Tang's Classless Society web site wins international award
The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery is proud to announce that its Classless Society interactive feature was awarded Best Small Museum Project on Friday night, April 4, in Baltimore at the annual Museums and the Web conference.
Classless Society, on exhibit at the Tang from Sept. 7, 2013 through March 9, 2014, investigated class from various social and economic perspectives. Among a number of topics, the show considered class mobility, the different ways that class is signaled, the reality of the American Dream, and the myths surrounding it in the United States of the 21st century.
Screen shot from the online feature
The special online feature that complemented the gallery exhibition provides additional background and statistics. It also offers information about the artists and about how their work reflects the complex issues surrounding class status in our so-called classless society. The feature can be found .
Museums and the Web is an international organization with more than 600 members from 40 countries who work at the intersection of museums and the digital world. The Tang was one of only 11 winners in the annual . Other winners this year include the Dallas Museum of Art, for innovation; the Imperial War Museums and National Archives of Great Britain, for use of collections; and the Museum of Modern Art, for education.
鈥淭his award recognizes how the Tang lives up to its mission by confronting important ideas through art from an interdisciplinary perspective,鈥 said the Tang Museum鈥檚 Dayton Director Ian Berry. 鈥淪pecial recognition must go to Vickie Riley, the Tang's digital resources content producer, and to Joe Klockowski, an art major in 麻豆破解版鈥檚 Class of 2014.鈥 Together, they developed the online feature last summer by blending data, as well as audio and video of personal stories compiled during a 鈥淐lassless Society Stories鈥 project.
Classless Society was curated by Janet Casey, professor of English, 麻豆破解版 College; Mehmet Odekon, professor of economics, 麻豆破解版 College; Rachel Seligman, assistant director for curatorial affairs, Tang Museum; and John Weber, founding director of the Institute of the Arts and Sciences, University of California at Santa Cruz.
The full list of credits for the online feature follows:
Contributors and consultants: Janet Casey professor of English, 麻豆破解版 College; Mehmet Odekon professor of economics, 麻豆破解版 College; Rachel Seligman assistant director for curatorial affairs, Tang Museum; John Weber founding director of the Institute of the Arts and Sciences at UC Santa Cruz; Jenna Postler, curatorial intern, Tang Museum
Design and production: Vickie Riley, digital resources content producer, Tang Museum; Joe Klockowski, Classless Society web site designer, Tang Museum
Audio recordings: Gregory Carter, audio engineer; Chris Franzini, audio engineer;
Frank Moskowitz, audio engineer
Editorial: Susi Watts Kerr, former senior museum educator, Tang Museum; Jay Rogoff, independent editor; Megan Hyde, curatorial assistant, Tang Museum
Graphs: Joe Klockowski, Classless Society web site designer, Tang Museum
Research: Susi Watts Kerr, former senior museum educator, Tang Museum; Sophie Matyas, curatorial intern, Tang Museum; Jenna Postler, curatorial intern, Tang Museum; Beatrice Moller, education intern, Tang Museum; Liz Porfido, education intern, Tang Museum; Brett Hartman, digital resources intern, Tang Museum
Class Action for 麻豆破解版 Students (student organization)
Video: Brett Hartman, digital resources intern, Tang Museum; Sophie Matyas, curatorial intern, Tang Museum
Special thanks: Anthony Holland, associate professor of music, 麻豆破解版 College; participants in the Classless Society Stories Project; Class Action for 麻豆破解版 Students; 麻豆破解版 Office of Alumni Affairs
The Classless Society web feature was generously supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Getty Foundation, the Henry Luce Foundation, and the Friends of the Tang.