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In/finite Earth

A Juried Exhibition of 15 Emerging Artists with Disabilities

OEC once again worked with VSA (formerly Very Special Arts) and the Volkswagen Group of America to install the twelfth exhibition of the Emerging Arts Program, which opened on October 24 in the S. Dillon Ripley Center. This longtime collaboration provides artists who are living with disabilities, ages 16–25, with an unprecedented opportunity to receive national recognition at the start of their careers. This year’s theme examines the intersection of environmentalism, creativity, and disability. The 15 artists showcased here have distinct, innovative, and compelling responses.

In/finite Earth was originally scheduled to open on October 1, but due to the shutdown, the installation had to be moved back a few weeks. In/finite Earth will remain on view in the S. Dillon Ripley Center until January 6, 2014. After it closes at the Smithsonian, the show will embark on a national tour.

For more information about this exhibition, visit
http://www.kennedy-center.org/education/vsa/programs/InfiniteEarth.cfm

 

In/finite Earth
Images, left to right: Installation of Containing Crohn’s, by LaAndrea Mitchell. Karla Torres, In La’Kesh, screenprint on cotton muslin.
In/finite EarthImages, left to right: Haylee Fucini-Lenky, La dame du lac, color photograph. Kristi Beisecker, Flowers, Kirlian (electricity) photography on photo paper.

 

New Date for OEC Open House!

Wednesday, December 4
8:30-10:30 am | 12:30-2:30 pm

The Federal shutdown forced us to postpone the second OEC Open
House, but we’ve found a new date. Join us for a behind-the-scenes look at the
Smithsonian’s largest, most comprehensive exhibit producer in our state-of-the
art building. All Smithsonian staff, interns, and volunteers are welcome!

Light refreshments will be served.
Shuttle transportation to and from the Mall
is provided.
Plan to join? Questions? Please rsvp to Peggy
Abel at AbelP@si.edu or x82095 

To get you excited about next month’s event,
here is a peek at the first Open House, held on September 24.

 

Images

Top row, left to right: Guests enjoy refreshments; editor Rosemary Regan describes the Hometown Teams exhibit. Second row: Modelmaker Daniel Fielding; modelmaker Carolyn Thome with 3D-printed models. Third row: Project manager Rob Wilcox (center) and graphics specialist Evan Keeling show off samples of direct printing; project management supervisor Mary Bird and guest; modelmaker Chris Hollschwander and guest watch the Haas CNC Milling Machine at work. Bottom row: The OEC team shows off their new team t-shirts.

Open House at OEC!

Join us for a tour of the Office of Exhibits Central

Choose the day and time that works best for you:

Tuesday, September 24

Thursday October 3

8:30 am to 10:30 am

12:30 pm to 2:30 pm


This tour is open to all Smithsonian staff, interns, and volunteers.

Please rsvp to Peggy Abel at x82095 or abelp@si.edu

Check out our invitation below:

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Learn about OEC’s projects and capabilities at the Smithsonian Staff Picnic on July 2

What has OEC been up to lately?

Come find out:

  • Watch a 3D printing demonstration
  • Check out the capabilities of our new
    direct-to-surface printer
  • Try out traveling exhibit interactives
  • Learn about new sustainable and affordable
    conservation-grade casework, developed in partnership with the Museum
    Conservation Institute

We will be located in the PEEPS Tent by the
Smithsonian Metro Station.
PEEPS mission is Promoting Excellence
among Exhibit Professionals at the Smithsonian
, and the tent will showcase a
range of Smithsonian exhibits and projects.

Hope to see you next week at the SI Staff Picnic!

All Smithsonian staff and members of the public are
welcome.

Milkweed Plant

Recently, modelmaker Danny Fielding and intern Jessica Western helped make the milkweed bugs at the National Museum of Natural History’s Insect Zoo feel a little more at home.  Danny and Jessica used their collective expertise to create faux milkweed plants for placement in the bug’s cages to simulate their natural habitat in the offseason when the real plants are unavailable. 

