Cornell Museum

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CORNELL MUSEUM: AT LEAST IT IS OPEN AGAIN!  

There was excitement in the air for the Grand Re-opening of Cornell Museum of Old School Square in the heart of Delray Beach.  At least it is open again. I was curious if the disaster of last August 10th, 2021, when the Delray Beach City commissioners, in a divided vote, blindsided the community by terminating the city’s lease with Old School Square “without cause” could actually become a phoenix rising from those ashes.  Well, not quite yet!

Cornell Museum. the Grand Re-Opening.
Cornell Re-Opening not the phoenix many had hoped for.

As I approached the museum with my husband, there was a buzz in the air a bit like the old days. I felt some excitement and anticipation.  Until I walked through the door into Cornell.  It was loud and garish, almost like in a busy train station.  People were looking past each other, and not at the exhibit, snapping selfies. I had the feeling that I had time travelled into an old and very bad political cartoon.   I saw one or two people I recognized as art lovers, the rest seemed to be politicians and curiosity seekers.  Some may have simply been overflow from the Christmas tree and carousel who stopped by for the snacks. 

I talked to a few visitors at the Re-opening reception.  Some were there for nostalgic reasons, their relatives had gone to school there, some were DDA employees, several politicians and a few artists. All were cordial in approval of the exhibit with the most common phrase being ‘at least it is open again’.  I am known for my frank opinions. I was underwhelmed by a sad old surfer exhibit with a token representation of local artists.  And the selection of local artists was hardly diverse, the battle cry of the commissioners. But rather were chosen from those who rent city subsidized spaces.  Once given an opening most I talked to agreed with me about the quality of the exhibit and the acknowledged the creativity was just not there.  The spark of delight was missing.  My husband was even more direct when I asked him what he thought, “AWFULL” that’s all I can say.

Art and science together with human ingenuity reflects the society and times where they exist.  Imagination, passion, creativity, and hard work make mere possibilities into realities.  This exhibit does none of that.  Instead, it reflects the city’s political fabric. It seems to support the idea that art is kind of magic wand to be wielded for political favor.  Wrong, wrong, WRONG! 

The space still looks magnificent. Thanks to those who worked for, volunteered, or donated to Old School Square Center for the Arts.  But it is a space now, not a museum.  It is like a Broadway play that closes on opening night and loses money.  Delray Beach cut your losses, and stick to the business of running the city. Turn the museum and other OSS property over to those with the passion, energy and soul for the arts.    Joe Gillie said it best “Truth is there should be no reopening it should have never closed in the first place.”

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Dear Donna,

Congratulations! I am happy to announce to you that your painting, “Rocco’s Tacos at Night” have been accepted to the Cornell Museum – Spotlight Gallery Show – Magic Hour and Nocturnes.

The show is January 3 – February 1, 2020.

Delivery: Monday, December 30, 2019
Reception: Friday, January 3, 2020 (which coincides with First Friday Art Walk)

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I was at Art on the Square in Delray Beach as the coordinator for Plein Air Palm Beach. Getting the tent setup went smoothly on Friday afternoon, but it was windy cold, and rainy on Saturday. Sunday was a beautiful day. It is great to show off beautiful plein air paintings. Several artist attendees said they had been looking for a plein air group so were happy to get info about PAPB.

I was happy to exhibit some of my paintings and was pleased at the comments I got. Unfortunately this did not translate into sales. Oh well. Here are some of the paintings I exhibited at Art on the Square.

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On Thursday, October 4th John and I went to the opening celebration of the Cornell Art Museum’s latest exhibition, Tech Effect.  The promo for the exhibit says

ABOUT TECH EFFECT From Brian Dettmer’s sculptures composed of melted-down cassette tapes to Antoine Geiger’s manipulated photographs of smartphone users being literally sucked into their devices, the technology of yesterday, today and tomorrow continues to inspire artists worldwide. “Tech Effect,” running Oct. 5 2018-Feb. 17, 2019 at the Cornell Art Museum, surveys 22 artists reflecting on the way technology impacts our lives and their art, or vice versa.

tech effect web.png

I thought it was an interesting exhibit and it certainly attracted a young tech savvy crowd.  I describe myself as an Artist/Scientist and certainly technology has been a main theme in my working career.  Generally I find artists the least tech savvy of the general population.  And while this was evident in this exhibit to some extent and some of the artwork was very pedestrian, there were also some very clever ideas of fusion of art & technology.    I particularly enjoyed the digital prints of fractals and photography and the 3d printing of sculptures that were later fired in  kiln.  This is my opinion is a beautiful fusion of art and science.  Since art always reflects society, there was a lot of art that was social commentary, like to effect of smartphones on ones focus of attention.  I was pleased to attend and plan to stop by again to take a closer look.

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Grand Re-Opening of Cornell Museum

The Cornell Museum at Old School Square has recently undergone a million dollar renovation and if it looked like an old school before it certainly does not now.  I attended the Grand Re-opening of the Museum on Nov 8th which was also the opening of the latest exhibit “Looking Glass”.  The atmosphere was joyous and electric.  While it retains the charm of an ‘old school’ the space is bright and open and will well serve the innovative and contemporary exhibits that curator Melanie Johnson is becoming known for.

Looking Glass Exhibit Nov 9 – Feb 25

Looking Glass, a group exhibition featuring contemporary artwork that immerses the viewer into the piece by creating their own reflection. The viewer and the space around the piece become a part of the work itself.  It was fun to view the exhibit with so many other artists and art lovers.   The exhibit will be there until Feb 25, 2018.

The opening was very festive and fun.   As a resident of Delray Beach, I felt proud that museum in the heart of downtown Delray is so progressive and attractive.  I was not too thrilled with their new policy of not serving red wine at the reception.  Really, they could just get some Mr. Clean magic erasers to clean up a spill.  This will not keep me from attending future reception there because it really is a gem of a museum.  

 

 

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