Tuesday, December 20, 2005
Here's another podcast from yesterday's trip to MoMA -- about Cezanne's Still Life with Apples (1895-8). And like with the Malevich White on White, we ask what it is about Cezanne's paintings that make them great -- and that make his work such a critical linchpin between the nineteenth and the twentieth century.
Right click here to download the mp3.
Monday, December 19, 2005
Branching out to MoMA - Malevich Podcast
Kazimir Malevich, Suprematist Composition: White on White (1918)
Today, we continued creating podcasts / audioguides -- this time for works of art in the Museum of Modern Art. We tried hard to stay away from lecturing, which isn't always easy. MoMA encourages visitors to create their own audioguides and they post their audioguides on their website. It is interesting to compare our podcast (in the form of a conversation) with MoMA's approach.
Right click here to download the mp3 or use the player below to listen.
Thursday, December 15, 2005
A Roman copy of an ancient Greek Sculpture at the Met
Here is our podcast of this Roman (marble) copy of an ancient Greek (bronze) sculpture by the famous artist Polykleitos. The original bronze was sculpted during the classical period. Polykleitos was interested in a "canon" of proportions that would dictate how the human body should be represented at its most perfect and harmonious. This harmony was found both in the position of the figure (in perfectly balanced contrapposto) and in the harmonious relationship of the parts to the whole. This is a good example of the ancient Greek interest, during the classical period, in the idealized, young, athletic male body.
Statue of Diadoumenos (youth tying a fillet around his head), ca. 69–96 A.D.
Right click here to download the MP3, or listen using the player below.
Wednesday, December 07, 2005
Our SUNY TLT Presentation in Summary
We presented a paper this morning titled “Pod and Video-Casting: New Strategies for Teaching with Images” at the annual SUNY TLT conference. In it we traced our interest in pod and vodcasting and began to explore related pedogogic implications. Below are a few of the issues that we raised:
We are intrigued by podcasts for several reasons:
1. We want to use a technology that is ubiquitous in our students’ lives
2. We are interested in the mobility afforded by this technology -- the idea of the "classroom without walls"
3. We suspect it may help solve problems that occur when teaching with images online -- and one problem in particular -- the way we ask students to divide their visual attention between text and image
Michel Foucault articulated part of the problem when discussing Rene Magrette’s painting The Treachary of Images,
"Either the text is ruled by the image… or the image is ruled by the text… What happens to the text of the book is that it becomes merely a commentary on the image… and what happens to the picture is that it is dominated by the text… What is essential is that [textual] signs and visual representations are never given at once. An order always hierarchizes them…."
The image is of a pipe, but the text tells us that this is not in fact an actual pipe. And the text wins out -- this is not a pipe, it is only a representation of a pipe. The text is the authority, it has a certainty that the image – even in all its clarity and precision -- lacks. And this is a certainty that we are reassured by, never mind that the text is no less a representation than the image. Since Moses (laws in hand) confronted his brother Aaron (golden calf not quite in hand), the immutability of text has held far more authority than the image with its ambiguous meanings and myrid interpretations.
From "stepinrazor" at Flickr
Never is this more true than in a museum where viewers can spend more time looking at a wall label than at the object that they are presumably there to see. In museums, in textbooks, in any environment where text and image coexist, does the text overwhelm the process of seeing? Do we stop seeing when we read? Do we only see what we have read about? Do we look only for what we’ve read about?
Too often we don’t trust our emotional or aesthetic responses. Perhaps it is the very ambiguity of the visual image that is threatening, and the authoritative text of the curator removes that ambiguity. It tells us, we incorrectly think, what the painting means. So given this hierarchy, how can we help students to trust their own responses to a work of art? How can we avoid situations where students rely on the “authority” of the text written by the curator or instructor and don’t trust their own experience or what they see and feel before the work of art. How can we help them to trust their own reading?