To create the lifelike plant models, they combined processes of molding and casting parts of real plants as well as direct build-up using steel, epoxy putty, cotton and glue, and other materials.

For example, Danny made plaster molds of real milkweed leaves, then vac-u-formed thin sheets of plastic onto the molds conforming the plastic to shape.  To create the milkweed flower he assembled clusters of buds individually from casts of real buds. Jessica built up tapered leaf stems from wire rolled with cotton batting and glue. Jessica also hand applied hundreds of “spines” one-by one to casts of pods. Plant stems were sculpted out of epoxy putty over a steel armature. Finally all the parts were arranged, assembled to shape, and airbrushed by Danny and hand-distressed by Jessica matching the colors and character of the real plants with incredible attention to detail.

The milkweed plant models are alternately on display (and covered with bugs!) at the Insect Zoo located in the National Museum of Natural History.

IMG_1146Modelmaker Danny Fielding examining his work

IMG_1143     A plaster mold, leaf stem, unpainted leaf, and painted leaf

IMG_0698 Jessica Western hand painting natural details on the milkweed plant

Bug2 The milkweed plant installed in NMNH's insect zoo

Bug1   A Milkweed bug enjoying it's new plant

The Way We Work

The traveling exhibit The Way We Work is in full swing at OEC. The exhibit was developed by Museums on Main Street and is based on a photo show done by the National Archives. Five copies will be produced and travel to small towns across the United States telling the story of how, why and where Americans work. The entire production process will require the help of every OEC department and include graphic design, exhibit detailing, large format printing, crating, model making, and much more.

IMG_1126
Museums on Main Street employee Terri Cobb labeling graphic panels which make up the foundation of the show. 

IMG_1127
Graphic panels awaiting lamination

IMG_1125
Graphic specialist Theresa Dahlman executing the printing of graphic panels

  IMG_1121

Model maker Danny Fielding creating molds of hats which will become interactive element

 

 

 

 

About SIE

Smithsonian Exhibits (SIE) is an office of the Smithsonian Institution. SIE collaborates with museums and offices throughout the Institution to help them fulfill their mandates to present powerful and engaging exhibits and public programs in Washington, D.C., and across the nation.

Design – SIE’s exhibit designers are responsible for all aspects of visual presentation, from gallery configuration and case design to text panels, banners, and other graphic elements.

Editing – SIE’s exhibit editors work with exhibit designers and a curator’s preliminary ideas to develop an overall exhibition plan. By collaborating with designers and subject-matter specialists, they ensure that words, design, and artifacts work together to tell an exhibit’s story most effectively.

Graphics – These specialists produce an exhibit’s graphic elements such as text panels, labels, photo displays, and signage. Techniques include digital printing, photo mounting, archival matting and framing, vinyl lettering, banner production, computer illustration, and silk screening.

Fabrication – The staff on this team produce exhibit cases, graphic panels, and unique exhibit elements. They also offer finishing, plexiglass, and artifact handling services.

Modelmaking – SIE’s modelmakers build scientifically and historically accurate dioramas, create scale models, sculpt mannequins and craft custom brackets to support artifacts.

Project Management – Our project managers are responsible for the day-to-day management of all SIE projects—from budget control and scheduling to resource management and stakeholder communication.

Special Exhibitions Division – The staff in the Special Exhibitions Division bring in traveling exhibits from around the world and coordinate temporary exhibits with Smithsonian offices for the International Gallery.

SIE’s weblog is currently maintained by our editing staff with the help of SIE staff and interns. Our staff writer/editor until September 2008 was Angela Roberts Reeder.

