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Amanda Stem
ARED 7500
04/24/2014
Exhibit of Exvotos: From Sacred Ground to Sacred Grove
Introduction
“…a museum of art is in essence a temple.” (Zeller, pg.30)
This hypothetical exhibition is an extension of my interest in Mexican
exvotos. In class I have so far introduced the exvoto in a concrete manner by
focusing on its history, function, and its scope of context. I have designed this
exhibition to expand on the concrete ideas into the abstract by trying to replicate
the exvotos in their natural habitat. That is, I want to display the exvotos in much
the same way as you would see them displayed in an actual chapel. In their natural
condition exvotos are a testimonies of faith by common people of Mexico to be
viewed by common people in a common place of worship. Hundreds or even
thousands of these tiny squares of faith are dedicated en masse on one wall of a
chapel creating one huge mosaic of devotion. It is an overwhelming aesthetic and
educational experience I propose brining to a museum gallery.
The Specific audience and the Personal, Sociocultural and Physical Contexts
Audience
The target audience for this exhibit is the Mexican American and/or Mexican
immigrant. Demographics are shifting. “Individuals born outside the United States
are now 12.5 percent of the American population, with 83 percent of those coming
from either Latin America or Asia…” (Falk, Dierking, pg. 89) Minority populations
are gaining in numbers and, “museums are continuing to seek new audiences, with
cultural diversity as an important goal.”(Henry, pg. 81)
Personal Context
Keys to attracting the Mexican American or immigrant audience are interest
and relevance. “In short, visitors generally select whether or not to visit museums
based on their prior interest in a museum’s subject matter and/or the type of
experience they seek…and then utilize their specific interests, along with their
entering identity-related motivations, as lenses to decide what aspects of the
museum to focus on…”(Falk, Dierking, pg. 93) Many Mexican immigrants, and some
Mexican Americans have encountered the exvotos at some time in their past and
therefore may have prior knowledge to encourage their interest. They may be
seeking an experience that fosters a sense of pride and nostalgia, and the subject
matter is an identity-related motivation. Also worth considering is that the interest
may not be solely in the subject matter but in the fact that it is in a museum to begin
with. They may simply find it novel that a museum would choose to exhibit a
common object they grew up with.
Sociocultural Context
“As other major institutions in our society…have declined in importance, the
role of museums as interpreters of culture has increased.”(Hein, pg. 9) Regardless of
how commonplace they are in Mexico, they are not in the United Sates where so
many Mexican immigrants have re-rooted. It may not surprise my reader that the
Mexican culture we experience here in Athens Georgia, and many other similar
communities in the southeast, is not wholly or authentically representative of the
culture they left behind. It is partial or spotty, and typically dressed up to sell more
margaritas or burritos. Many Mexican American children are born into a society
where most believe Cinco de Mayo really is Mexican Independence Day.
I have often wondered how Mexican immigrants teach and pass down a
heritage that is so removed from their daily experience. Those with prior knowledge
about this particular piece of Mexican heritage could facilitate learning in children
and relatives that would not encounter them otherwise. As Falk and Dierking state
in chapter seven, “Adults frequently take on the roles of teachers, facilitators, or
group leaders during museum visits and use a variety of strategies to facilitate,
including helping children identify the important features of an exhibit, offering
explination, making connections to prior experiences and knowledge and asking
questions.”(Falk, Dierking, pg. 153)
Finally, exvotos are not being produced in the numbers they once were and
so their existence is finite. Though this hypothetical exhibition is designed to be
temporary, it could stir up the kind of awareness that would inspire active collection
for permanent display. As Hien points out in Learning in the Museum, museums have
“become active preservers of (often vanishing) cultures, not just passive collectors
of cultural artifacts.” (Hein, pg. 11)
Physical Context
I found Falk’s and Dierking’s discussion about conveying concrete
information versus abstract ideas especially relevant for this hypothetical
exhibition.(Falk, Dierking, pg. 113) However, rather than concrete versus abstract, I
see my exhibition of exvotos possibly, ideally, accomplishing both. What I believe is
essential to accomplishing both in one exhibit is to display them as they are
displayed naturally–as they are in a chapel–accompanied with the relevant and
meaningful contextual information presented in a very modest, even reverential
way. “Opportunities to relate works to the culture in which they were produced are
exploited by few museums; works are visually presented in isolation without a
frame of reference or context in which they can be situated and understood.”(Eisner,
Dobbs, pg. 10)
I have visited an exhibition of exvotos organized and produced around the
concrete information they can provide. That concrete information is “affected in
each case by geography, climate, history, economics, and politics, in sum, by
everything that gives people their own special character.” (Luque, Beltrán pg. 71)
Specifically, the exhibition was of Mexican exvotos depicting the experiences of
Mexican immigrants in relation to the Mexican American border (Jorge Durand).
