4B - Thursday, March 11, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 9 Docents go through a two-semester training process including shadowing tours, writing a research paper and intensive study ofart history and art appreciation. DOCENTS From Page 1B a week for two hours. These meetings act to ingrain basic art history and research techniques, but more important, they act to develop touring techniques. It is here where the program pulls from didactic and experiential modes of learning, mak- ing it extremely inventive. Laura Seligman, a new docent who came on last fall, reflected on the incorpo- ration of guest lecture speakers from the University departments. "(Jacob Procter, associate curator of modern & contemporary art) walked us through the new galleries and talked about why he chose, what he chose and how he situated certain pieces," she said. "Like for example, he put the Donald Judd piece near the window and it referenced the building outside the window and cast shadows along the floor. The way a piece hangs matters. It's not just the piece. That was very exciting for me." This aspect of training is distinctive to UMMA because it's a University-based museum. "That is the gift of being part of the University community, where you have these phenomenal professors and gradu- ate students exploring, who really know this material," Seligman said. The docents can learn from leading experts in the field who are researching and relaying information in real time. This is another moment when learning becomes active, not just for people who step into the museum, but for the docents themselves. They come out of a culture of contributory learning, so it's natural that they relay that same attitude to each museum guest. Seligman was drawn to being a docent for this collaborative aspect, which she found in her previous experience with museums in Rochester, NY. "For me the museum was like this com- munity well," she said. "It was so exciting, and always new things were happening there. Very interesting people were show- ing up there - it was a hot spot." UMMA fulfills this role in Ann Arbor through its stream of changing exhibits and artist question-and-answer sessions, like the one with emerging installation artist Heather Rowe this past fall. In the second semester, the training shifts toward a process rooted in shad- owing. These second-semester docent candidates follow experienced docents on tours with patrons. This is a time when each docent candidate can experi- ence the touring techniques of his or her future colleagues. Personal touring styles emerge, as well as various approaches to help patrons of all ages come to under- stand the art. "No script is given," Glidewell said. "Each docents tweaks the program to their own style. It is this constant process of finding the right technique that fits with the right audience. No tour, no stop, is ever the same." Building off of the lectures and gallery experiences, each shadowed tour is a way to slowly implement the methods and his- torical information gathered during the first semester. This is the moment when these soon-to-be docents have an oppor- tunity to work off of the excitement that the guests brings with them when they enter into the museum. At the end of the shadowing process, a candidate will have completed a full six-stop tour with a vet- eran docent. To fully establish their knowledge and presence in UMMA, second-semester docents write a research paper on a piece within the museum. They are asked to choose and examine an object, then write on all the associations that emerge while they sit with the piece over the course of a few meetings. After the initial impres- sions and emotions manifest themselves, the research paper requires the potential docents to critically analyze the artist and the historical context in which he or she worked. The methods of learning - didac- tic and experiential - form a bundle of information that is not doused on each guest in the space, but rather slowly poured out. These UMMA docents have implemented this immersive, interactive method in the gallery experience, mir- roring the methods in the docent train- ing program. With graduate students, curators and each other, the docents have constructed meaning for themselves. Transmitting an experience The docents' personal construction of meaning is passed on to patrons young and old, who all join in this new method of art appreciation. But even with this pressure to make the museum more than just a collection of objects, Glidewell recognizes that the museum experience mostly relies on taking time to be present in the gallery space. "We understand that our audiences are coming in having so much access to technology," she said. "Everybody kind of wants to see bells and whistles. We try not to give in to the temptation of making the museum feel like an amusement park, because it's a different kind of experience. ... Sometimes you really just want the kids to slow down and look closely." It is the act of slowing down - becom- ing close to the work and drawing out a personal meaning - that establishes the spectacle. While we have the means to complicate and ornament the museum experience through digital interventions in a tour, we still elicit truth through old- fashioned question-and-answer. This combination of the Socratic meth- od and the sensory experience allows us to forge a strong connection with