FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: May 30, 2023
WCMA Announces ‘Construct Your Own Meaning’ Summer Series

Series Begins July 6 and Runs Through August 17

Press Contact: Rebecca Dravis, Communications Manager, 413-597-3127; [email protected]

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Williams College Museum of Art will present “Construct Your Own Meaning,” a series of summer programs that invites the community to interpret WCMA’s permanent collection installation Remixing the Hall from their unique perspectives. Borrowing a term from DJ culture, “Remixing” describes WCMA curators’ process of selecting objects from the collection that highlight multivalent correspondences between form and meaning in art.

“By giving a diverse set of people outside the museum the agency and platform to share their personal connections to artwork in our collection, we are broadening who the museum is for,” said Roz Crews, WCMA’s Associate Curator of Programs. “This series asks audiences to see relationships between disparate objects and experiences, interweaving the present and the past.”

Each event will be two hours on Thursdays throughout the summer: a 5 to 6 p.m. presentation and a 6 to 7 p.m. reception with celebratory food and drinks.

The series kicks off on July 6 with a program featuring beer inspired by artwork from WCMA’s Remixing the Hall exhibition. Artist and seasoned beer industry expert Eric Steen has invited Bright Ideas Brewing (North Adams, Mass.), Hot Plate Brewing (Pittsfield, Mass.), and Rare Form Brewing (Troy, N.Y.) to interact with the art collection, dialogue with museum staff about the collection, select one or more artworks for inspiration, and brew new beers. During the public event, Steen will give an abbreviated artist talk and open up the conversation with the participating brewers before a reception where the new art-inspired beers will be served to visitors with special glassware.

The series continues July 20 with musicians taking center stage. In collaboration with museum staff, Andrea Belair (Co-Owner of Belltower Records, North Adams, Mass.) has curated a set of musicians from a range of musical backgrounds who will each compose five- to 10-minute pieces inspired by an artwork in Remixing the Hall. Featured musicians include: Mirabel Thompson Boyer (Williamstown, Mass.), Wednesday Knudsen (Austerlitz, N.Y.), Lemuel Marc (Boston), Father Hotep (Hadley, Mass.), Luis Granda (Williamstown, Mass.), and Carlos / REC – Humble Monarch Media (Amherst, Mass.). Together the musicians will make a collective concert for the audience as they guide visitors through the exhibition. A DJ reception featuring a playlist inspired by the exhibition shared by Taraka Larson (@_taraka_ on Instagram, Wassaic, N.Y.) will follow from 6 to 7 p.m.

On August 3, a group of youths from the community will present a public tour of Remixing the Hall. Leading up to Aug. 3, WCMA will host a week-long intensive fellowship for these youths, who will get a behind the scenes look at the museum’s collection, hear about different careers in the arts, and learn various methods for interpreting artwork. At the end of the program, the fellows will give a collaborative guided tour of Remixing the Hall designed for kids and adults from their communities. Opening remarks from the fellows and tour from 5 to 6 p.m, reception featuring foods selected by the fellows in collaboration with Anne Kennedy from 6 to 7 p.m. 

The series concludes on Aug. 17 with bakers showcasing their cakes, designed and produced to interpret an artwork in Remixing the Hall. Featured artists include Edward Cabral (New York City), Cakes For No Occasion (New York City), Magnet (@heartshapedchain on Instagram, New York City), and Alli Gelles of cakes4sport (New York City). From 5 to 6 p.m., the cake artists will share about their selection and creation process alongside their creations and the artworks that inspired the cakes. From 6 to 7 p.m., there will be a reception to taste the cakes alongside iced coffee and tea.

For more information, contact the museum at 413-597-2429 or visit artmuseum.williams.edu.

WCMA is open to the public Tuesday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is free.

 

 

On View Summer 2023: 

Across Shared Waters: Contemporary Artists In Dialogue with Tibetan Art from the Jack Shear Collection
This exhibition presents works by contemporary artists of Himalayan heritage alongside traditional Tibetan Buddhist rolled paintings, or thangka, from the Jack Shear Collection, a juxtaposition that highlights the richness and diversity of Tibetan artistic expression and fosters greater understanding and appreciation of Himalayan histories and identities.
Through July 16

Object Lab
Object Lab is a hybrid gallery-classroom that visualizes the Williams College liberal arts curriculum through the museum collection.
Through December 17

Beatriz Cortez: The Portals
The Portals is an installation in multiple locations that explores alternative genealogies of Williams College, stitching together different voices that inhabited the landscape that became Western Massachusetts.
Through May 2024

Remixing the Hall
Borrowing a term from DJ culture, “Remixing” describes WCMA curators’ process of selecting objects from the collection that highlight multivalent correspondences between form and meaning in art. This ongoing exhibition of objects from the collection highlight multivalent correspondences between form and meaning in art.
Ongoing

Rheingantz x Prendergast
Brazilian artist Marina Rheingantz’s paintings explore nature and the built environment, both real and imagined. Rheingantz cites many influences, but for WCMA the most important is Maurice Brazil Prendergast. The museum has the largest holdings of Prendergast, and this exhibition places watercolors of Italy in dialogue with Rheingantz’s large-scale Vavale, a new acquisition to WCMA’s global collection.
Ongoing

Embodied Words: Reading in Medieval Christian Visual Culture
Artworks from WCMA’s collection and manuscripts from the Chapin Library demonstrate the embodied nature of reading in Christian Europe from the twelfth through the sixteenth centuries.
Ongoing

 

About Williams College Museum of Art
The Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) creates and inspires exceptional experiences with art that are integral to a liberal arts education, lifelong learning, and human connection. The Museum is a partner in nurturing the cross-disciplinary arts in support of a liberal arts education; advancing the academic and experiential preparation of arts leaders; enriching the cultural ecosystem; engaging artists; and creating a shared learning community that spurs new thinking, creative making, and civic engagement. Located on Main Street in Williamstown, Massachusetts, on the Williams College campus, the museum draws on the collaborative and multidisciplinary ethos of the surrounding college to enliven the more than 15,000 works in its growing collection. The museum is open to the public Tuesday through Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is free. For more information, visit artmuseum.williams.edu.