The information was undeniably concrete, but the exhibition took on the typical
one-piece-at-a-time presentation, isolating one exvoto from the rest, and therefore
eliminating the sublime quality of mass devotion. That is, it was too concrete.
On the other hand, the way exvotos are typically displayed within a chapel
can be a stupendous, maybe even overwhelming, or bewildering experience for
those not already familiar with them. It comes without the concrete information in
the form of labeling or other interpretive material an outsider might require for a
better understanding and maybe a more meaningful experience. It can be too
abstract. Contextual information “…is particularly important the further the work of
art is removed from our cultures and our times.” (Henry, pg. 91)
How to reconcile? I would follow the advice of Falk and Dierking and start
with the concrete because, “Although it is understandable and admirable that
museums…are committed to communicating big ideas to the public,…Museum
exhibitions and interpretive materials are very effective when they begin with
concrete information; concrete understanding is an important precursor to abstract
ideas.” (Falk, Dierking, pg. 113)
Because exvotos have the characteristic of being produced according to
prescribed aesthetics and compositions, much of the concrete information applied
to one can be effectively applied to all or most. For example, they are almost always
painted on industrial tin cut into sheets of about the same size. They all serve the
similar devotional function. In varying degrees, they all display a simplistic style of
painting. They all have text typically including names, dates, and location. Therefore,
there is no need to include all of this information on an individual level. All of this,
including information on their origin and history, can be provided in a brochure,
catalog, or along an exterior or entry wall. The less signage within the exhibit the
better as I believe it would detract from the experience.
Translation, however, is necessary. Not only would promotional and
educational information, typically presented in English, need to be provided in
Spanish, but also the Spanish text inscribed on the exvotos themselves should be
translated to English. I am not suggesting every exvoto in the exhibit be translated
but only a select few. I will explain this in more detail further along in this text. In
summary, substantial information about exvotos can be presented with minimal yet
effective signage.
It will not be as easy to convey the abstract idea attached to such a powerful
display of mass devotion, but I will attempt it through the overall design of the
exhibit, by displaying it as naturally as possible and by a grouping method. Every
collection has its best pieces, and exvotos, though intrinsically individual, can
capture themes such as illness, crime, sports and so on, and so on, and so on! The
manner in which I would group this exhibition is by first finding sufficient
examples–out of hypothetically hundreds or thousands–of a number of depicted
themes. Then I would select around half a dozen of the best examples from each
theme to be translated and displayed in groups separately from the remainder of
the collection. This, I hope, would illustrate the scope of content matter as it is
presented in an individual way; each exvoto shows just a flash, or still frame of an
extraordinary experience from one person’s life– an experience that one person
considered miraculous!
The remainder of the collection would be grouped together in a chaotic mass;
the condition in which they might be found outside of the museum. I would display
them one on top of another, and without organization. I want this group to be so full
and random that they loose themselves within themselves until the group becomes
a whole; a single wall of faith. The abstract idea is, as I stated in the introduction, the
one being constituted of the many.
The Nuts and Bolts
Have you ever walked into a cathedral and been knocked off your feet by the
power of the sanctuary? You feel it as soon as you walk into the nave. This is the
feeling I want to get from my own exhibit of exvotos. Therefore, I would design this
exhibit according to the aesthetic associated. I envision a single room that has
dimensions similar to a chapel or church. It would be somewhat narrow and tall. A
good example from the Georgia Museum of Art would be the Phillip Henry Alston Jr.
