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Where Publics May Touch
Authors:Mark Clintberg
Affiliation:Mark Clintberg lectures in the Department of Art History at Concordia University, Montreal. His research interests include collaborative practices, public art, and the unique challenges offered to collecting institutions by ephemeral, performative, and edible art practices. His most recent publication is Romantical: Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay (Owens Art Gallery). mark.clintberg@gmail.com
Abstract:ABSTRACT

In response to the unique sensory modes of blind and partially sighted communities, tactile and multisensory tours and exhibition components of museum collections are gradually becoming more common in North America and Europe. Such initiatives are often intended to give equal forms of access for diverse participating publics. This article provides an auto-ethnographic report on the tactile tours offered by The National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa) program “Stimulating the Senses,” and gives context for sensorial models at play in Western museums today. Museum strategies that encourage intersensorial awareness and access are also discussed. Attention is given to the performative properties of these tours, and the variety of encounter they encourage between publics. This article also includes accounts of the program by its supervisor and coordinator, as well as from a participant. Key questions this article explores are: do such tours in fact give equal access; what motivates the development of such programs in Canadian institutions; and what outcomes are realized through these programs?
Keywords:sensory models  tactile museum tours  public access  blind and partially sighted cultures  museum public programming
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