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Putting art and public in frame

By Xu Jingxi in Guangzhou ( China Daily ) Updated: 2013-10-25 10:00:33

Putting art and public in frame

Contemporary art museum M+ has organized education programs to help the public know more about art. Provided by M+, West Kowloon Cultural District

An art museum preserves man's splendid cultural heritage, but the collection would be meaningless if the artworks were simply locked up in glass cases.

"An art museum is by nature an educational institution. Its mission is to help people of all ages to find the answers to what art is, how to appreciate art and how art is related to life," says Jason Sun, a curator from the Department of Asian Art of the New York-based Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Putting art and public in frame

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Putting art and public in frame

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Today's art museums, especially those specialized in contemporary art, have to do more than put on exhibitions, they need to come up with more creative ideas, according to Ivy Lin, a curator at Hong Kong Art Promotion Office.

"The spirit of contemporary art is to challenge stereotypes," Lin says. "Art museums' public education has been restricted by several fixed patterns. It's like a restaurant offering set meals only. They can taste good, but customers will feel bored."

M+, a contemporary art museum that will open to the public in Hong Kong in 2017, has promised to be an "approachable" museum.

"We value public education programs a lot. The more people see, the more they know about art. We will organize trips to take the audience to the workroom to watch staff members repairing, framing and displaying art works," says Pi Li, a senior curator at M+.

Lin from the Hong Kong Art Promotion Office elaborates on fostering the connection between art and people. "We had seen the restrictions of museums to go further in terms of connecting contemporary art with the public so we started the Oi! Project," Lin, curator of Oi!, says.

The 108-year-old red-brick buildings standing at No 12 Oil Street in Hong Kong were given a new life to become a special art area with the punchy name "Oi!" in May.

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