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Arts And Cultural Initiatives - Connecting to Technology

Metropolitan Museum of Art

Eqyptian ExhibitStudents at Henry Viscardi School were able to visit the tombs in the Egyptian Exhibit at the Met without ever leaving their classroom. After a previsit using replicas, students followed the tour guide to see the mummies and other artifacts and ask and answer questions live. This was a first for the museum.

Interactive Broadcast from the Lower East Side Tenement Museum (LESTM)

Tenement MuseumIn an innovative attempt to increase access to an inaccessible museum in New York, HVS students had the opportunity to visit the Lower East Side Tenement Museum via a live, interactive, virtual tour from the Smeal Learning Center here at Abilities!. Using our technological expertise in collaboration with museum education specialists, 6th, 9th and 11th graders interacted in live time with a docent in period character and costume who played the role of Victoria Confino, an actual documented immigrant teenager to the Lower East Side in 1916. Victoria gave the students a tour of her tenement providing details about her family life and customs, language, community, the cramped quarters she shared with her numerous siblings, outhouses, public bath houses and life and work for immigrants in the early 1900's. Students were able to verbally and visually interact and ask questions that Victoria answered for them. And did they have questions!! Students were engaged with "Victoria" and interacted with her as if she were truly the character she represented. Some of us even waved goodbye as she closed the door to her tenement at the conclusion of the broadcast.

The live broadcast was preceded by a visit to the students by museum educators and was complemented by a hands on session with museum artifacts prior to the broadcast. In addition to our participating group in Smeal Learning Center, one of our classrooms in the HVS Inclusive Technology project was able to access the broadcast from a remote classroom and ask questions as well.

Due to the historic preservation of this building, The Tenement Museum is not accessible to many individuals with mobility issues. The two way live interactivity of this program allowed us to bridge physical barriers in order to access the tour. This initial attempt to expand cultural experiences through a live, interactive, virtual visit was a success and speaks to the potential of future opportunities to connect with remote or inaccessible sites.

Questions about this program should be directed to Fran Prezant at 516-465-1601. Technical questions about broadcast capability can be directed to Peter Kurtz at 516-465-1416.

Considering Concepts of Universal Design for the Exhibition
Unlimited By Design
A Presentation by Bruce Hannah for the Museum Access Consortium

Bruce HannahBruce Hannah is the curator and exhibition designer for Unlimited By Design, an exhibition about universal design that was on display at the Cooper Hewitt in 2000. Mr. Hannah discusses his philosophy of universal design and how this translates into exhibition design. This presentation was recorded on January 16, 2003 at the Brooklyn Museum of Art during a general session meeting of the Museum Access Consortium. Unlimited By Design was co-curated with George Covington, photographer, writer, and gad-about, and co-designed with Tanya Van Cott, architect.

Bruce Hannah graduated from Pratt Institute in 1963 with a degree in Industrial Design. His career as a designer began in 1967 when he collaborated on several award winning seating groups for Knoll. In 1976 Bruce Hannah established his own design office. In 1990 the Hannah Desk System for Knoll was named a design of the Decade by the IDSA, Industrial Design Society of America. In 1992 Bruce was named the first Designer in Residence at the Cooper Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution. Bruce was awarded the Bronze Apple by the New York Chapter of IDSA for the first national design conference on Universal Design. Bruce is a tenured Professor at Pratt Institute and continues to design, most recently an exhibit at the National Design Museum titled, Unlimited by Design. In 1998 Bruce received the National Design Education Award from the IDSA. He was Guest editor/Contributor to Condé Nast Traveler Magazine, Design Catalog, March 2000. In 2000 he was awarded the Federal Design Achievement Award for the exhibition "Unlimited By Design" at National Design Museum, Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Institution. In 2003 Mr. Hannah received the Rowena Reed Kostellow Award from Pratt Institute for excellence in teaching.

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The Unlimited By Design Exhibit

Unlimited By Design LogoThis video introduces the Unlimited By Design Exhibit which was originally exhibited at the Smithsonian Institution/Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in 1999. The exhibit was later shown at the Design Exchange in Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 2000.

The contents of this resource were developed as a product of the RERC on Universal Design a University at Buffalo's Publications Initiative.

©2002 Center for Inclusive Design and Environmental Access; Running time 19:03.




Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center (RERC) on Universal Design
School of Architecture and Planning
University at Buffalo
Buffalo, NY 14214-3087

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The free download of RealPlayer (version 8 or RealOne)

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Titles:

Considering Concepts of Universal Design For the Exhibition "Unlimited by Design" A Presentation by Bruce Hannah for the Museum Access Consortium
Experiencing Art Museums with a Visual Impairment: A Personal Perspective
Access for People with Hearing Loss