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Watching the Walker

About a month ago the Walker Art Center announced the redesign of its Walker Channel. Initially launched in 2003 as a streaming venue for events related to the influential 
How Latitudes Become Forms: Art in A Global Age exhibition/initiative, the Walker Channel continues to feed live event streams while also accumulating the related video archive. It was one the first such event reference archives on a museum website and by now hosts over 200 videos of the Walker’s diverse programming - not just lectures, conversations, and gallery talks, but dance, music, and other performing arts.

Justin Heideman, who works on the Walker’s interactive and web-based projects, wrote a post announcing the improvements to the Walker Channel on his in-house blog “New Media Initiatives”. The visual design changes are subtle but are a big improvement in making this large and quickly growing archive more manageable - with a nice sense of hierarchy on the landing page, its own search, and a great browse page (by Featured, Popular, Recently added, and Schedule; Genre like film, music, deign, visual arts, etc; or Type like artist talk, lecture, performance, etc).

Justin outlines the various improvements most clearly in his post, and I don’t have to repeat his points here. His post is an admirable example of transparency in museum practice, discussing the strategy and process and sharing the details on resources and programming. The emphasis is on the technical improvements, highlighting the Walker’s new HD capabilities and conversion of its older videos to contemporary formats. It is a great reference for new media departments at other institutions, as is his blog in general.

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Although not necessarily part of the most recent redesign, some small gestures are worth noting as they make this channel work so well: Immediately below each video are the location, date, time, and length of the event recorded, its genre and type, as well as the people featured. This simple information is crucial reference material and tells you a lot of what you need to know - especially when the content spans as many disciplines and formats as the Walker’s does. The genre and type fields are also handy entry points to the browse page.

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Below this immediate reference material is a more detailed description with associated links, and tabs that display related media, allow sharing/embedding/downloading, user comments, and my favorite: a time-coded transcript that allows you to read the text and jump from there to any place in the video. The transcript goes hand-in-hand with the subtitles found in each new video, and is probably the greatest tool to make the Walker’s video material more available (by making the spoken word searchable) and more accessible.

 
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Some other large art museums - like MoMA and SFMOMA - have similar online spaces for their video/media output, although rarely specifically dedicated to live event streams. With its recent updates, the Walker Channel stays a few steps ahead of its peers thanks its commitment to high-quality production, consistent use of subtitles, published transcripts, and the clarity of its interface.

Filed under  //   Walker Art Center   media   video  

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Interview with Jeffrey Inscho: "being a gatekeeper is completely out of the question"

Despite a full-time staff of only 12, the Mattress Factory has been able to create an impressive online presence that includes an active blogTwitter account, the recently launched “Is This Art?” iPhone app and website, and more. One of the leaders behind these initiatives is Jeffrey Inscho, who answers questions about the Mattress Factory's iConfess project and makes important points about using new media tools to advance the organization's core mission, creating opportunities quickly, and establishing new methods to measure their success.The interview was conducted by email earlier this week. 


ETB: By way of introduction, can you tell us about your position at the Mattress Factory, how long have you been there, and what the scope of your responsibilities is?

JI: My official role at the museum is to handle media and public relations, but don’t let that fool you. As a small non-profit, all staff members at the Mattress Factory wear several hats. My main priority is to facilitate the telling of the museum’s story through both traditional channels like paid advertising and conventional PR, and non-traditional approaches like projects such as iConfess and our inclusion of QR codes in the galleries. I started working here in 2007, after almost a decade of being a fan of the museum.

ETB: I want to specifically ask about iConfess, a series of short videos posted on YouTube showing visitors to the Mattress Factory speaking alone (or with friends) before a video camera. The first clip in this series shows you introducing the program in December 2008. Was iConfess your idea, or where in the organization did it originate?

