
source How to Make the Most of an Art Gallery Visit
This is a friendly and useful guide of eight tips for visiting an art gallery, for anyone who is interested in attending an art gallery and wants to make the most of of their visit. These gallery visiting tips can be
used by people of all ages.
1. Do Not Be AfraidAn art gallery is not meant to be an intimidating place, event though it may seem that way from outside the door. An art gallery is a sales venue, and they welcome browsers, buyer, artists and art lovers.
2. Start in the CenterWhen you first walk in, your first tendency may be to start at the right and view the artworks in a counterclockwise manner. The best way to view artwork in an art gallery, especially one that is not filled with other people, is to stand in the middle of the room.
From the middle of the room, look around at each wall, glimpsing each piece. Next, go to the one piece that caught your attention. Walk straight over to it, even if it is the last piece of artwork in the gallery.
After that, you can follow along a wall, or turn around and find the next piece that catches your eye. The point of this is to make art gallery visits interesting and fulfilling. There is no rule that says you have to look at 20 paintings of a barn before you look at the one that really interests you.
3. No Need to TalkWhile you can feel free to discuss the art works you see with the gallery staff, or with a companion, it is not a must. Some people steer clear of art galleries because they think they will be quizzed on what they think of the work, or asked some complex art history or technique questions. It is simply not the case.
4. Attend the OpeningOne of the best times to visit an art gallery is during the art show opening. Not only will you be treated to beverages and snacks there will be other people there. The artist or artists are also usually in attendance, and will welcome any questions you might have.
5. Ask QuestionsIf you do have a question about a piece of artwork in a gallery, do not hesitate to ask the staff. They will be more than willing to answer your questions. Not only is it part of their job, it is also more fun for them to talk to you than it is to just sit there.
6. Do Not Get Too CloseThe Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Hewlett-Packard and YouTube today launched YouTube Play, an international contest to find the world’s most creative new video.
YouTube Play will accept user submissions from anywhere in the world until the deadline, July 31, 2010, 12:00 p.m PT. A jury of experts will then select up to 20 videos, which will be simultaneously presented on October 21, 2010 at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City, and throughout the Guggenheim network of museums in Venice, Bilbao and Berlin. The 200 videos that make it through the first round of screening will be available on the YouTube Play channel.
The main criterion for winning the contest is creativity. According to class='blippr-nobr'>YouTubeclass="blippr-nobr">YouTube, “submissions may include any form of creative video, including art, animation, motion graphics, narrative and non-narrative work, or entirely new art forms. YouTube Play hopes to attract innovative, original, and surprising videos from around the world, regardless of genre, technique, background, or budget. Participants can be art students or amateur video makers as well as creative professionals.”
Check out a short promo video below, and an introduction to the project by the Managing Director of Google Creative Lab Andy Berndt and Guggenheim’s Deputy Director and Chief Curator Nancy Spector.
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About YouTube Play
Anyone is invited to submit a video to YouTube Play, even video creators themselves, and the submission deadline is July 31.
The videos may consist of animation, motion graphics, narrative, non-narrative, or documentary work, music videos and even "entirely new art forms" that challenge the perception of what's possible to do with video, explains the YouTube blog post about this unique collaboration project.
Two hundred of the leading videos will be selected for further attention by an international jury of experts from the worlds of art, design, film and video. Twenty of those initial 200 videos will then be presented at the Guggenheim. Yes, that's right - at the Guggenheim itself. The YouTube videos will appear in the Guggenheim network of museums in New York, Bilbao, Venice and Berlin on October 21 and will be made available for the world to see on the youtube.com/play channel.
This isn't a contest per se, as the winning videos don't receive a cash prize or other sort of physical reward. But having a video dubbed "art" and being showcased internationally in one of the world's most famous art museums, is a reward in and of itself, most would agree.
This isn't the first time YouTube has proven itself the medium of choice for artists worldwide. Last year, the YouTube Symphony Orchestra, an online experiment in music, sought out musicians to participate in the world's first collaborative online orchestra where the endgame was a performance at Carnegie Hall.
YouTube: Internet Leads to Instant Success?
What's most interesting about this current art competition as well as the Online Orchestra is the way that it is able to surface undiscovered talents and allow them to achieve fame without all the requisite toiling and tolling for years in "starving artist" mode, as was once par for the course for those wanting to break into the art world. Instead, with YouTube, a handful of videos can lead to a lifetime of success. Just ask Justin Bieber. Or Soulja Boy. Or Esmee Denters. Or Journey's new singer Arenl Pineda, discovered a few years ago. Or FRED, the annoyingly overactive boy whose high-pitched voice befuddles parents but whose videos and associated kid-friendly merchandise have made the teen rich beyond belief.
But while the above are certainly high-profiled examples, let's be clear about one thing: When it comes to art and music, YouTube hasn't surfaced the next Leonardo or Monet, the next Beatles or Stones, the next Janis Joplin or Jimmy Hendrix. To date, the folks who have made their way up through YouTube are not necessarily, forgive me Bieber fans, going to make their mark in the annals of history as being among "the best of the best." In some cases they may be great... but are they the greatest? Really?
However, with this contest, that may change. For next-gen video artists, there's surely no better place than YouTube to flex your artistic muscles. It should be interesting to see what video creation wins this latest attempt to elevate YouTube to art form. The end result will likely be just that: art.