Smithsonian Exhbits

Smithsonian Institution
3400 Pennsy Drive
Landover, Maryland 20785
(Tel) 301 238-2090
(Fax) 301 238-2275

 

On the Water: Stories from Maritime America

Throughout our history, America's waterways have served as important corridors, connecting sites within the United States, as well as linking us to other countries and continents.  "On the Water: Stories from Maritime America" is a permanent exhibit at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History (NMAH), Washington, D.C., which examines marine commerce and transportation by exploring the lives of the people who took part in the maritime trades, and the structures they employed for water travel.  From stories of whaling crews, fishermen, shipbuilders, merchant mariners, and passengers, to 18th-century sailing ships, 19th-century steamboats, and 21st-century super containerships, the exhibit provides a comprehensive view of America's marine-based development.

As part of the exhibit, NMAH requested that the model makers at the Office of Exhibits Central (OEC) design and build a model of an early 18th-century slave ship for inclusion in one of the exhibit cases.  Chris Hollshwander and Natalie Gallelli readily accepted the opportunity to fabricate the model, and figures of slaves and crew, respectively (photo 1).  Because detailed drawings of slave ships are rare, Hollshwander and Gallelli worked closely with NMAH curator Paul Johnston to produce a representational schematic model which would illustrate the harsh and dirty conditions on board such a ship.

Slave ship model 2

Photo 1.  Slave ship model fabricated by OEC model maker, Chris Hollshwander, with figures by Natalie Gallelli.

Hollshwander based his model on an 18th-century merchant shipwreck, discovered and excavated on Manhattan Island, New York.  He worked from drawings supplied by the curatorial team at NMAH, which included general size descriptions and notes on the structure.  This provided the foundation for the creation of 3-D computer modeling which depicted what the final scale model would look like (photos 2-3).  Reviewing detailed information on the slave trade in the form of graphic images and period color renderings of slave trade vessels, as well as working closely with the curator, enabled him to refine the details before beginning to construct the actual model.  This part of the process, Hollshwander noted, was critical since there seemed to be a lack of specific scaled drawings of slave ships.

 Slave Ship Screenshot 1 final

Photo 2.  NMAH plans to put Hollshwander's 3-D computer drawings into its Ship Plans List, one of NMAH's three catalogs of ship plans available to the public.
 

Slave Ship Screenshot 2 final

Photo 3.  Slave ship 3-D computer drawing. 

 

Mahogany was selected for the body of the model, while the mast is made of pine with rope rigging (photo 4).  Hollshwander began construction by shaping the hull's 18 interior ribs on a band saw, and using a router with templates to work out how to form the "rib cage" or keel and frame.  He then built the beam work for the upper and lower decks.  Next, he covered the ribs and constructed the decks, using approximately 250 individually cut and stained mahogany planks.  The planks were also "weathered" (sanded and roughed up with a chisel) to make them look worn.

Slave ship model 1

Photo 4.  View of slave ship model.

 

According to Hollshwander, "This was an especially interesting project for me to work on.  Thanks to my past experience with scale modeling, I had a good idea of the scale that I thought would work well to illustrate the details that the curators desired to have shown.  It also gave me a chance to get back to my roots in traditional model making."

The ship's figures–which represent the male and female slaves who would have been transported on the vessel, as well as some of the crew members–are an equally compelling part of the project.  The women are huddled together on the model's upper deck (photo 5); the male slaves are positioned on the lower deck either sitting or lying down (photo 6); the crew are placed close to where they would have been working.

1. female slaves final

 Photo 5.  Female slaves.

 

To determine the poses, Gallelli used reference images provided by the curator, as well as additional drawings that she was able to locate which were completed during the time period, primarily by abolitionists.

2. male slaves final

Photo 6.  Male slaves and crew member.

 

To begin the complex casting process, Gallelli first sculpted, by hand, a standing and a seated male figure, as well as a standing and a seated female figure, from a mixture of clay and wax, at the appropriate scale.  She then made a separate silicone mold from each sculpture (totaling four molds) by placing each figure in a small square aluminum container, and gently pouring liquid silicone on top of it.  Once the silicone had hardened, Gallelli took the silicone cube out of the container, carefully cut it in half, and removed the clay and wax figure (photo 7).

3. seated figure in mold final

Photo 7.  Silicone mold with seated clay and wax figure.