Gallery. I would hang the bulk of the collection, the chaotic wall of faith, on the wall
opposite to the entry so that it is the first thing the visitor sees, like the sanctuary in
a cathedral. I would make sure that every inch of the wall, from floor to ceiling, is
covered with exvotos. I would display the themed groups on evenly spaced panels,
or possibly even within two Plexiglas panels, along the side walls. I would size the
panels and arrange the exvotos in such a way that the viewer may be reminded of
stained glass windows. Beneath the arrangement I would add modest signage with
the translations. The translations would occupy one sign and would be coded by
number. In the center of the gallery I would place benches reminiscent of church
pews in a nave with room to walk on either side as well as down the middle. Each
bench would have a catalogue containing all the concrete and abstract ideas equally
represented in English and Spanish. The intended viewing path would be right down
the middle to the greater wall but visitors would be able to move comfortably (and
within ADA standards) around the benches which would absorb some of that empty
space that no one feels comfortable turning his/her back to. I anticipate visitors will
backtrack to the greater wall after visiting the smaller group panels because the
panels will likely add meaning to the greater wall. The colors of the wall would be
warm like the stuccoed interior of a chapel or church. The lighting would be warm
and candle-like and would come from above and below. I would open the exhibit on
the sixteenth of September and run it through December twenty-seventh.
How to get exvotos here
New Mexico State University has one of the largest collections of exvotos in
the country. There are also several private collectors here in the United States. Also,
as Ramón A. Gutiérrez points out in his article, Sacred Retablos: Objects That
Conjoin Time and Space, “Vast numbers of votive offerings were, and still are, left
daily at popular Mexican shrines. Regularly, shrine custodians remove large
numbers of them to make room for the new ones that constantly arrive. Votive
offerings removed from the shrine are either discarded or sold to religious-goods
vendors…”(pg, 34) Though exvotos are constituting smaller and smaller percentages
of the votive offerings being left and then discarded, this is still a source worth
consideration.
How to get the audience here
Collaborate! The Georgia Museum of Art could work with numerous other
entities at the university, including the Spanish department, and the anthropology
department. They could help with translation difficulties and encourage visitor
participation in and among the departments themselves. Off campus, there are
several places of promotional opportunity, for example, there are many Mexican
restaurants and grocers. Catholic churches may count many Mexican American
members among their flocks, and last but not least, there is a Quinceañera shop on
Broad Street!
In conclusion
In Silent Pedagogy: How Museums Help Visitors Experience Exhibitions,
Elliot W. Eisner and Stephen M. Dobbs state plainly that, “Works of art do not speak
for themselves.”(Eisner, Dobbs, pg. 8) I highlighted and circled it with exvotos in
mind. Exvotos spoke to me the very second I saw one of them. The meaning was
literally on the surface in text and testimony, and metaphorically below in devotion
and dedication. “A viable model for museum teaching…needs to account both for
what transpires in words and what transpires beneath and beyond words.”
(Burnham and Kai-Kee, pg. 64)
Bibliography
Articles
Burnham, R. & Kai-Kee, E. (2011). Gallery Teaching as Interpretive Play. In Teaching
in the Art Museum: Interpretation as Experience (pp. 59-66). J Paul Getty
Museum: Los Angeles
Eisner, E.; Dobbs, S. (1988) Silent Pedagogy: How Museums Help Visitors Experience
Exhibitions. In Art Education, July, (pg. 6-15).
Hein, G.E. (1998). Introduction and Brief History of Museum Education. In Learning
in the Museum (pp. 2-11). Routledge: New York, NY
Guitiérrez, R. A. (2001) Sacred Retablos: Objects that Conjoin Time and Space. In Art
and Faith in Mexico; The Nineteenth-Century Retablo Tradition (pp. 31-38).
University of New Mexico Press: Albuquerque
Luque, E. & Beltrán, M.M. (2001). Powerful Images: Mexican Exvotos. In Art and
Faith in Mexico; The Nineteenth-Century Retablo Tradition (pp. 69-76).
University of New Mexico Press: Albuquerque
Zeller, T. (1989). The Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Art Museum
Education in America. In N. Berry & S Mayer (Eds.). Museum Education:
History, Theory, and Practice, (pp. 10-89). Reston, VA: National Art Education
Association.
Books
Falk, John H., and Dierking, Lynn D. Dierking. The Museum Experience Revisited. Left
Coast Press Inc., Walnut Creek, CA, 2013.
