Subject: Signage
Karen Potje <kpotje [at] cca__qc__ca> writes >At the Canadian Centre for Architecture we are going to place "Do >Not Touch" signs near objects which are being displayed without >plexiglas covers. ... ... >Finally--does the "Do Not Touch" message work, or will people touch >anyway, given the opportunity? Many years ago I was a summer volunteer at the University of Pennsylvania Ethnological Museum. They addressed this problem in an innovative way: they opened a gallery with exhibits meant to be touched. I acted as a guide there one morning a week. It was ostensibly for the blind, and we had several school groups come through from Overbrook and other establishments, but I remember sighted people enjoying it, too. The first exhibition was on the human head: a granite Egyptian official, a bronze Roman, a New Zealand wooden effigy, a New Guinea mask, etc. etc. They were chosen for their robustness and lack of unique informational value, and treated to protect them against handling. The exhibits were round the walls, a foot or so behind a waist-height railing with a braille label--there were printed labels, too--so the 'viewer' needed only reach forward and there it was. In the middle they had a huge globe of the earth with smooth seas, sandpaper deserts (not popular) and velvet jungles (worn away quite quickly!) Another exhibit was of representations of birds. They also had an art show of works by blind artists, some of which were impressively pleasant to feel. I'm not sure this solves your problem, but it may give someone an idea. *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:4 Distributed: Tuesday, June 19, 2001 Message Id: cdl-15-4-007 ***Received on Friday, 15 June, 2001