JI: The general idea for iConfess stemmed out of something the Brooklyn Museum did with their Black List exhibition. One thing Brooklyn does really well, and something we try to do well, is to create an open framework for sharing our technological experimentation in the context of a museum. Essentially, our goal here at the Mattress Factory is to create an open source environment for ideas. With the QR codes, for example, we blogged about our process and exposed the methods we employed so other organizations can pick up the ball and continue running with it. That’s kind of what happened with iConfess. We saw what Brooklyn was doing, and we remixed it with a Mattress Factory spin.

ETB: Do you know of any other institutions doing similar things? Did you look at external references besides the Brooklyn Museum?

JI: I’m not sure if other organizations are working on similar projects, but I hope they are. The more institutions push forward with new ways to engage community in an open environment, the bigger benefit for all involved.

ETB: How long did it take to move from the approved concept until installation/inauguration?

JI: It took us approximately one week to get it rolling. Maybe a week and a half. Definitely less than two.

ETB: Since then (December 2008), how many clips have been posted?

JI: Our visitors have posted nearly 500 videos. There is also one from our founding director, Barbara Luderowski, in there. Bonus points for anyone who finds that one.

ETB: Where in the building is the “recording booth”? Can you tell us how this is identified or what kind of signage or message you have at the booth to encourage participation?

JI: The Confessional, as we like to refer to it, is currently located directly off the elevator on the museum’s third floor. You can’t miss it. It’s been designed to include a big plexi-glass window so people are generally very curious and approach the structure without any convincing on our part. Once they’re close, they can see directly into the booth. We’ve placed the operating directions in close proximity, so if someone chooses to participate they have everything they need to complete the process.

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ETB: Tell us more about the process; what happens once a visitor decides to participate?

JI: The visitor operates the entire thing. We created some simple, icon-based directions that are easy for people to comprehend and follow. They record, preview, re-record if necessary and upload their own videos.

ETB: Does anyone review the recordings before they are published on YouTube?

JI: Videos are published instantly to the YouTube channel. I receive a notification via email that a video has been published, but there is no vetting or approval process. This project is inherently about relinquishing control of communication to our visitors, so our being a gatekeeper is completely out of the question. From the beginning, we’ve said that we’d only remove a video if it violated YouTube’s terms of service or the Mattress Factory’s mission. To date, out of the hundreds of videos uploaded, I’ve only had to remove two.

ETB: Some of the published content is very irreverent; does this concern anyone in the administration?

JI: No. What might be irreverent to us obviously meant something to the visitor at the time it was recorded. For each instance of an off-topic video, I can point to a relevant and on-point submission.

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ETB: Give us a little context: What was the overall objective for iConfess when you pitched this idea? Do you see it in the sense that Nina Simon writes about in  The Participatory Museum, that it can be a tool for visitors to become more engaged in the programmatic ideas?

JI: I think that in order to provide context about this particular project, I need to provide some context about the organization. The Mattress Factory is a research and development lab for artists that doubles as a museum of contemporary installation art. We’re much more concerned with creative process than we are with creative outcomes. We bring artists from all over the world to Pittsburgh where they live and work for a number of weeks in-residence creating new site-specific works. Our purpose as an organization is to help make the artists’ visions realities.

In that spirit, we try to undertake creative ways to engage our visitors and the online community. The only objective behind iConfess was to break down the traditional flow of information – to not only hear directly from our visitors, but also make that feedback public record. We continue to view it as an experiment and a learning tool. I think Nina is right on the money with her assessment.

ETB: Are the recordings seen or discussed by the director, curators, or other staff in order to integrate this feedback?

JI: Yes, but there is no formal organizational process in place for reviewing the videos.

ETB: Do you also make this material available for visitors in-house?