 

Using the resulting mold, Gallelli cast five silicone copies of each sculpture by repeatedly pouring silicone into the cavity left by the clay and wax figure.  Next, she used the five copies of each sculpture to produce new five-figure silicone "gang" molds so that she could make multiple copies of each figure more quickly.  Gallelli subsequently cast approximately 50 copies of the figures in clay and wax using the four gang molds (photo 8).

4. clay figures in gang mold final

Photo 8.  Silicone gang mold with clay and wax figures.

 

Gallelli then heated each clay and wax figure separately in order to bend it into an individualized position.  Next, she made a new silicone mold for each individualized figure.  Once that was completed, Gallelli cast the final figures by pouring urethane into the cavity of each individualized mold (photos 9-10).

5. individualized figure in gang final

Photo 9.  Urethane figure next to its individualized silicone mold.

 

6. individualized figure in single mold final

Photo 10.  Urethane figure in its silicone mold.

 

After the urethane figures had cured, Gallelli removed them from their molds, and painted each one, by hand (photo 11).

7. figures in drawer final

Photo 11.  View of finished figures.

 

In addition to the figures, Gallelli also cast several rats in urethane, fabricated water buckets and elephant tusks out of wood, and created cloth sacks out of epoxy putty, for placement in the ship's cargo hold (photos 12-13).

8. crew members final

Photo 12.  Crew members with rats and water buckets.

9. cargo final

Photo 13.  Cloth sacks and elephant tusks.

 

Gallelli, too, considered herself to be fortunate to be able to participate in such a significant project.  "As a figural sculptor," she said, "I was very interested in making each figure individual.  I wanted to convey, through the distorted and uncomfortable positions of the figures, the horrific conditions under which the slaves traveled."

The successful collaboration among Hollshwander, Gallelli, and the NMAH curators resulted in a model and figures which are compatible in scale and character.  Additionally, both Hollshwander and Gallelli agreed that they had learned a great deal about the difficult life experienced by so many on board an early 18th-century slave ship.  The model is displayed in its exhibit case alongside a pair of shackles which the slaves would have worn while in transit, as well as a manilla from Nigeria.  These copper or bronze bracelets were carried aboard European merchant vessels as trade goods.

 

photo credits:

   photo 1: Courtesy National Museum of American

            History; Harold Dorwin, photographer

   photos 2-3: Chris Hollshwander

   photo 4: Courtesy National Museum of American

            History; Harold Dorwin, photographer

   photos 5-10: Natalie Gallelli

   photo 11: Kathleen Varnell

   photos 12-13: Natalie Gallelli

 

 

 

  

Interview with Kathleen Varnell, OEC Senior Exhibits Specialist and Ceramic Artist


Q: Can you describe what you do as a Senior Exhibits Specialist at the Office of Exhibits Central (OEC)?
A: I am a team leader of day-to-day operations, frequently acting supervisor of the Graphics unit, and point person for production and installation of numerous exhibitions.  Additionally, I train and counsel assigned employees and interns on production techniques, and develop, as well as establish, internal operating procedures.  On the design and graphics side, I am responsible for interpreting and implementing design concepts, layouts, sketches, and shop drawings to execute production of exhibition-related graphics (e.g., text and graphic panels, large-scale photographs and text, directional signage, object labels), which meet clients’ aesthetic and accessibility requirements.  On the business side, I prepare contracts and orders for services, materials, and equipment, ensuring sufficient inventory for current projects.  As a Project Manager, I am responsible for all phases of project development including client consultation, budgets, scopes of work, contracts, purchasing, outsourcing, production, transportation, and installation.


KV Int 1


Q: How long have you been at OEC?  How did you get started there?
A: I have been at OEC for eight years.  I came to OEC as a Howard University Minority Fellowship Intern in the Fabrication unit, during the winter session of 2001.  At the end of the internship, I was offered temporary employment in the Graphics unit.  After one year of service, I applied for the permanent position of Exhibits Specialist, and I’ve been here ever since.


