*I 4D - Tuesday, September 8, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com WORTH THE WAITa After two years of renovations and new construction, UMMA reopens - - *I By KIMBERLY CHOU Daily Arts Writer NOVEMBER 13TH, 2008 - On the ground level of the Uni- versity of Michigan Museum of Art's new Frankel wing, two glass walls join neatly, pushing toward State Street like the prow of a ship. Right now, the space they enclose isn't much - something more to walk around, though it affords a nice view of the recently installed Mark di Suvero sculpture "Orion." "Most people are surprised to find out that it's going to be a gal- lery," said UMMA director James Steward. Once UMMA reopens during winter term, after two years of reno- vations and new construction, the space will house temporary exhi- bitions of emerging contemporary artists. "When we figured out how we weregoingtositetheexpansion,this is the space we first started thinking of to help us capture interest of peo- ple going past," Steward said. Work exhibited inthisgallery will employ light, movement and other elements visible through the glass. Hopefully, according to Steward, being able to see such dynamicwork without barriers - save for the glass walls - will lure passerby inside. "There's this idea: We want to make art part of the everyday expe- rience," he said. The space is part of UMMA's efforts to make the museum - and by extension, art in general - more accessible to everyone, every day, in its position as both a University resource and a community resource. According to Steward, UMMA is the largest museum between Detroit and Chicago and people come from great distances to visit. Each visi- tor, whatever his or her walk of life, should feel comfortable taking in a performance at UMMA's new audi- torium, viewing ceramics in what will be the first gallery space dedi- cated to Korean art at an American university, or simply having a cup of coffee while enjoying the view from the new caf. The cafe and the museum's extended-hour "walk- through" space, which Steward is suggesting as a campus shortcut, are intended to draw otherwise unlikely visitors. The old building and new Frankel wing will be multi-purpose. They will be split into galleries, research and conservation areas, educational and social spaces, storage, retail and a caf6. "Weworkedveryhardtointegrate functions in this building," Steward said. "We want to persuade visitors, when they come to the museum, to visit the whole thing." When the museum reopens after its $41.9 million makeover, it will be more than double the size of its old building, the Alumni Memorial Hall. The University owns more than 18,000 art pieces, but was previous- ly only able to show 3 percent of that collection at a time. UMMA's off- site location at the juncture of South University and South Forest - what used to be the original Mitch's Place bar - allowed for even more limited exhibitions. Now the added 53,000 square feet in the new building will allow UMMA to show 10 percent of its entire collection at a time. And viewing and appreciating this art need not be separate from learning about it. What UMMA calls its open stor- age gallery is one way the museum seeks to combine art appreciation and education. The space that was once the Chinese gallery (renamed The Shirley Chang Gallery of Chi- nese Art in the new museum space) will now feature cabinets with floor-to-ceiling glass shelving. The construction of the gallery allows for a dense arrangement of 600 to 800 pieces - such as Chinese pots, American decorative arts objects, African pieces - that scholars and visitors can come in and study dur- ing the museum's open hours with- out an appointment. "It's a way to create something in between the pristine display of art gallery spaces and dead storage space, a way of animating the collec- tion," Steward said. Call it experien- tial storage. Around the corner from the open storage gallery is the old Japanese gallery space, which will become the Asian Art Conservation Labora- tory's new location. UMMA's Asian Art Conservation Lab has been around for 25 years and is one of few in the country. Today, the lab does client work for other museums as well. Here, visitors can watch con- servationists at work, from behind the glass doors. "Sometimes, literally, it's like watching paint dry, but the public is really fascinated," Steward said. "It's like alchemy; a magical mixture of art and science coming together." The conservation lab, open stor- age gallery and temporary con- temporary gallery all contribute to UMMA's greater emphasis on "con- nective tissues" - art spaces that provide the link between different cultures, between art and science, and between education and appre- ciation. 