Henry, Carole, The museum Experience: The Discovery of Meaning. National Art
Education Association, Reston VA, 2010.

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FP Henry

  • 1. Amanda Stem ARED 7500 04/24/2014 Exhibit of Exvotos: From Sacred Ground to Sacred Grove Introduction “…a museum of art is in essence a temple.” (Zeller, pg.30) This hypothetical exhibition is an extension of my interest in Mexican exvotos. In class I have so far introduced the exvoto in a concrete manner by focusing on its history, function, and its scope of context. I have designed this exhibition to expand on the concrete ideas into the abstract by trying to replicate the exvotos in their natural habitat. That is, I want to display the exvotos in much the same way as you would see them displayed in an actual chapel. In their natural condition exvotos are a testimonies of faith by common people of Mexico to be viewed by common people in a common place of worship. Hundreds or even thousands of these tiny squares of faith are dedicated en masse on one wall of a chapel creating one huge mosaic of devotion. It is an overwhelming aesthetic and educational experience I propose brining to a museum gallery.
  • 2. The Specific audience and the Personal, Sociocultural and Physical Contexts Audience The target audience for this exhibit is the Mexican American and/or Mexican immigrant. Demographics are shifting. “Individuals born outside the United States are now 12.5 percent of the American population, with 83 percent of those coming from either Latin America or Asia…” (Falk, Dierking, pg. 89) Minority populations are gaining in numbers and, “museums are continuing to seek new audiences, with cultural diversity as an important goal.”(Henry, pg. 81) Personal Context Keys to attracting the Mexican American or immigrant audience are interest and relevance. “In short, visitors generally select whether or not to visit museums based on their prior interest in a museum’s subject matter and/or the type of experience they seek…and then utilize their specific interests, along with their entering identity-related motivations, as lenses to decide what aspects of the museum to focus on…”(Falk, Dierking, pg. 93) Many Mexican immigrants, and some Mexican Americans have encountered the exvotos at some time in their past and therefore may have prior knowledge to encourage their interest. They may be seeking an experience that fosters a sense of pride and nostalgia, and the subject matter is an identity-related motivation. Also worth considering is that the interest may not be solely in the subject matter but in the fact that it is in a museum to begin with. They may simply find it novel that a museum would choose to exhibit a common object they grew up with.
  • 3. Sociocultural Context “As other major institutions in our society…have declined in importance, the role of museums as interpreters of culture has increased.”(Hein, pg. 9) Regardless of how commonplace they are in Mexico, they are not in the United Sates where so many Mexican immigrants have re-rooted. It may not surprise my reader that the Mexican culture we experience here in Athens Georgia, and many other similar communities in the southeast, is not wholly or authentically representative of the culture they left behind. It is partial or spotty, and typically dressed up to sell more margaritas or burritos. Many Mexican American children are born into a society where most believe Cinco de Mayo really is Mexican Independence Day. I have often wondered how Mexican immigrants teach and pass down a heritage that is so removed from their daily experience. Those with prior knowledge about this particular piece of Mexican heritage could facilitate learning in children and relatives that would not encounter them otherwise. As Falk and Dierking state in chapter seven, “Adults frequently take on the roles of teachers, facilitators, or group leaders during museum visits and use a variety of strategies to facilitate, including helping children identify the important features of an exhibit, offering explination, making connections to prior experiences and knowledge and asking questions.”(Falk, Dierking, pg. 153) Finally, exvotos are not being produced in the numbers they once were and so their existence is finite. Though this hypothetical exhibition is designed to be temporary, it could stir up the kind of awareness that would inspire active collection