Q: What kind of training did you have before you came to OEC?
A: I have a BA, with concentrations in Graphics and Ceramics from Jackson State University.  I have an MFA in Ceramics from Howard University.  I also have experience in teaching and money and banking.


Q: What kind of work did you do before you came to OEC?
A: Before Howard University, I worked in accounting with a large food distribution company where I reconciled accounts payable and accounts receivable.


Q: What has been your favorite project so far at OEC?
A: There have been many projects I’ve enjoyed at OEC, but by far, the annual Smithsonian Women’s Committee (SWC) Craft Show is my favorite project to work with each year.  I have served as the project manager, determining the scope of work based on the committee’s needs.  I also attend to the graphic needs for this project.  This is a show where approximately 120 artists showcase their artworks.


Q: What has been your favorite project so far as an artist?
A: As an artist, being in the studio, and living the process of creating is the ultimate project.  “Live Face Casting” is one important element in my work.  My first encounter with live face casting was in undergraduate school.  The procedure entails greasing your face with Vaseline, and inserting straws coated with cotton into your nose for air access.  While lying on your back, a two-inch coil of clay is placed around your entire face.  Plaster mixed to a cake mix consistency, is poured onto your face.  In approximately 15 to 20 minutes, the plaster cures, and then the cast lifted from your face has all your features, even the flaws.  The feeling was as if you were buried alive.

Wounded I-Detail.ai



Wounded I (Detail), 2002
Smoke-fired stoneware with earthenware slip

Keeping this in mind, imagine two grade school boys going through this process.  Many years ago, a client commissioned wall art featuring the faces of her two boys.  The eldest son went through the process just fine.  He was a great role model for his younger brother.  Then, it was time for the youngest son “to go under.”  He was fine while we prepared his face and hair for the process.  Even when the plaster was poured onto his face, he lay there still and brave.  Just before the plaster set, however, he leaped to his feet and took off across the yard.  Thank goodness we were outside, plaster went everywhere.



The client knew just what to do.  She calmed him and convinced him to try it again.  She read his favorite book to him while we began the process.  This time he was a champion.  We made it through the entire process without a hitch.  We finished the day with two perfect face castings of two perfect boys.


Q: Do you have any upcoming events where your work will be showcased?
A: Yes.  I will exhibit at Arts/Harmony Hall Regional Center in their commemorative exhibition, 20 Years: A Retrospective, on view from November 16, 2009, through January 9, 2010, in Ft. Washington, Maryland, and I have a piece in an exhibit at the Fischer Gallery in Jackson, Mississippi.  Also, I have work at the Mississippi Museum of Art in their permanent collection.



Q: Are there any similar techniques or skills that you use both in your ceramic work, and the work you do at OEC?
A: Yes.  Managing projects at OEC is similar to managing shows of my work.  I am responsible for sales and marketing, content development, cost estimates, contracts, purchasing, production, transportation, and installation.  In addition, to have superior craftsmanship, skill in Adobe CS3 applications, and to interpret and implement layouts and sketches, are crucial in my ceramic work, as well as the work I do at OEC.


Q: What is one significant event that has shaped your career as an artist?
A: When I was in undergrad, I kept putting off my ceramics class.  I took every possible class to avoid it.  But from the first day I stepped into the ceramics studio, the aroma of the clay took me over.  In that moment, I went back to my childhood when I would play in the dirt and make little village compounds.  My mother always had to get me out of the dirt.  Since that first day in the ceramics studio, I have only worked in clay.

Healing VI.ai 


Healing VI, 2004
Smoke-fired stoneware with earthenware slip

Q: What does it mean to you to work at an institution like the Smithsonian?
A: As an artist, this is a dream to work at an institution that is the largest conglomerate of art in the world.  I enjoy looking at art in the Smithsonian’s collections, and being inspired to expand my own work in new directions.


Written by Antonia Harbin.  

photo credits:


       photo 1:  Nekisha Durrett


       photo 2:  Sutikare Photography

      photo 3:  Mississippi Museum of Art