JI: Currently we don’t, but that’s not to say we never will. We just haven’t found the right interface. We learned from the MF SCREENtxt project that sometimes a publicly visible, on-site content stream can become a distraction for a large segment of visitors. With SCREENtxt, we displayed a real-time stream of visitor text messages and photos on a huge flat-screen television. All content was also viewable online, so there was this really interesting dialog occurring between people who were onsite with the art and people who were offsite looking in. Oftentimes, that content stream became the visitor’s focus, rather than the art. We try to avoid that at all costs, and are examining tactful ways to introduce iConfess content to visitors while they’re onsite.

But there’s also something to be said for the fact that visitors have no frame of reference or preconceptions of previously recorded videos when they participate in the project. I think this element of the experience creates some truly unique responses that would have never occurred had the visitor seen the way others had participated earlier.

ETB: iConfess has relatively few viewers on YouTube; what measures to you use to assess its success?

JI: This is a really great question and something I’ve been thinking a lot about lately. I think organizations make a huge mistake when they use the metric of numbers to evaluate the success of initiatives designed to grow relationships. Placing heavy weight on irrelevant numbers like Twitter followers or video views is the result of marketers using antiquated analytics to evaluate success within a new paradigm. From a traditional marketing point of view, success is based on the return of your investment – if you spend X dollars/effort on an initiative, you should get Y dollars/awareness/views/followers as a return, where Y is greater than X. I would argue that when it comes to relationship-building initiatives, the ratio of Y over X should be as close to the number 1 as possible. That means you’re each participating in the equation and growing a vibrant community.

Having said that, the iConfess channel has almost 5,000 page views and more than 11,000 video views, which really surprises all of us here at the museum.

ETB: Since its launch, have you made any key adjustments based on experience?

JI: Yes, we’ve moved the physical location of the Confessional to provide a more private experience. It was originally located in the museum lobby, where many people gather. It’s a space that gets quite crowded, so we moved it to the 3rd floor gallery. Having the booth in the galleries is definitely quieter and gives participants the space they need to speak freely.

ETB: How does iConfess fit into the Mattress Factory’s broader online strategy - do you see a relationship to the more recently launched “Is This Art?” iPhone app?

JI: Yeah, they’re kind of related in that they both rely on user-generated content. But other than that, not really. They’re both serving different objectives: iConfess is doing a great job at breaking down traditional communication structures, while “Is This Art?” is provoking an interesting discussion about the complex nature of art – what art is, where art can be found, what art can be, and why art is important.

ETB: Are there other new initiatives you have in the works that you can speak about?

JI: We’re in the very early stages of a digital archive & organizational history project that I think will blow some people’s minds. Other than that, the Mattress Factory is just really focused on making interesting art and producing amazing exhibitions.

 

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Great visitor quote: "It was definitely a waste of my time not coming here"

Filed under  //   Is This Art?   Mattress Factory   iConfess   media   video  

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Learning from Rem

There is a certain way museums publish their lectures online. This usually takes the form of a static video feed (2 alternating angles for museums with bigger budgets) showing the speaker on stage, with details of the slides inserted at more or less the right moments. Depending on the speaker’s skills this can be excruciating or palpable, and I am not sure how many of even the most dedicated fans will watch 45 minutes (or more) of this on a computer or iPod.

Some museum sites offer transcripts, a great benefit for those interested in browsing or studying the content for research purposes. See the CCA’s series of Mellon Lectures as a good example, where mp3 audio files are accompanied by downloadable illustrated transcripts (although the PDF files aren’t searchable on the site). As I've mentioned before, ArtBabble is doing a great service by annotating the videos and creating a searchable database, which saves you a lot of time if you are looking for specific references - but it doesn’t give you a workable text.
 
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I just came across the Lectures section on Rem Koolhaas’s website (via Abitare). Here is a different model that I haven’t seen commonly used on museum sites, although it could serve them well. The lectures are represented by a manageable selection of images followed by the transcript - no media. I like this because you can instantly see what each lecture is about, you can look at the reference images for as long as you like, and you can linger over the text (which can also be printed or saved). Published directly on the site, the text is also fully searchable.

