Personal phone tours bring museums to your ears
Cell phones and PDA’s are slowly replacing the once-revolutionary audio handsets in museums. One good example is the Baltimore Museum of Art which offers visitors the opportunity to explore the museum’s Sculpture Gardens while listening to the a Podcast. In addition, for those without a mp3-player, there is also the possibility to hear the BMA’s curators, conservators and artists talk about the artworks on display by dialing a access number on their cell phones. Among the contributors to this cell phone tour are the director of the museum, sculptor Mark di Suvero, and a BMA trustee who grew up with the sculpture collection prior to its donation to the museum.Cell phones are not only cheaper to use, easier to maintain, more hygienic and far more versatile than other hand-held devices, but they also enable museums to interact with visitors. Another museum in Baltimore, The Walters, offers a phone tour that will allow visitors to “talk back” to the curators and experts who put the show together, and their comments could be added to the tour over time. Considering the fact that over 90 percent of all visitors already uses a cell phone, this could revolutionize the way in which museums inform their audiences and involve them in interpreting the collection.
Read article (The Baltimore Sun, August 15, 2007)
Go to website The Walkers Art Museum
Go to website Baltimore Museum of Art
Go to cell phone tour brochure
Related posts: Museums enjoy their free for all // The Da Vinci Code Soundwalk @ The Louvre // Hotel chain offers exhibition previews and tours //
augustus 15th, 2007 at 9:34 pm
Interesting topic. Dutch writer Geert Mak and the VPRO collaborate on the project In Europe, which makes podcasts available for phone.
http://weblogs.vpro.nl/ineuropa/category/geert-mak-podcast/
september 4th, 2007 at 12:30 am
The National Gallery of Art is excited to offer its first cell-phone tour. Visitors to the East Building may call the number and learn about eleven different artworks in the collection. Callers can hear I. M. Pei discuss his design of the East building and the importance of sculpture in relation to his architecture. Leah Dickerman and Molly Donovan from the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art narrate the tour. Call 202.595.1857 and press 1#–11# (eleven stops) to listen.
The Brochure can be downloaded at http://www.nga.gov/cell/ebcelltour.pdf.
september 4th, 2007 at 12:40 am
Thank you Joanna.