Friday, January 18, 2013

Internship Update - Week 2

My internship is two days a week (Mondays and Wednesdays). On Mondays we are in the warehouse and on Wednesday we're at the arts center getting down to business.

This past Monday was my first day at the warehouse and now that I've done it for a whole day I think I can be better prepared for this next monday. What we're doing there is assigning each item an accession number, so that everything is cataloged and can be easily found and put in the right place. With the Ray Yoshida collection, everything is organized in tableaus, which is how Ray had his house set up. He would go to the Maxwell St. Market in Chicago and buy often overlooked items and give them new life in his house. He had a massive collection and would rotate his items, to keep his walls looking interesting. 

Those pictures to the left and right are good examples of Ray Yoshida's tableaus. This picture is from an exhibit of Ray Yoshida and his influences. 

I bet you're all saying "What was IN the tableaus, Jenny? I WANT TO KNOW!" Well, there are masks and ships and furniture and little ceramics people and a little under life-size baby statue and about a million other things that range from silent butlers to a set of wrenches.

One of the most interesting things I came across while checking the first tableaus was some 2-D work given to Ray by Jim Nutt, another Chicago Imagist. On the back, Jim had written notes to Ray. I love that part of art. So many times you'll only see one side of the picture and in this case it's literal. On the back side, there is a real person. Also, Jim Nutt seems hilarious to me. I can't exactly remember what it said, but it was something like "This is for Ray, because he had it cumming to him" and then there was a little picture of a splat. 

Ice cream manwich, perhaps? This is an example of a Jim Nutt piece.


On Wednesday, I worked on doing a little research on starting a museum blog. Starting this blog was fairly simple, but starting a blog for an institution is turning out to be quite a process. and, as with most things with museums, just because it seems like a good idea doesn't mean it's going anywhere fast. There's so much to consider when introducing social media to a business. What should you post, what shouldn't you post and with museums you also have to consider copyrights. I'm interested to see if the blog gets up and going or not. I like doing the research for the potential posts though! 

Next weekend, I'm going down to Chicago and hopefully will be visiting the Roger Brown Memorial Collection (another friend of Ray Yoshida) and I'll definitely be visiting Intuit, the museum where they have a replica of Henry Darger's apartment. I'm so excited! 

I'm planning a few posts this week, one about Mary Nohl and maybe one about John Grade; so be sure to check back!

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