the art we observe. And it's each docent's imple- mentation of this learning system that reconfirms the necessity for a tactile art experience. the process of crafting his brain- be an extremely tight script that DUFF" child's sequel. was examined by the experts. From ""You wouldn't believe the jovial The first time, we were just kids atmosphere we had on the set of in a candy store - the second the first movie - actually, the sec- time around, we were adults in a conduct _,nated both close and movie, too. A lot of fun was candy store." friends and business partners. had," Duffy said. "But the differ- As for future plans, Duffy was Unfortunate as these person- ence between the first and second eager to address rumors of a pos- ality flaws may have been, they 'Boondock' movies is that the sec- sible sequel. appear to have been considerably ond time around was a bit more "I've got some ideas percolat- tamed by 10 years of experience serious because we were making ing on a possible 'Saints III,' but in film; moreover, they are easier it for people who know the movies let's face it - we all know that the to overlook when one observes in fucking minutiae. vast majority of sequels suck," he Duffy's overwhelming convic- "These are people who know said. tion and the passion with which every word, every frame, where "The tiniest percentage of he speaks of his fan base. The cult every 'fuck' is. They've seen it a them turn out to be any good, and following of "Boondock" is the hundred times, soI knew that the we believe we made such a sequel. most compelling impetus driving fans would call me out on it if I But it was a maximal creative Duffy's career, and it's the only treaded on the sacred ground of effort, like walking through a factor he considered to expedite the first film. Naturally it had to minefield, like cracking a code. A third movie would be like crack- ing the code to the safe of fuck- ing Fort Knox," Duffy said. "The sequels we love --'Rocky II,''The Terminator II,''Aliens' - they all give the fans everything they love from the first movie, plus a brand new story they couldn't have pos- sibly seen coming." Several' respected critics may have dismissed the intense popu- larity and high DVD revenue of "The Boondock Saints" as a fluke. But it's easier to criticize an artist from the outside lookingin than to admit that the path to a filmmak- er's popularity is oftentimes paved with raw emotion and unpleasant candor instead of affluence and refinement. * FUNDRED From Page 3B issues, you stand. to potentially shift the health of society," Rubin said. "Because if you look around the country, the cities that have high lead contamination are the cities that have high violence - New Orleans, Detroit, Baltimore, Cleveland, Providence - it just goes on." Chin said the relationship between lead and our culture has implications that can directly affect anyone, in any city, any- where in the country because it is a problem that reaches far beyond New Orleans. He explained that the success of Fundred and Opera- tion Paydirt in New Orleans could mean a lot for cities in the future, making the magnitude of the proj- ect much larger than it initially appears. "(New Orleans) is the proper place to run the first experiment on soil transformation," Chin explained. "Logistically, environ- mentally, condition-wise - it lines up. Then we can come up to a place like Detroit with something that really works. "With that model, we can begin a change - a change in the soil and a change in the environment that threatens children. And if that's something that people care about and want to spread consciousness about, then it has meaning for everyone. "It's about a larger community," Chin said. Rubin said this project is an excellent opportunity for artists and non-artists alike to embrace the privilege of working with com- munity outreach and to participate in a project that will have a larger- than-life impactif successful. "We are relying on people to understand the power of this proj- ect," Rubin said. "Because yes, it's about lead remediation, children, theenvironmentand NewOrleans. But it's really about engaging your local community, creatingrcommu- nity and inspiring community in order to initiate change." The project is simple - only * requiring some sort of marking and a signature on the fundred - and, if successful, it could mean a new beginning for New Orleans and cities all over the country that suffer from the same problem. With a collection center located conveniently on campus in the School of Art & Design, 'students and community members have a special opportunity to work hands on with Fundred's cause. "(The School of Art & Design has) utilized (its) students a lot, (and) they've gotten. involved," Banks said. "But we're such a small school and we would definitely love to have any more people that we could be involved with this project. We only have about 500 students and it would be great to have more students on the proj- ect." Banks serves as the Fundred collector and distributor at the University, and can be contacted directly if individuals or organiza- tions are interested in participat- ing. "We just need the support," Chin said. "And we aren't even ask- ing for money. We are asking for a drawing, we're asking for human expression." WHERE'S THE CREAM FILLING? IT'S AT DAILY ARTS! 9 JOIN US. 0 E-mail join.arts@umich.edu for information on applying.