01 EXPANSION SIZE 93,111 square feet total; 53000 square last Maxine ad Stuart Frankel and the Frankel Family Wing THE MASTERMINDS Designed with Brad Cloepfil and Allied Works Architecture of Portland, Oregon; the firm also oversaw the Seattle Art Museum expansion and the St. Louis Contemporary Art Museum THE ARTWORK UMMA's collection includes more than 18,000 pieces of art THE NEW ELEMENTS Musuem features a triple-height (three-story) Vertical Gallery, among other new and expanded gallery spaces HOURS Building Hours Daily: 8 am-12 am Gallery Hours Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday: 10 am-5 pm Thursday, Friday: 10 am-10 pm Sunday: 12-5 pm ALL FREE Most importantly, admission to UMMA is still free The building itself demonstrates an architectural blend of old and new. Alumni Memorial Hall, built between 1907 and 1910, reflects the Beaux-Arts revival style. While ren- ovation of the old building stuck to historic preservation, where work- ers removed dropped ceilings and additions added in earlier 20th- century "attempts" at renovation, the building didn't try to imitate the past. "We need to build a building that was of our moment, historically, not looking just to the past," Stew- ard said. "Having said that, we also sought to build (an addition) that would keep company with the old, in terms of scale and materials." For most of the University's undergraduate population, Alumni Memorial Hall has always been fenced in and under construction. See UMMA, page 8D New skylights in the original statuary of the Alumni Memorial Hall portion of UMMA combine natural light and electrical light to best showcase the artworks. 01 Students line up for the UMMA Student Grand Opening nn Tuesday, March; few days later, an Saturday, March 28th, 2009. Tartuffe by.Moliere, translated by Runjit Bolt Hilarity ensues when a l lcroly suggestible patronfllner a pious con-man in this fmuiisc fPrce about religious hypocisy Arthur Miller Theatre * Oct. 8 - 18, 2009 Dept. if Theatre & Drarna Evita by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice 73 lene ]oAa etneause beloved and i/ttedfirst liy, Eva Perin Medelssohnt 1:a1re1 .o.15- 18,2009 Dept of Musical Theatzre The Marriage of Figaro bh rerby Wolfgang AmIadeus Mozart ltepefet meleigEt, musc and aion Sung in Italian with Lnglish translations Power Ctcrer Nov. 12 - 1, 20)9 University Opera leatre Uncommon Women and Others by Wendy Wasserstein V s A groap ofwtsmtantfi-it'es re'niasce about their college' dre'met-s to "hav it all"r Artlttr Miller lIattr1 * Nov 19 - 2?, 2009 Dept. of Lheatre & Drama Macbeth by William Shakespeare 'hie classic tragedy about one couple's descent into evil to the pursuit of power Power C'nt'er *Dc. 1(1 - 1 3, 2(9 iDept. cifl Thatr & lrat ci OUr 2009-2010 U-M School of Music, Theatre & Dance' season promises superb entertainment at a great value! Student tickets are only $9 with ID 60% off the regular price! Get yours now at the League Ticket Ofice in the Michigan League. 3 (Re) Visionay Pances /1 riv1 of ayar/sa S icc:eltt d Printmps Ito Ici xieas.ai) andI naetw tratonst htb t aauly lUsn iesity DancL I tmpany2 r 1Our Town iby lisorn on WN'itdett lice taoae/ess and/ qt:uteetia/ Amteican ploy onahi, lov, eal ecah Mlecidssobn 'inatre -[Fet. i8 - 21, 2010 ID'p. of 'trec & Draaa Winter Opera - TBA r.e-,tpa--ion, atepotion. We'llannounce thisopera in early October Mendelssoh 'Theatre -M 25 - 2c, 2010 Uiversity. Opera Teatre Trafford Tanzi by Claire Luckha A.joung w'ooan sep; into a W/F ring in this raucous conedy about literally fightingfrr onessedetermainaun. Arthur Miller' Iheacre Apr. 1 -. 11,2010 Dept .ofiTistre &D:aima Ragtime by errence McNlls Stephen Flaherty, and Lynn Ahrens A poerid looe at America at the turn qfthe 20th centry tthrough the lives ofthree diverse'families. Power Center * Apr. 15 -1' 2009 -e|t Dpt. o cMusciicaleatre uy two student tickets f.r the price of one, for any of the 2009-10 U-M Stchool of Music, iheatre & Dance mainstage protutctions. Offer subject to aaiiabtiliy. Iitted to one free ticket per coupon. Must sthsow valid student ID and britng coupon to the i.eagueT icket Office located in the Michigan League or to the theatre on the ight f performance. 0I