Top Banner
Wandering Ruins Becky Manson Assistant Curator, Digital Learning, Tate We Are Museums 5 th June 2014, State Ethnographic Museum, Warsaw
38

"Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

May 11, 2015

Download

Technology

WeAreMuseums

Becky Manson was presented at We Are Museums 2014 the most recent Art Maps workshop, Wandering Ruins. Taking the recent Ruin Lust exhibition at Tate Britain as a starting point, participants used Tate’s online collection, locative media and a variety of digital content to create online trail experiences, via mobile devices. This collaborative project encourages both authors and users to explore the connections between landscape, landmark, art and a sense of place, as well as interrogating the what technology might add to and detract from this process.
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

Wandering Ruins

Becky Manson

Assistant Curator, Digital Learning, Tate

We Are Museums 5th June 2014, State Ethnographic Museum, Warsaw

Page 2: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 3: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 4: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 5: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 6: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 7: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 8: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 9: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

Joseph Mallord William Turner Norham Castle, Sunrise, c. 1845

Page 10: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 11: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

Anish Kapoor As If To Celebrate, I Discovered A Mountain Blooming With Red Flowers, 1981 © Anish Kapoor

Page 12: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

‘I think the red colour remind of red chill famous place named Patan, the city of Ahemdabad where Saris are made’

-‐ Art Maps participant

Page 13: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 14: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

Banner credit: Louise and Jane Wilson Azeville, 2006 © Jane and Louise Wilson, courtesy 303 Gallery, New York

Page 15: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

Tacita Dean The Wreck of Worthing Pier, 2001 © Tacita Dean, courtesy Frith Street Gallery, London and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York/Paris

Page 16: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

Patrick Caulfield Ruins, 1964 © The Estate of Patrick Caulfield

Page 17: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 18: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 19: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 20: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 21: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 22: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 23: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

Rachel Whiteread B: Clapton Park Estate, Madeville Street, London E5; Bakewell Court; Repton Court; March 1995, 1996 © Rachel Whiteread

Page 24: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 25: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 26: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)
Page 27: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

How did mobile technologies facilitate connections to new or familiar locations?

Page 28: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“it’s amazing how much you don’t notice about your own environment”

Page 29: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“I was able to explore the history of a certain area… different historical facts… and issues around gentrification and regeneration”

Page 30: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“to explore what’s not necessarily visible”

Page 31: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“peeling away the layers of the different spaces and showing… things that had already happened”

Page 32: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“We ended up having a fantastic conversation with a person who had… grown up in, or been part of that community since 1976. [She] was able to tell us so much, being [part of the ] church, at the heart of the community… and what she had seen across the years”

Page 33: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

What did mobile technologies add to participants’ understanding of the collection?

Page 34: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“the ideas around art and the concepts that artists create don’t come out of nowhere… They’re created in society and they’re influenced by things that happen in society”

Page 35: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“within the walls of the Tate, every artwork is compared to another artwork, whereas there is this other influence, which is the world outside of art”

Page 36: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“putting it in the environment and creating [an] opportunity where people can explore the artwork… in a different context that’s particular to them”

Page 37: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

“You can actually get something which is part of an institution and… use your imagination, your creativity and your ideas to make something [else] out of that. It’s like taking an archive and using it to create something new. And I think that’s the future really. Get it out of the gallery, put it out there and make people interact with it”

-‐ Wandering Ruins participant

Page 38: "Wandering Ruins" by Becky Manson from Tate (UK)

artmaps.tate.org.uk/artmaps/tate

wanderanywhere.com

tate.org.uk

[email protected]