Fine Arts – Pandemic Homeschooling, Theme 3

Here’s my 3rd installment of themed books, activities and snacks to help you organize your Social Distancing days. How are you holding up? It’s just the beginning for me and I’m pretty nervous about this increased social isolation. I hope you and your family are well.

Museum Nerd Patch

I had this Museum Nerd fantasy that all the museums would stay open, that most people would avoid going, and so I could have the museum all to myself! #WishfulThinking But, anyway, here are some fine arts ideas for you and your family!!

Curriculum Connection

If you’ve never matched up your history curriculum with objects in a museum, maybe take some of your time at home to search the collections of the MFA or other institutions to find objects that bring to life the time periods and cultures you study. The MFA, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC and others have truly encyclopedic collections of the arts that you can search and view online.

Field Trips

The deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park has closed their museum but their sculpture park is free and open to the public. Take a beautiful walk, but maintain social distancing!

Virtual Field Trips

12 Famous museums offer virtual tours, from MSN.com. This article links you directly to the virtual tours of these amazing institutions below.

  • British Museum, London
  • Guggenheim Museum, New York
  • National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.
  • Musee d’Orsay, Paris
  • National Museum of Modern & Contemporary Art, Seoul
  • Pergamon Museum, Berlin
  • Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
  • Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam
  • The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
  • Uffizi Gallery, Florence
  • MASP, Sao Paulo
  • National Museum of Anthropology, Mexico City

Books

“Art Dog,” Thacher Hurd
“Oxford first book of art,” Gillian Wolf
“The Usborne First Book of Art,” Rosie Dickins
“Henri, egg artiste,” Marcus Pfister

Activities

Online Learning

Lunch Doodles with Mo Wilems , The JFK Center for the Performing Arts, Artist-in-Residence-At-Home

“Mo Willems invites YOU into his studio every day for his LUNCH DOODLE. Learners worldwide can draw, doodle and explore new ways of writing by visiting Mo’s studio virtually once a day for the next few weeks. Grab some paper and pencils, pens, or crayons and join Mo to explore ways of writing and making together.

“New episodes will be posted each weekday at 1:00 p.m. ET and then remain online to be streamed afterwards.  Check back each weekday for new LUNCH DOODLES!”



One of my favorite art historians of all time is Sister Wendy Beckett. She has the most amazing, humanist analysis of fine art. She loves and understands humanity and expresses it exquisitely in her series on Fine Arts. Check out this segment from Sister Wendy’s PBS series on Rothko and Warhol – and then click around to see the other segments available for free on YouTube.

And if you want to know more about Sister Wendy, watch this interview with Bill Moyers, It’s broken into 6 parts.

Snacks

Paintbrush rice crispy treats

A Word of Caution about the ICA

First a note about myself: I have a BA in art history. I completed one year in a graduate program in museum studies. I am a supporter and defender of the arts and museums. I appreciate art. I make room for all kinds of art to exist in the world. I accept there are works that I will not personally enjoy, but fully embrace those works as important to the culture. Some art isn’t safe, some art is challenging. Some art, just like some parts of life, is not for children.

We visited the ICA yesterday to take part in a program on the exhibition “When Home Won’t Let You Stay.”

First of all, this is a heart-rending exhibition. Not only is it about the experiences of people who must leave their countries, it is also about how other countries treat refugees. Most of the art displayed was excellent, introduced ideas, and evoked strong emotions and thoughts.

Toward the end there is a dark room with three monitors at a child’s eye level. There are headphones hanging from hooks below them and benches to sit on while watching. At first it appears to be relatively innocuous, certainly there’s no indication of imminent danger – one person on each screen in front of a neutral backdrop speaking. There are easy to read subtitles on each screen that can be read comfortably 15 feet away.

We passed through that room without stopping, to view “American Library.” Our guide mentioned mildly and in passing that there might be some difficult topics on the videos in the prior room and parents should use discretion. I understood that as a PG-13 kind of warning. I shepherded my 10-year-old son away from the doorway in “American Library” so he wouldn’t see the videos. However, while looking around the library together, I didn’t notice that he went back to the doorway to watch them.


Kids! AmIRight? They LOVE videos of almost any kind, if there’s a screen in a room playing anything, it grabs their attention immediately, like a Siren singing to Odysseus…who you will remember had to be tied to the mast of his ship to prevent him from throwing himself to the deadly Sirens.


The next thing I knew, my son was next to me visibly upset, beginning to cry, asking to leave. Downstairs as we waited for our group, he wanted to distract himself on my phone and by walking through the gift shop to look at cute things. When I was finally able to get him to tell me what he read on the screen, he told me a detailed, horrifying story of torture with a sexual element to it.

He could not participate in his group’s art making session, he was too upset. When I sat with him to encourage him, we made something together to help him process what he was feeling. Instead of a quilt square about our family’s migration stories, he made tear drops falling into a puddle, and told me and another parent that he’s scared because he’s small and not strong and doesn’t want to get hurt or die.

Processing distress at the ICA
Source: BBHS

This is the third time we’ve gone to the ICA and my kids were exposed to excessively disturbing material in a way that was impossible to avoid, particularly because no appropriate warning was given. These were materials no functioning parent willingly exposes their kids to: NC-17 level imagery and descriptions of rape and torture. Both my sons still occasionally bring up a video installation that we saw over a year ago. I really hope this latest experience doesn’t have lasting effects on my younger son.

I don’t understand the curatorial decisions of a museum that welcomes families, but subjects the public to such extreme imagery and words, without warning and sometimes without a way to avoid those works and still visit the rest of the exhibits. It feels like intentional infliction of distress.

MLK Jr. Day & Lunar New Year – Tips on visiting the MFA on free days

The Museum of Fine Arts' Fenway entrance with people walking out the door and down the stairs.
MFA’s Fenway Entrance, Source: BBHS

I know the Museum of Fine Arts is crazy-busy on their free days, but they do offer lots of really wonderful family programming on those days. It can also be a great, low-cost way to spend time with friends. Even this introvert has gone to 4 or 5 MFA free days over the years!

The next free admission day at the MFA is on January 20, 2020 in celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day. And if you can’t make it, there’s another on February 1, 2020 to celebrate the Lunar New Year.

Here are my tips to maximize your visit:

  • Arrive EARLY is #1, the lines in won’t be as long, and the lines for the coat room won’t be long either.
  • Arrive LATE, another good move if you don’t mind a short visit. Note that most of the family programs will be winding down by mid-afternoon.
  • Do not drive there! The garage, lots and street parking will be full and traffic will be sluggish around the museum with people trying to park, save yourself the headache and either take the T or plan to park far away and walk over. Also, museum parking is NOT free on free days.
  • If the line to get in winds out to the sidewalk on Huntington Ave, go around to the Fenway entrance. The line is usually SO MUCH SHORTER! Keep in mind, the Huntington entrance also has a long line inside, whereas the Fenway inside line is about 1/4 the length. The Fenway coat room usually has a shorter line too.
  • The downstairs cafe is going to be mobbed, consider eating outside before going into the museum, or visit the cafe at non-peak times.
  • You can bring your own food into the museum to eat at the cafe, make sure you’re carrying it in a museum approved bag.

Do you have any tips to share? Please leave them in the comments below! ❤️