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Museum Legs [Paperback]

Amy Whitaker (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 13, 2009

An irreverent, highly original look at our rocky relationship with museums and museums' rocky relationship with us.

If you've ever considered going to an art museum and then thought, errr, I'll do something else . . . If you've ever arrived and left a little glazed and confused . . . If you've ever thought, I might read an eight-page article about art museums but not a whole book . . . Then this is your story.

Museum Legs--taken from a term for art fatigue--starts with a question: Why do people get bored and tired in art museums and why does that matter? As Whitaker writes in this humorous and incisive collection of essays, museums matter for reasons that have less to do with art as we know it and more to do with business, politics, and the age-old question of how to live.

Maybe the great age of museums will yet be a great age of creativity and hopeful possibility in everyday life.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

Whitaker is the perfect docent--wise, wry, and engaging. Her essays are as captivating as the artworks they describe. --Daniel Gilbert, author of Stumbling on Happiness

It is so extraordinary to ask these simple questions and to have the courage to look for answers. Museums would be a better place to visit if they questioned themselves as Whitaker does --Alfredo Jaar, artist

Amy Whitaker's sparkling meditations on the museum are both delightful and pressing. She explains how we might reattain our sense of wonder, and how museums might rediscover their essence: relating to patrons without being patronizing, and sustaining themselves without selling out. --Jonathan Zittrain, author of The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It

About the Author

Amy Whitaker has an MBA from Yale and an MFA in painting from the Shade. She has worked at the Guggenheim, MoMA and the Tate, and for a well-known artist and a well-known hedge fund. Her first degree from Williams College is in political science and studio art. Her drawings and paintings are held in collections in the United States and United Kingdom. She has worked as an economics fellow studying U.S. regulatory agencies at Yale and in legal research at Harvard. She likes teaching economic theory to artists--as compiled in the booklet Business School for Artists--and, conversely, painting and art history to businesspeople. Her work has appeared previously in the British journal Architectural Design and in the New York Times. Originally from the South, she now divides her time between New York and London. This is her first book.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 264 pages
  • Publisher: Hol Art Books; 1 edition (September 13, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1936102005
  • ISBN-13: 978-1936102006
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #215,331 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Loosely connected but interesting notes on art and art museums, August 8, 2010
This review is from: Museum Legs (Paperback)
There are some subjects on which I want interesting questions more
than I want answers. That is especially true with respect to art
and art museums, where I believe there are few objective answers
and where each of us has answers that are specific to our own
individual wants and needs. So, some questions:

- What's the purpose or mission of an art museum?

- Should all art museums be trying to serve the same purpose?

- Could it be that the founder or owners or directors or curators
should be allowed to determine the mission and orientation of the
museum? Or, must they always consult with their visitors or
members? And, if they should consult with their visitors, then
is it true that "the customer is always right"?

- Should an art museum attempt to *educate* me about art,
especially the art in that museum? Or, is it enough for it to
merely make the works or art available so that I can experience
them.

Read Whitaker's book carefully and, if you care about art,
encouraged to think about these questions and many more.

I wish that Whitaker had spent a bit more time on one of my
favorite questions, specifically whether a copy of a work of art
can be as useful or valuable as the original, and why or why not?
Many works of art can only be copies, for example, cast bronze
statues, prints made from wood block carvings and etchings, and
lithographs. Now that we have such easy access to digital
photography and now that such high quality digital photographic
equipment is available and especially now that there is ready
access to image manipulation software (Photoshop, The GIMP, etc),
this becomes a more salient issue. I'm suspicious of claims about
the importance of authenticity or the original. But, most
important, I feel that thinking through issues about copies versus
originals of works of art helps each of us understand what is
important in art for ourselves. And, you may as well get used to
it, because for people under 25 who have become so used to copies
of movies, music, and images, this is a non-issue.

One set of the issues that concerns Whitaker most are those that center
around the commercialization of the business of art museums. She'd
likely be uncomfortable with labeling an art museum as a business.
And, she worries that when the price of admission to an art museum
or an exhibition at one becomes more than negligible, then the
visitor's experience becomes an economic transaction, one in which
the visitor is concerned about getting entertainment value for
the money more than with having an experience of and with art
that enriches and expands her/his life.