David Weinberger’s essay "Knowledge in Transition” posits that,
Educators…face a different set of challenges….Their authority is in question since we've learned that we can learn more from talking with others than by listening to any single expert. But, more important, if knowledge emerges from conversations, then just about all our educational focus ought to be on learning how to be good conversationalists: how to listen, how to kindle a conversation, how to evaluate claims, how to speak in a voice worth hearing... and, most of all, how to share a world in which knowledge is plural, for that's what conversation – and knowledge – is about.
As educators we know that we can do this to some extent by fostering a safe environment for discussion. But perhaps more importantly, what we need to do, as Weinberger suggests, is to teach students how to “be good conversationalists” since the internet has further eroded the notion that any single source can provide definitive information. Modeling conversations is precisely what we do in our podcasts and in our camtasia videos.
In online art history courses that rely only on text and image, we ask students to awkwardly divide their visual attention between text and image. When students must read our lectures about an image, how can they then also closely examine that image? As Foucault noted, pairing text and image can discount the image, students read about the image and only then look to the image for what the text has already explained – the text remains the authority and the image is not explored in its own right. Re-introducing voice in our podcasts allows word and image to exist simultaneously in our students’ awareness without diminishing either by reclaiming aspects of the conversation in the traditional classroom environment that allows conversation to overlay the image. We hear and see simultaneously. Our eyes rest on the image while we listen to each other.
So, what kinds of audio do we already have available to us that explore works of art? Well, we have the audio-guides produced by museums, too often narrated by terribly pretentious curators or museum directors (inevitably men) who read from a script and in a sense simply produce a spoken text. We were worried that the overbearing authority of the curatorial voice would undermine our students’ tentative trust in their own emerging interpretive skills.
We were inspired to do our own audioguides by both Artmobs’ alternative audioguides of works of art in the Museum of Modern Art created by a professor from Marymount College with help from his students, and by the work of the contemporary artist Janet Cardiff, who has for several years been creating art that are audio files that her audience listen to as they move through the streets of London, New York or the halls of The Museum of Modern Art.
In sharp distinction to the typical museum audioguide, we conceived of our podcasts and our Camtasia videos as unscripted spontaneous conversations that take place in front of a work of art and foster a sense of exploration and discovery. We worked hard to overcome our natural tendency – as instructors – to become the authority. We did this by exploring images that we were somewhat unfamiliar with and by raising questions that were not part of the standard art historical discourse. Our aim is to empower our students to take risks, ask questions, and to trust both their eyes and their own innate analytic abilities. What we emphatically did not want to do was to create canned lectures for our students.
Responses from our online students have been overwhelmingly positive. Not only are they pleased to learn what our voices sound like, but they are also grateful to briefly leave the largely text-based environment of the online class.
Tuesday, December 06, 2005
New smARThistory website and Edublog award shortlist
While this blog may hopefully have some value in its natural additive or sequential form, it may also be useful to offer a more static companion website. The smARThistory website includes a floorplan of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and locates the works of art that are the subjects of our podcasts. Our intent is that these podcasts are uploaded to mp3 players and then played in front of the original object. This takes advantage of the mobility of this technology and truly breaks down the walls of the classroom, but to what advantage? Surely, primary to the technology that we all take for granted is the infinite reproducibility of text and image. Is it perversely archaic to return to the singular historical object? Or, is there value to be had from marrying the two?
Just prior to the opening address of the annual SUNY TLT conference, Michael Feldstein, Assistant Director of Blended Learning for SUNY Learning Environments and author of the superb blog, E-literate, leaned over and said, “congratulations!” I was, as is often the case, confused. Michael kindly explained that this blog has made the Edublog 2005 Awards Short List for blog for best Audio and/or Visual Blog. Yikes! Please feel free to vote for us!
We will post the outline of our talk tomorrow on pod- and vod-casting just as soon as it is written.
Friday, December 02, 2005
Holbein vodcast
Here is our second attempt to create a vodcast, in this case a conversation about a work of art, using Camtasia.
Click here to listen and watch.