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There are currently five lectures dating from 2002 through March 2009, four by Koolhaas and one by his partner Reinier de Graaf. The selection adresses broad topics such as “Sustainability: advancement vs. apocalypse” and “Lagos: infrastructure and improvisation”, as well as more specifically the firm’s work in Dubai and for the Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia.

Such a simple interface and format could very well serve museums that don't have the time or financial resources to capture, produce, and host audio/video content on their websites. The only challenge is to get the spearker's transcript...

Filed under  //   ArtBabble   CCA   Rem Koolhaas   architect website   lectures   media   museum website  

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Content vs. Interface, 1:0

Since its launch in November 2009, the Whitney Museum website, has been steadily adding great content in its Watch & Listen category. Of most interest are the exhibition-related videos, which give voice to the artists and provide excellent insight to their work. The videos are produced in a way that makes them worth watching if you saw the exhibition or not. Some are occasionally funny advance teasers like the series leading up to the opening of the 2010 Whitney Biennial; others are more serious, produced later to capture the artist reflecting on the work or installation, as in the small group for Roni Horn aka Roni Horn. (Although why these Roni Horn videos, for example, are found only under Watch & Listen and not on the dedicated exhibition page and remains a question.)
 
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Event-related video and audio files (here) are produced with less flair, but provide an interesting resource and there is already enough content to make a relevant reference archive. A great example is Richard Nonas speaking about Gordon Matta-Clark and the broader 1970s art scene in SoHo, New York (here).
 
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The fundamental critique of the site still stands (read original post here), and my assumption is that improvements to the interface design will be made, hopefully soon. At the same time it is worth noting that the Whitney team is very busy producing and pushing excellent content, and that the new site serves the Whitney well as a platform to publish this media.

While the Whitney RSS feed gives too many updates to static pages (Visiting Information, general Education pages, etc), it will also drop these worthwhile event and exhibition media uploads in your Inbox. I recommend adding the subscription, because you just don’t want to miss this:

Rashaad Newsome: Jasmine, Dawn, and Aaliyah, 2010

Filed under  //   media   video   whitney  

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Required Reading

A small selection of LACMA catalogues has been digitized and made available in a very nice online interface called the Reading Room.
 
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On line now is the first Reading Room selection entitled “Southern California Art of the 1960s and 1970s”, which includes ten exhibition catalogues of art from Southern California published between 1963 and 1981. They range from publications documenting one-person shows such as Edward Kienholz (59 pages) and Billy Al Bengston (69 pages, designed by Ed Ruscha) to the exhaustive A Report on the Art and Technology Program of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1967–1971 (391 pages) and the slight Late Fifties at the Ferus (7 pages).

Once selected, a new window opens to display the scanned book. The menu allows you to view, zoom, and “leaf through” the books in different ways, as well as search for content (results give you the pages on which the search term is found), share (via email, facebook, twitter, delicious, google) and “take it to go” (download the PDF). That’s right: you can download out-of-print catalogues you probably should have read but couldn’t find in your local library or used bookstore. Time to catch up.
 
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By making this material so easily available, the museum is serving itself and the reader. The Reading Room is a testament to the institution’s historical role and curatorial ambition (presumably future selections will also include more recent titles), taking full advantage of online tools to better disseminate LACMA’s vision. The benefits to the rest of us are obvious.

What more can I say; there is a new requirement for all museums: Copy the LACMA Reading Room.

Also see this related video with curator Stephanie Barron (who organized The Museum as Site: Sixteen Project the catalogue for which is also part of the Reading Room selection). The short, simple video adds a valuable sense of the catalogue’s physicality that is absent in the flat page scans.

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Filed under  //   LACMA   catalogues   media   museum website   video  

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Going to Indiana

Indianapolis is not exactly on the top of my list of places to visit for seeing art, and I suspect that I’m not the only one who would more likely book a trip to NYC. However, if you’re at the computer, as I am, in a place that is neither New York nor Indianapolis, I recommend a trip to the IMA’s new website over most NY museums’ sites. (The big exception here is the Brooklyn Museum, which is always a few steps ahead of the field in regards to online activity - more on this later.)

