SAVE-A-DATE: October 14-15, 2005, Conference
Art Beyond Sight: Multi-modal Approaches to Learning
Organized by Art Education for the Blind, The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
and the Museum Access Consortium
Friday, October 14, and Saturday, October 15, 2005
Location: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the
Museum of American Folk Art
In a culture in which vision is by far the dominant sense, and life
revolves around the visual, the potential for learning through other
sensory modalities is too often ignored. This innovative international
conference will address the challenge faced by educators, artists and
museum professionals, to create multimodal learning opportunities that
better serve all audiences. Psychologists and educators will explore ideas
and recent research findings relating to other learning modalities,
including touch, sound, language, kinesthetics, and even smell. The
conference will also examine the relationships between vision, non-vision,
and the other senses, through discussions focusing on blindness and
learning. Issues raised include the communication of ideas about visual
culture through non-visual means, cross-modal interaction and multi-sensory
integration, and the implications of Universal Design for learning.
Friday, October 14, will be spent at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, with
presentations and panel discussions focusing on perspectives on multi-modal
learning in practice (morning sessions) and new fMRI studies, cross-modal
interaction and understanding learning (afternoon session). Among the
presenters: Rebecca McGinnis and Deborah Jaffe (the Metropolitan Museum of
Art), Hannah Goodwin (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), Georgina Kleege
(University of California at Berkeley and author of Sight Unseen.), Dr.
Alvaro Pascuale-Leone (Harvard Medical Center), and David Rose (Harvard
Medical School of Education and CAST).
The Saturday, October 15, morning session will take place at the Museum of
Modern Art, and will comprise two panel discussions: "Multi-Modal
Approaches to Accessibility: Best Practices," chaired by Paula Terry
(Director, Office of AccessAbility, National Endowment for the Arts),
and "Teaching Through Touch: Touch and Interactive Exhibits and Tools,"
chaired by Francesca Rosenberg (Museum of Modern Art).
The Saturday afternoon session will be held at the American Folk Art
Museum. Panel discussions on "Language and Communicating about Visual Art"
and "Artists Response to Multi-sensory Challenges," chaired by Pam Rogers
(Pure Visions Art Studio/The Shield Institute), will further explore the
conference theme.
In addition, there will be evening "Dining and Discussion" events and
Saturday breakfast meetings. To receive complete conference details and an
invitation (registration is $50), send your name, address, phone number,
and e-mail address to [log in to unmask] Please
put "October conference" in the subject line.
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