  • 4. for permanent display. As Hien points out in Learning in the Museum, museums have “become active preservers of (often vanishing) cultures, not just passive collectors of cultural artifacts.” (Hein, pg. 11) Physical Context I found Falk’s and Dierking’s discussion about conveying concrete information versus abstract ideas especially relevant for this hypothetical exhibition.(Falk, Dierking, pg. 113) However, rather than concrete versus abstract, I see my exhibition of exvotos possibly, ideally, accomplishing both. What I believe is essential to accomplishing both in one exhibit is to display them as they are displayed naturally–as they are in a chapel–accompanied with the relevant and meaningful contextual information presented in a very modest, even reverential way. “Opportunities to relate works to the culture in which they were produced are exploited by few museums; works are visually presented in isolation without a frame of reference or context in which they can be situated and understood.”(Eisner, Dobbs, pg. 10) I have visited an exhibition of exvotos organized and produced around the concrete information they can provide. That concrete information is “affected in each case by geography, climate, history, economics, and politics, in sum, by everything that gives people their own special character.” (Luque, Beltrán pg. 71) Specifically, the exhibition was of Mexican exvotos depicting the experiences of Mexican immigrants in relation to the Mexican American border (Jorge Durand). The information was undeniably concrete, but the exhibition took on the typical
  • 5. one-piece-at-a-time presentation, isolating one exvoto from the rest, and therefore eliminating the sublime quality of mass devotion. That is, it was too concrete. On the other hand, the way exvotos are typically displayed within a chapel can be a stupendous, maybe even overwhelming, or bewildering experience for those not already familiar with them. It comes without the concrete information in the form of labeling or other interpretive material an outsider might require for a better understanding and maybe a more meaningful experience. It can be too abstract. Contextual information “…is particularly important the further the work of art is removed from our cultures and our times.” (Henry, pg. 91) How to reconcile? I would follow the advice of Falk and Dierking and start with the concrete because, “Although it is understandable and admirable that museums…are committed to communicating big ideas to the public,…Museum exhibitions and interpretive materials are very effective when they begin with concrete information; concrete understanding is an important precursor to abstract ideas.” (Falk, Dierking, pg. 113) Because exvotos have the characteristic of being produced according to prescribed aesthetics and compositions, much of the concrete information applied to one can be effectively applied to all or most. For example, they are almost always painted on industrial tin cut into sheets of about the same size. They all serve the similar devotional function. In varying degrees, they all display a simplistic style of painting. They all have text typically including names, dates, and location. Therefore, there is no need to include all of this information on an individual level. All of this, including information on their origin and history, can be provided in a brochure,
  • 6. catalog, or along an exterior or entry wall. The less signage within the exhibit the better as I believe it would detract from the experience. Translation, however, is necessary. Not only would promotional and educational information, typically presented in English, need to be provided in Spanish, but also the Spanish text inscribed on the exvotos themselves should be translated to English. I am not suggesting every exvoto in the exhibit be translated but only a select few. I will explain this in more detail further along in this text. In summary, substantial information about exvotos can be presented with minimal yet effective signage. It will not be as easy to convey the abstract idea attached to such a powerful display of mass devotion, but I will attempt it through the overall design of the exhibit, by displaying it as naturally as possible and by a grouping method. Every collection has its best pieces, and exvotos, though intrinsically individual, can capture themes such as illness, crime, sports and so on, and so on, and so on! The manner in which I would group this exhibition is by first finding sufficient examples–out of hypothetically hundreds or thousands–of a number of depicted themes. Then I would select around half a dozen of the best examples from each theme to be translated and displayed in groups separately from the remainder of the collection. This, I hope, would illustrate the scope of content matter as it is presented in an individual way; each exvoto shows just a flash, or still frame of an extraordinary experience from one person’s life– an experience that one person considered miraculous! The remainder of the collection would be grouped together in a chaotic mass;
