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Please Touch the Art

Please Touch the Art

Please Touch the Art
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Please Touch the Art

Please Touch the Art is a multi-sensory exhibition aimed at creating an immersive artistic experience that engages all of the senses. Not only does Please Touch the Art challenge visitors to consider how they may engage with a work of art beyond seeing, it also challenges visual artists to consider how their work engages a diverse range of audience members.

There are 52 pieces of art in this exhibition. As  you navigate this exhibition, you are encouraged to take your time with each work of art. Many of the pieces tap into multiple senses including sight, touch, sound, and even smell! See how many senses you can engage with each piece. Also included in this exhibition is a humanities exhibit presenting a History of Blind Accessibility in the Arts. Please proceed up to the third floor after experiencing the artwork to experience a selection of artifacts and imagery related to over a century of innovation, adaptation, and inclusion.  

Please Touch the Art invites sighted and visually impaired visitors to go beyond looking at artwork and encourages them to use their sense of touch to experience each piece. The exhibit addresses issues about the nature of aesthetic appreciation and perception of art. It also provides an inclusive and accessible experience for all visitors with the use of braille and large print gallery guides, audio guides, tactile maps, and navigational tools (preview/download ahead of time via the links below).

A message from our Curator:

In  handling  these pieces, exhibit visitors are invited  to feel what the artists felt when creating.  Here we  are made  conscious of the  double meaning of feeling: both in terms of touch but also in terms of emotion. Much of the work is whimsical and playful, but many pieces elicit other emotions. They are meditative, mysterious,  even  mournful.  And  this direct interaction  releases other sensory qualities. The work chimes,  rattles,  purrs, emits  music and  poetry. This exhibit  disrupts  the typical temporality  of an art exhibit.  Supposedly  the eye can take  in an entire  image at  a glance, while  touch  requires a prolonged encounter. Visitors  to this exhibit  are encouraged to take their time, to take time with each piece to discover everything  it  has to offer." (Georgina Kleege, Please Touch the Art Juror and Curator)

Exhibiting Artists

Maryan Amaral, Paul Angiolillo, Zy Baer, Su Bailey, Lev Brown, Eddie Bruckner, Ava Chan, Melissa Chaney, Nancy Crasco, Julia Cseko, Jean Cummiskey, Linda Cundiff, Trisha Danforth, Rosalyn Driscoll, Ann Forbush, Bette Frank Leahy, Adric Giles, Kimberley Harding, Jennifer Justice, Cynthia Kennelly, Bob Kephart, Laura Klausmeyer, Michael Kolitsky, Cindy Lu, Elizabeth Martinez, Karen McCarthy, Aaron McPeake, Michael Moss, Chris Neiman, John Norton, Ponnapa Prakkamakul, Claudia Ravaschiere, Etta Rosen, Carolann Tebbetts, Rocky Tomascoff and Students from Perkins School for the Blind- Lower School, Sylvia Vander Sluis, Cathy Weaver Taylor, Meegan Williams, Annie Zeybekoglu

Exhibition Tools & Resources

We're offering the following tools and resources to enhance your Please Touch the Art exhibition experience:

• Large Print & Braille descriptive wall labels for every piece of art in the exhibition

• Large Print & Braille gallery guide books (View PDF version here)

• Tactile Maps of our building

• Audio Guides (mp3 players w/ headphones) -- A narrated tour of the exhibition!

Prefer to use your phone? CLICK HERE to stream all our audio tracks on your smartphone, tablet, or other device!

Exhibition Tour Sign-Up

We have a wonderful team of knowledgeable trained guides ready to lead group tours for sighted, blind, and low vision visitors. We'll be running tours with them all summer long! Please follow this link to view the full schedule of available tours and sign up for the one that works for you! Don't see a time or date that works for you? Please contact our Director of Exhibitions, Aneleise Ruggles at exhibits@mosesianarts.org to schedule an alternative time for you or a group. Limit 5 visitors per tour guide. 

*Please note, in order to participate in a guided tour, you must be registered. Guides are only on site when there is a registered tour on the calendar. 

Opening Reception & Panel Discussion

We had a wonderful time at the Please Touch the Art opening reception and panel discussion on June 6, 2019! In case you missed it, here's a video recording:

Moderator:

Georgina Kleege, Curator of Please Touch the Art & Professor of English and Disabilities Studies at UC Berkeley

Panelists:
Sarah Stewart - Art Education Teacher, Envision, Inc (a not-for-profit that seeks to improve the quality of life for individuals with vision loss  in Wichita, KS)

Ronit Minchom - Accessibility Coordinator, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Maryan Amaral - Please Touch the Art Artist and Founder and Director of Aero Inc (an integrated abilities dance company in Newton, MA)

Please Touch the Art is funded in part by Sasaki Foundation, Watertown Commission on Disability, and Mass Humanities, which receives support from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and is an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

About Mass Humanities:

Mass Humanities conducts and supports programs that use history, literature, philosophy, and the other humanities disciplines to enhance and improve civic life in Massachusetts. Massachusetts Foundation for Humanities and Public Policy, now simply known as Mass Humanities, was established in 1974 as the state-based affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), and is an independent programming and grant-making organization that receives support from the NEH and the Massachusetts Cultural Council as well as private sources.

Learn more: https://www.masshumanities.org

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About Sasaki Foundation:

The Sasaki Foundation is a 501(c)3 organization committed to empowering communities by tackling the issue of inequity in design. The Foundation works with communities, government, practitioners, and others to support research and programs that diversify the voices involved in discussing the built environment.

Learn more: https://www.sasakifoundation.org/

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May 23 - September 06, 2019

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