Student Spotlight: Sheena Crawley

Sheena Crawley, Studio Art and Economics '13

My name is Sheena Crawley and I am a double major in Studio Art and Economics.

I would have to say that my favorite artist is Pablo Picasso.  I feel like his art walks the line of abstract art even though he was one of the most important artists responsible for the cubism art movement.  I enjoy how I have to take time to analyze his artwork in order to appreciate and understand all of the elements that are working together.  I see his work as visually challenging and I like a challenge.

 My responsibilities at the Phillips Museum consist of maintaining the website, including setting up the website’s configuration, and adding all of the text and photographs.  I am also responsible for using social media outlets such as Facebook, Twitter, and Flickr to interact with our community outside of the museum.  Lastly, I help to promote and document the exhibitions and events to the community through making videos from exhibition receptions, adding photographs from the exhibitions to our social media outlets, and making all information from past exhibitions available on the website in an organized exhibition archive.  During my time here I have worked on the Outdoor Sculpture Map on Google Maps, archived all past exhibitions since the 2007-2008 school year on the website, created videos to recap receptions and gallery talks for exhibitions, and created web banners to advertise current ongoing exhibitions.  Now that I am leaving this position, I have also begun to write a Digital Media Manual to help the next incoming intern when they begin to work.

My favorite thing about this job is that I am always busy working on something.  I enjoy having multiple things to work on because I am able to take a break from one task and work on a different one.  I also like how some of my responsibilities are routine, but then I get to work on various projects, which makes things exciting.

What I find most challenging is editing information that has gone onto the website.  Often, there are small mistakes that are easily missed, particularly misspelled names and dates, so it is important to take your time in transferring information to the website and make sure you double check everything.

 This job has definitely given me technical skills in learning how to use InDesign and learning more about Photoshop.  I have learned that research before planning and organizing projects is helpful for the final outcome and that multitasking is an essential skill for any job.  This job has also taught me that the work each employee does is very important in developing the museum to its full potential and that my input and opinion is helpful even though I am just an intern.

I am most looking forward to being the new graphic design intern here at the museum.   I believe this opportunity is very important in developing skills and experience that I will need in the future.  I will accumulate great print pieces that I can add to a growing portfolio and I will finally get a real taste of what it is like to be a graphic designer.

 

Learning the Art of Connoisseurship

Historia Naturalis, hand-colored engraving, 1657

Each year, The Phillips Museum of Art collaborates with faculty to provide hands-on object based learning experiences to students across the curriculum.  When Professor Michael Clapper of the Art Department  approached the museum with an idea for a new take on object-based learning for his ART 249 History of Printmaking Class, Museum Director Eliza Reilly saw it as an opportunity to advance the idea of the museum as a “laboratory for learning.”  The students became active contributors to the museum, overseeing the purchase of new works for the collection that will be studied by future generations of students for many years to come.  The class was given a $1,000 budget to purchase prints of the students’ choosing to add to the museum’s permanent collection. The purchase project allowed students to apply their connoisseur skills to the real world, taught them how to make intelligent decisions when making purchases on the web, and inspired the next generation of art collectors proving that young collectors can start a substantive collection of quality historical and aesthetically interesting works of art on a modest budget.  The staff was thrilled when we saw their purchases and we are very excited to have these prints as part of our collection. The prints were on view as part of the class’ exhibition Studying Human Nature and the World: Prints of the Seventeenth Century.

Professor Clapper summarizes their purchases:

Jacques Callot, The Strappado, plate 10 of The Miseries and Misfortunes of War, etching, 1633.  This is the first work by this important printmaker to enter the college’s collection.  Callot is known for his technical innovations in etching and ambiguity and complexity of his portrayal of human nature. He invented new tools and techniques so that he was able to make etchings in the style of engravings. The refinement and grandeur of his style contrasts with his often farcical or tragic subject matter.  The Miseries and Misfortunes of War, a series of eighteen images that portrays the pageantry and the savagery of war, is his most renowned work. This image features the strappado, a torture device with which a person is suspended by their arms tied behind their back and then sometimes dropped and stopped short of the ground, causing intense pain an injury to the arms and shoulders.  The artistic and social import of this print turn on the contrast between this gruesome practice and military orderliness elegantly portrayed.  Bought over the web from Christopher Mendez, a London dealer in old master prints.

 

Matthaus Merian, Butterflies and Moths, from Historia Naturalis, hand-colored engraving, 1657. This is a fine example of a natural history print. Since its invention, printmaking had been used as a means of making exactly repeatable images for purposes of scientific cataloguing. Publications such as the one from which this page comes organized and transmitted knowledge about the natural world. Natural history prints are now appreciated primarily for their decorative effect, but they are historically important as documents of an attempt at orderly, comprehensive understanding of the world. The fact that such works are as much science as art makes them under-represented in many art collections, including ours, while the scarcity and high value of the entire volumes from which such images are taken makes them rare even in special collections libraries and liable to be disassembled and sold as separate leaves. Bought through EBay from Daniel Good, a major UK rare book dealer.

 

View of the southern Italian city of Tricarico, from Georg Braun and Franz Hogenberg, Civitates Orbis Terrarum, volume 6, engraving, 1617. This engraving comes from a six-volume city atlas that was a landmark publication in that its city views portray the actual features of particular cities, rather than fantasies or generic images. The first volume first appeared in 1572, shortly after the 1570 publication of Abraham Ortelius’s Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, the first true atlas, for which Hogenberg had engraved the maps. This engraving comes from the sixth volume of the Civitates, first published in Latin in 1617. In addition to their technical and aesthetic merits, early city views like this demonstrate a new commitment to understanding the world through accurate, specific topographical representations. Bought on EBay.