
First and foremost, my project is centered on art museums and the increasing need for a larger audience base. Authors and researchers have accepted the notion of a current generational gap formed in the people that choose to attend art museums. Currently, white affluent men and women over the age of 50 contribute a major portion of attendance and donations to art museums around the country. This in itself is nothing to be alarmed about. The part that is scary for the art museum industry is that there isn’t another demographic that is picking up the remaining portion. This is where my master’s project will come into play.
My project is a portfolio-based project that will be grounded in research involving a specific group (14-21 year old males and females). I will be researching the methods of creativity and social dynamics by holding six focus groups with 6-8 members of this demographic in attendance. The information provided by these as well as other research means will provide me the necessary information and insight to complete a creative brief for an advertising platform. Once this creative platform is completed, I will devise two separate advertising campaigns containing between 10 and 15 advertising print executions. I will then use my research to justify my creative executions, thus allowing for an effective method of advertisement to a previously uninterested group of individuals.
When looking through the Internet for a viable example of diversity integrating with my project topic, I came across an excerpt from Susan Donley’s book, Cultural Diversity; The Museum as Resource. I found this excerpt at http://www.learningdesign.com/Portfolio/museum/museumschool.html. Within this chapter excerpt, Donley outlines the nature of art museums. She goes into detail about their historical significance as well as their ability to teach diversity. She believes the artifacts themselves, being made by different cultures, is in itself a valid form of diversity. Pieces shown within the walls of a museum are not racially specific in nature. Each and every piece has a different beginning, middle and end. The artifacts themselves are evidence of diversity in action. Within one museum, there are thousands of artifacts, each expressing a different meaning or idea. It is this melting pot of significance that diversity is found. With each piece, a new story is told; it can be one of a middle class Caucasian woman or that of a high class African American man. The point is that art has the luxury of not being racially distinguishable. It is because of this very fact that my project integrates diversity within itself naturally. Conversation about diversity within my project is therefore unnecessary.
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