[Artbeyondsightmuseums] FW: {Spam?} Tactile Art Center,

Sushil Oswal oswal at rainierconnect.com
Sun Jun 26 20:32:25 UTC 2016


Hi Lisa, in the message you mention that the 18th-tactile experience of art was common in the Century.

If I wanted to quote this fact, do you have a scholarly reference  of your own or from another scholar?

Thanks!
Sushil Oswal
  

-----Original Message-----
From: Artbeyondsightmuseums [mailto:artbeyondsightmuseums-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Lisa Yayla via Artbeyondsightmuseums
Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2016 5:00 AM
To: accessibleimage at freelists.org; art_beyond_sight_learning_tools at nfbnet.org; Access to Art Museums; Art Beyond Sight Advocacy; Art Beyond Sight Educators List; Art Beyond Sight Theory and Research
Cc: Lisa Yayla
Subject: [Artbeyondsightmuseums] {Spam?} Tactile Art Center,

Hi,

Sending links to an exhibition about two artist and tactile art plus, 
video about it - excerpt from the explanation with the vimeo video which 
I thought was very interesting.

"Prior to the mid-1800s, tactile interaction was commonplace for 
visitors experiencing collections of art, but as museums of art evolved, 
rules forbidding touch became the norm. In some cases, these were to 
protect artwork that truly was not meant to be touched, but in large 
part these norms had nothing do with preservation and everything to do 
with nineteenth century politics of gender, race and class control."

This new gallery show encourages you to get hands-on with art

When we think of going to an art gallery 
<https://www.timeout.com/los-angeles/art/best-art-galleries-in-los-angeles>, 
we tend to expect to be walking around, looking at pieces with our eyes 
and considering them from a few feet back. With a show opening on June 
24, one West Hollywood gallery is challenging those preconceptions.

/Please Touch the Art/ at Cantor Fine Art 
<https://www.timeout.com/los-angeles/art/cantor-fine-art> features a 
group of artists’ works which all share one thing in common: an 
invitation to get a little hands-on. They call the idea "tactile art."

As the gallery’s co-owner,  Sam Cantor, told LAist 
<http://laist.com/2016/06/16/please_touch_the_art.php>,  inspiration for 
the show grew out of a story he was told by Laguna Beach artist Andrew 
Myers. Myers specializes in crafting elaborate mosaic-like pieces from 
screws which he arranged at various heights and then painted, creating 
portraits with depth and texture evocative of topographical maps—and one 
day, a blind stranger walked in and put his hands on the art, almost as 
if it were printed in Braille. This lead Myers and Cantor to find the 
man, who turned out to be a furniture maker and artist in his own right, 
George Wurtzel, about whom Cantor made a short documentary, which you 
can see below. The experience left Cantor fascinated with the idea of 
tactile art and using the sense of touch in art and story-telling.

Next up for Wurtzel and the tactile art movement is a project to convert 
a former grape crushing barn in Napa into the first Tactile Art Center, 
a space fully dedicated to encouraging the blind to create, observe and 
sell art.

https://www.timeout.com/los-angeles/blog/this-new-gallery-show-encourages-you-to-get-hands-on-with-art-061716

Please Touch the Art video


https://vimeo.com/166149898


http://www.gmwurtzel.com/

Please Touch All Of The Art At This West Hollywood Show

http://laist.com/2016/06/16/please_touch_the_art.php

http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/life/features/a-rare-sight-app-allows-the-blind-to-see-photos-34631371.html

http://www.ozarksfirst.com/news/facebooks-new-feature-for-visually-impaired-users

All in the Family: Artist Larry Walker Debuts at His Daughter’s Gallery

"The earliest works in the exhibition are from his 1960s Children of 
Society Series. The artist’s Remnant Series is made up of acrylic 
abstracts with collaged remnants of paper. When Larry started painting 
again in Atlanta, he continued the Figurative Series he had started in 
California. That work evolved into the Blindfold Series, a response to 
learning he had glaucoma.

“Contemplating the notion that I might go blind at some point in time, I 
started doing these figures that had blindfolds on. In another series, I 
did figures that had no eyes,” Larry said in the BOMB conversation."

http://www.culturetype.com/2016/06/19/all-in-the-family-artist-larry-walker-debuts-at-his-daughters-gallery/



Art Of The Visually Impaired On Exhibit In Plattsburgh

http://wamc.org/post/art-visually-impaired-exhibit-plattsburgh#stream/0

Artist volunteer wins volunteering award

http://www.charitytoday.co.uk/artist-volunteer-wins-volunteering-award/

Meet young artist Jamie Thomas — who cannot see, hear, taste or balance

http://www.examiner.co.uk/news/west-yorkshire-news/meet-young-artist-jamie-thomas-11463649

Art exhibtion opens at Bradford College

http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/14550734.Blind_artist_s_loss_of_vision_influenced_her_exhibition_work/


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