  • 7. the condition in which they might be found outside of the museum. I would display them one on top of another, and without organization. I want this group to be so full and random that they loose themselves within themselves until the group becomes a whole; a single wall of faith. The abstract idea is, as I stated in the introduction, the one being constituted of the many. The Nuts and Bolts Have you ever walked into a cathedral and been knocked off your feet by the power of the sanctuary? You feel it as soon as you walk into the nave. This is the feeling I want to get from my own exhibit of exvotos. Therefore, I would design this exhibit according to the aesthetic associated. I envision a single room that has dimensions similar to a chapel or church. It would be somewhat narrow and tall. A good example from the Georgia Museum of Art would be the Phillip Henry Alston Jr. Gallery. I would hang the bulk of the collection, the chaotic wall of faith, on the wall opposite to the entry so that it is the first thing the visitor sees, like the sanctuary in a cathedral. I would make sure that every inch of the wall, from floor to ceiling, is covered with exvotos. I would display the themed groups on evenly spaced panels, or possibly even within two Plexiglas panels, along the side walls. I would size the panels and arrange the exvotos in such a way that the viewer may be reminded of stained glass windows. Beneath the arrangement I would add modest signage with the translations. The translations would occupy one sign and would be coded by number. In the center of the gallery I would place benches reminiscent of church pews in a nave with room to walk on either side as well as down the middle. Each
  • 8. bench would have a catalogue containing all the concrete and abstract ideas equally represented in English and Spanish. The intended viewing path would be right down the middle to the greater wall but visitors would be able to move comfortably (and within ADA standards) around the benches which would absorb some of that empty space that no one feels comfortable turning his/her back to. I anticipate visitors will backtrack to the greater wall after visiting the smaller group panels because the panels will likely add meaning to the greater wall. The colors of the wall would be warm like the stuccoed interior of a chapel or church. The lighting would be warm and candle-like and would come from above and below. I would open the exhibit on the sixteenth of September and run it through December twenty-seventh. How to get exvotos here New Mexico State University has one of the largest collections of exvotos in the country. There are also several private collectors here in the United States. Also, as Ramón A. Gutiérrez points out in his article, Sacred Retablos: Objects That Conjoin Time and Space, “Vast numbers of votive offerings were, and still are, left daily at popular Mexican shrines. Regularly, shrine custodians remove large numbers of them to make room for the new ones that constantly arrive. Votive offerings removed from the shrine are either discarded or sold to religious-goods vendors…”(pg, 34) Though exvotos are constituting smaller and smaller percentages of the votive offerings being left and then discarded, this is still a source worth consideration.
  • 9. How to get the audience here Collaborate! The Georgia Museum of Art could work with numerous other entities at the university, including the Spanish department, and the anthropology department. They could help with translation difficulties and encourage visitor participation in and among the departments themselves. Off campus, there are several places of promotional opportunity, for example, there are many Mexican restaurants and grocers. Catholic churches may count many Mexican American members among their flocks, and last but not least, there is a Quinceañera shop on Broad Street! In conclusion In Silent Pedagogy: How Museums Help Visitors Experience Exhibitions, Elliot W. Eisner and Stephen M. Dobbs state plainly that, “Works of art do not speak for themselves.”(Eisner, Dobbs, pg. 8) I highlighted and circled it with exvotos in mind. Exvotos spoke to me the very second I saw one of them. The meaning was literally on the surface in text and testimony, and metaphorically below in devotion and dedication. “A viable model for museum teaching…needs to account both for what transpires in words and what transpires beneath and beyond words.” (Burnham and Kai-Kee, pg. 64) Bibliography Articles
  • 10. Burnham, R. & Kai-Kee, E. (2011). Gallery Teaching as Interpretive Play. In Teaching in the Art Museum: Interpretation as Experience (pp. 59-66). J Paul Getty Museum: Los Angeles Eisner, E.; Dobbs, S. (1988) Silent Pedagogy: How Museums Help Visitors Experience Exhibitions. In Art Education, July, (pg. 6-15). Hein, G.E. (1998). Introduction and Brief History of Museum Education. In Learning in the Museum (pp. 2-11). Routledge: New York, NY Guitiérrez, R. A. (2001) Sacred Retablos: Objects that Conjoin Time and Space. In Art and Faith in Mexico; The Nineteenth-Century Retablo Tradition (pp. 31-38). University of New Mexico Press: Albuquerque Luque, E. & Beltrán, M.M. (2001). Powerful Images: Mexican Exvotos. In Art and Faith in Mexico; The Nineteenth-Century Retablo Tradition (pp. 69-76). University of New Mexico Press: Albuquerque Zeller, T. (1989). The Historical and Philosophical Foundations of Art Museum Education in America. In N. Berry & S Mayer (Eds.). Museum Education: History, Theory, and Practice, (pp. 10-89). Reston, VA: National Art Education
  • 11. Association. Books Falk, John H., and Dierking, Lynn D. Dierking. The Museum Experience Revisited. Left Coast Press Inc., Walnut Creek, CA, 2013. Henry, Carole, The museum Experience: The Discovery of Meaning. National Art Education Association, Reston VA, 2010.