For quite a while now, the Indianapolis Museum of Art (IMA) has been doing what the Whitney Museum failed to realize in its December 2009 website redesign (see earlier post here). While the IMA could easily have been pigeonholed as a regional attraction with limited nation-wide relevance, a powerful online presence gives it a national and international role regardless of its physical location. The museum built something online that wasn’t possible in real space - despite a nice facility on a large campus. (I actually had a chance of seeing this in person when the IMA was one of the host institutions for the 2009 Museums and the Web conference, where I co-presented this paper on the Canadian Centre for Architecture's website redesign.)

The IMA has been a leader in museum transparency, and its website is a key tool for this. It details works sold and bought, energy used, financial statements, staff cuts, etc. Its New Media team has been among the leaders in pushing what museums can do online, and has also integrated this nicely throughout the institution. The Davis Lab is a great model for putting the online world back into the building itself, while founding ArtBabble is an excellent example of investing in new tools to go beyond regional limitations. Creating this platform, along with its growing network of institutional partners, allowed the IMA to offer its resources to a wide audience and therefore position itself in a way that it would be impossible with on-site activities alone.

I would have written positively about the IMA’s online activities a few months (even years) ago as well, but would have stopped short of endorsing its web interface. The homepage especially was maddening with its many unmoored boxes of mini-menus. My favorite thing about the new design is the very straightforward, top-of-screen menu that NEVER CHANGES wherever you are. Well, almost never changes. The otherwise genius Dashbord still has its 1990s interface, all videos are hosted on the "drawn" 1980s  ArtBabble interface, and the blog for some (probably technical?) reason also doesn’t have the menu although the page is otherwise integrated and there would be space. And the navigation menu would be worth writing about in itself, because it is like a little website. From (nearly) every page, it gives you the interactive calendar, access to collection search, directions based on your zip code, etc.

Among the highlights is the Calendar, a great dynamic tool that breaks down the museum’s many activities in a simple graphic timeline with text and images below; exhibitions are integrated but clearly distinguished from one-time events. The Collection Search is great but not perfect (see IMA blog entry here) The Magazine is found alongside the Blog under the Interact menu, and indeed it is there for you to browse.

One complaint: Too much space is given to boring images used for decoration. Why do museum websites insist on doing this? I admit to having been responsible for this myself, but that was nearly 10 years ago and by now there must be room for a new model. Especially on the homepage, this leads to a serious lack of hierarchies: a giant image of the building or garden followed by lots of homogenized information. On all other pages, it is also just wallpaper eating up the best screen room.

A question: Why does an art museum have, in third place, a menu for ART? Here, again, I miss some hierarchy. Tell us what this place is really about. The stream is nice in the middle of the homepage, but what about the art?

A comment: Seriously, ArtBabble is an amazing tool/resource with (currently) 22 international collaborators/contributors, and the IMA put that together. My highest compliments for that. The content is excellent, and the way videos are annotated and searchable raises the bar for everyone trying just to keep up posting their lectures on the web. The trouble is that all IMA videos are hosted on this very different interface, where users are dropped from the main site without warning. Regular ArtBabble users will understand what happened, but a casual visitor to the website looking to watch a video advertised on the homepage will either be confused about where the IMA went, or excited by the forward motion of browsing other media.

And a final compliment, among the others already noted above: I’m surprised I like the logo as much as I do, and it may have something to do with the relief at seeing the “Its My Art” tagline gone. Apparently this new design was already introduced in print material a while back, but is only now online. The logo cleverly lets you know right off the bat that Indianapolis is a place - in Indiana. This is especially good branding for people like me, who are just passing through online.

Filed under  //   ArtBabble   CCA   IMA   MW   media   museum website   online collections   video  

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