El Tercer Brazo

 
Filed under

artist website

 

Miranda And You And Everyone We Know

Etb-10_july-home
In the spirit of looking elsewhere for interesting ideas to apply in a museum context (see Learning from Rem), I went back to another favorite. Let an artist conceive her own website, and you will likely have an excellent example of something with a clear character. Miranda July uses just about any medium in her art, and her websites are a tightly integrated component.

Etb-10_july-perf


Miranda July captures what I miss in most museum websites - a sense of personality. Perhaps the term “institutional character” is an oxymoron, but I don’t think so. While mission statements (and grant applications) attempt to clearly distinguish a museum from its sister institutions, the websites often don’t. Most museums overemphasize the website’s technical role of providing access to information. What needs more attention is how - with what voice - that information is delivered. In the coming days I will be publishing a two-part interview with the Indianapolis Museum of Art's Director Maxwell Anderson and his former Director of New Media Daniel Incandela. Both have strong feelings about this topic, and Anderson makes a clear case for the need of the museum and its online initiatives to reflect specific values.

Etb-10_july-noone1
Obviously museums can’t write their websites on kitchen appliances (as July did for No One Belongs Here More Than You), but there is a lot that can be done to give the website a voice that will speak to - and connect with - its visitors. A startling example is this 2006 Webby Nominee, which after several years remains lodged in my memory because of the choice its opening screen forces on visitors.
Etb-10_segregation

Filed under  //   Miranda July   artist website  

Comments [0]