Current:Home > StocksA new kids' space at an art museum is actually about science-LoTradeCoin
A new kids' space at an art museum is actually about science
lotradecoin token listing requirements View Date:2024-12-25 12:31:10
Education is part of the mission of most art museums. Programs usually help kids learn things like how to look at a painting, how to draw or the biographies of certain artists.
But the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is trying something new: a 3,500-foot science play space that helps children understand the materials used to make art.
At first glance, science education might not seem like a natural fit for an arts institution. But Heidi Holder, chair of the Met's education department, has overseen the project and begs to differ.
"The Met is a science institution," she said recently. "We have three big parts of ourselves: our scientific research, our conservation and our art."
Not only is science used to help conserve precious objects, she said, but it's also used to better understand the art itself. "Say an art object comes in. You can't just look at it and say it's made of clay. It kind of looks that way. But it was made 500 years ago. You don't know what they mix to make the substance. "
Because science is so important to the contemporary understanding of art, the museum decided to turn its former library space on the ground floor — most often used for the Met's beloved story time — into the 81st Street Studio, a place where children could interact with basic materials. Currently, the studio is focused on wood.
Panels near the entrance display wood in many forms — including tree trunk slices, corrugated cardboard, shingles and a carved wooden screen.
"You can touch wood [here]," she said. "You can go right up to it and kiss it."
This is what most differentiates the studio from the museum upstairs: children ages 3 to 11 are encouraged to interact with objects.
Adam Weintraub, one of the principal architects of KOKO Architecture + Design, which created the space, said, "It's important that the kids could touch things, could smell things, could listen to things that we have."
Experts at Yamaha, he said, developed original instruments — their own takes on a marimba, on a kind of calliope, on castanets. Pillows on an artificially grassy hill are stuffed with scents like lemon and pine. There's the cozy circle underneath a feature he called the "komorebi tree" with dappled light that changes according to the time of day and eventually the seasons.
Then, there is the advanced technology used to encourage children to play with the physics of light. When a child places an image from the Met's collection on a special screen, it's projected onto the wall as a 2-dimensional figure. But some twisting of dials makes the light shift and the shadows move, creating a 3D effect.
Another station makes instant copies of a child's drawings and projects them onto a table, where they can be flipped or the colors can be changed.
The 81st Street Studio is free to all and doesn't require a reservation; children and their grownups are welcome to drop in.
The kids who visit, of course, don't know that they're learning about light or the physical properties of wood. They think they're playing. But that's fine, the museum says.
"We are hoping that it will occur to some children to ask us questions about what they're playing with," said Patty Brown, a volunteer. "We are not going to be didactic about it or heavy-handed because they will never want to come back. But there will be the odd child who will ask questions."
And if they do, she said, she and the other volunteers will help the family connect what they're touching in the play space with what they see upstairs in the larger museum — giving them a hands-on understanding of art.
Audio and digital story edited by Ciera Crawford.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Trump taps immigration hard
- Climate activists spray Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate with orange paint
- Dominican Republic closes all borders with Haiti as tensions rise in a dispute over a canal
- Alabama Barker Shares What She Looks Forward to Most About Gaining a New Sibling
- Biden commutes roughly 1,500 sentences and pardons 39 people in biggest single
- 2 Arkansas school districts deny state claims that they broke a law on teaching race and sexuality
- A Supreme Court redistricting ruling gave hope to Black voters. They’re still waiting for new maps
- Who will Alabama start at quarterback against Mississippi? Nick Saban to decide this week
- Sabrina Carpenter reveals her own hits made it on her personal Spotify Wrapped list
- Top EU official heads to an Italian island struggling with migrant influx as Italy toughens stance
Ranking
- Shanghai bear cub Junjun becomes breakout star
- College football Week 3 highlights: Catch up on all the scores, best plays and biggest wins
- Pet shelters fill up in hard times. Student loan payments could leave many with hard choices.
- Lee makes landfall in Canada with impacts felt in New England: Power outages, downed trees
- 'Secret Level' creators talk new video game Amazon series, that Pac
- Los Angeles sheriff's deputy shot in patrol vehicle, office says
- 1-year-old boy dead, 3 other children hospitalized after incident at Bronx day care
- Minnesota man acquitted of killing 3 people, wounding 2 others in case that turned alibi defense
Recommendation
-
She grew up in an Arizona church community. Now, she claims it was actually a religious cult.
-
McBride and Collier lead Lynx over Sun 82-75 to force a deciding Game 3 in WNBA playoffs
-
A Mississippi jury rules officers justified in fatal 2017 shooting after police went to wrong house
-
'We can’t let this dude win': What Deion Sanders said after Colorado's comeback win
-
Atmospheric river and potential bomb cyclone bring chaotic winter weather to East Coast
-
Lee makes landfall in Canada with impacts felt in New England: Power outages, downed trees
-
Anchorage scrambles to find enough housing for the homeless before the Alaska winter sets in
-
Ford and GM announce hundreds of temporary layoffs with no compensation due to strike