Remove Artist Remove Blog Remove Model Remove Photography
article thumbnail

Steal these 42 Creative Pinterest Ideas for Nonprofits

Care2

Add “pin it” buttons to your blog or web site so your visitors and supporters can create their own pin boards that highlight your cause. Bonus if you convince members to pin their own recipes posted on their own blogs. Pin masterpieces from the budding artists in your arts classes. Don’t just pin, repin.

Ideas 78
article thumbnail

Quick Hit: My Work with the Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History

Museum 2.0

But the point is that the MAH, like just about every other museum in the known universe, was content to define the museum experience as something removed from the outside world, a rarefied church-like space of refined artistic reflection. Her blog, "Museum 2.0," is one of the leading forces working to remake the museum experience.

Museum 31
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Guest Post: A Tale of Two University Museums

Museum 2.0

Margaret shared these thoughts about "museums for use" on her blog , and I asked her to adapt a version for the Museum 2.0 The Siskind Center gives students and the public the opportunity to pore over the photography in the Museum's large collection of works on paper. Should a museum be a destination or a place for everyday use?

Museum 37
article thumbnail

Interview with Brooklyn Museum's Shelley Bernstein

Museum 2.0

Let’s say you wanted to find a model museum using Web 2.0 A place that blogs, that engages in social networking sites, that tries experiments, and reports about all of it honestly. We saw that these artists were using the wall, then telling us about it on Flickr. We use Wordpress to power our blogs. Us on Facebook.

Museum 27
article thumbnail

Crowdsourcing: Measuring the Impact of the Crowd in Funding and Doing

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

There are four different models of crowdsourcing activities: wisdom, creation, voting, and funding. There’s isn’t one best way to do it – and many organizations use a combination of these models to meet their objectives. Brooklyn Museum implemented a crowdsourced photography exhibit experiment called “ Click!

Measure 96
article thumbnail

Why Click! is My Hero (What Museum Innovation Looks Like)

Museum 2.0

is an exhibition of photos that were submitted by open call and judged by individuals over the Web in an experiment following the collective intelligence model set forth by James Surowiecki in his book The Wisdom of Crowds. It’s not really a photography show in the way I would curate a photography show.”

Museum 20