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Volume 42 • Number 2

Summer 2008



 


Looking to Learn: Museum Educators and Aesthetic Education

by Nancy Blume, Jean Hennings, Amy Herman, and Nancy Richner

The purpose of art is to lay bare the questions, which have been hidden by the answers.

—James Baldwin

Introduction


Museum education. Aesthetic education. How are they similar? How do they differ? How do they relate to each other? What are their goals? As museum educators working with classroom and art teachers, we are often asked these questions, and we ask them ourselves. "What do you DO?" is probably the most frequently asked question of all, and the answer is complex. Even more complex is how these questions relate to the Rembrandt Project. Given that looking at original works of art is such a priority for museums and museum educators, how do we address the project's reliance on technology? And how do these questions relate to the social studies and visual arts standards, another major component of the project? How does the project relate to the work we do in our own museums? Writing collaboratively implies that we have certain areas of commonality; but we also have differences, which will be apparent in individual sections of this article: Jean Henning and Nancy Richner discuss the Nassau County Museum of Art, Nancy Blume writes about Asia Society, and Amy Herman explores the Frick Collection. Our focus will be the domain of museum education as that is what we know best, but there are inevitably areas where it overlaps and complements the domains of art education, aesthetic education, and social studies.


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