the center of the African-American community but “wiped clean for a new hockey arena.” He created a series of rain gardens in the shado...
Channel: MIT World
Video Length: 0
Date Found: March 08, 2011
Category: Science
Date Produced: March 08, 2011
View Count: 0
Flag
Related Videos
Computing for Everyone | BahVideo.com
MIT World

Computing for Everyone

0 of 5 Stars
July 07, 2011
In three presentations that look back to digital-age milestones, and glimpse ahead to what may come next, speakers share some previously undisclosed stories, great enthusiasms, and a few concerns. Nicholas Negroponte tells a few “dirty secrets” about the start of the MIT Media Lab, including ...
Turing Award Winners Panel Discussion | BahVideo.com
MIT World

Turing Award Winners Panel Discussion

0 of 5 Stars
June 29, 2011
Winners of the A.M.Turing Award, the Nobel Prize of computing, describe their singular contributions to the field, and their works’ impact. They also find time to discuss the current and future state of computer science. Moderator Stephen Ward starts with 1990 prize winner Fernando Corbato, who ...
Design for Fun: What Makes a Game Good,  and a Good Game? | BahVideo.com
MIT World

Design for Fun: What Makes a Game Good, and a Good Game?

0 of 5 Stars
June 13, 2011
Drew Davidson likes to play with blocks in his sandbox, as he demonstrates in a show-and-tell to interactive media colleagues. In this case, the playground is an online game called Minecraft, a two-year-young internet sensation with millions of followers, developed single-handedly by a ...
Plays Well With Others: Leadership in Online Collaboration | BahVideo.com
MIT World

Plays Well With Others: Leadership in Online Collaboration

0 of 5 Stars
June 06, 2011
Amy Bruckman finds the accomplishments of such online collaborations as Wikipedia, Apache and Firefox “nothing less than astounding,” and is both eagerly seeking and hoping to foster the next creative group Internet sensation. In her lab’s empirical studies, Bruckman has dissected different ...
Technology: Do Kids Need More or Less? | BahVideo.com
MIT World

Technology: Do Kids Need More or Less?

0 of 5 Stars
June 06, 2011
The ultimate questions for this Sandbox 2011 panel, posed by moderator Alan Gershenfeld, are “Where is technology not working? When is technology not the answer?” That’s a bold agenda for a panel of children’s media creators and a roomful of other producers in the industry, from Sesame ...
: advertisement :
Featured
Content
Featuring websites that enhance the internet user’s experience.

Like
Like