And, this issue is becoming more significant, as is everything that
involves money, during the economic recession, when support for art
and art museums shrinks. I my own city, children from local
schools now get either field trip to the local art museum or the
local historical museum, but not both. In times like these, the
value and experience of art gets lost in the finances, if you are
still able to afford the visit to the museum, let alone a trip to a
remote museum, at all.

One problem that I have with the book has to do with the level of
intellect for which it is intended. Whitaker is smart; I'm
simple-minded. Some of Whitaker's analogies are mysterious to me;
I don't get the connection. Some explanations that she gives are
too complex or too vague for me to "get". You are likely to have
less trouble connecting the dots and understanding the connections.
Still, ..., I do wish that an editor would have asked Whitaker to
"tighten things up" and to think about her readers.

The book discusses a variety of themes, issues, and ideas. That
makes me a little uncomfortable, because I'd rather have a single
theme that I can follow and can use to make sense of everything
else. The variety of subjects discussed makes the book seem like a
loosely connected set of magazine articles. However, the themes and
ideas in this book are, for me at least, interesting and important.
Here are some of those themes.

(1) There is one issue that I believe is very important, but I
wonder whether Whitaker's claims about it are true. She believes
that experience with art encourages and helps us with independent
thinking and with imaginative thinking. I hope she's right, but I
wonder. Also I believe that reading and thinking in terms of words
and symbols is as much or more important for independent and
imaginative thinking than thinking in visual imagery. But, either
way, you will be interested in what Whitaker has to say about it.

(2) Another theme that Whitaker brings up several times is the idea
that you cannot understand or appreciate or experience art unless
you create art yourself. She seems to say that you must at least
try to draw or paint in order to learn enough to understand what
other draftsmen and painters have done. I'm suspicious about that.
In part because I'm poor at creating art myself, and don't want to
admit that I can't benefit from and be enriched by that art done by
others.

(3) One idea that is particularly dear to Whitaker is the importance
of recognizing and supporting new, contemporary artists. Since
Whitaker worked at MoMA (the Museum of Modern Art) in New York and
the Tate in London, that's to be expected. But, a proposition like
that, while admirable, has its problems. For example, how do we
separate the good from the bad, the worthwhile from the rubbish,
especially when so much of it looks like "my 5 year-old could do
that", as it is often so tempting to say. Whitaker's stance here
seems more reasonable when considered in the light of her
encouragement that we enter an art museum with a attitude of
"openness". In particular, she wants each of us to view any given
work of art and to appreciate it, analyze it, enjoy it, etc, on its
own terms and especially on *our* own terms, *without* being
restricted by the text in the white card on the wall next to the
work or the text in the museum catalog or the comments by the
curator in a lecture we attended or by the comments of any other
expert, for that matter.

Summary: It's an interesting book with a rich collection of
interesting subjects. Give yourself a quiet place to sit and time
to think, and you'll be rewarded for it.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Will change your relationship with Museums for the better, October 22, 2009
This review is from: Museum Legs (Paperback)
I just finished reading Museum Legs last night and I really feel better for the experience, stretched in the really appropriate way. I like that it made me really think about relationships: with museums, art, music, friends; and that it's actively changed how I feel about at least three of those! It was also an amazing sensation to explore all of the connections (works of art, essays, places, people) Ms. Whitaker ingeniously weaves together; it's really personal to experience a book like that, not voyeuristic, but different from anything I've experienced. I'm lucky enough to have a signed copy and have passed along several to friends already. If you get the chance, you should also try and see Amy on her book tour!
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Museum Legs defies classification, reaches out to all readers., September 21, 2009
By 
Manny (Milledgeville) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Museum Legs (Paperback)
Museum Legs keeps readers laughing with stories and provokes thought about how we could become more visually creative and more engaged as citizens if museums weren't so drop-dead difficult to negotiate.
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