Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Beacons to enhance visit to Arts Center

Technology installed for Marin show

- ERIC BESSON

The Arkansas Arts Center will unveil its John Marin exhibit today alongside new technology that officials hope will give visitors a fuller viewing experience.

Small sensors installed throughout the gallery will send detailed informatio­n about the artist and his work to guests’ cellphones as they walk among Marin’s drawings and paintings.

The foray into “beacon” technology coincides with an exhibition the museum has designed with the intent to demonstrat­e it has the capacity for significan­t showings.

“This allows you to access more informatio­n without having to put it on the wall or cluttering the experience,” said Angel Galloway, the museum’s communicat­ions director and the person who coordinate­d the project. “I really don’t want you to notice [the sensors], to be honest with you.”

The Arkansas Arts Center’s use of beacons follows similar offerings across the state, including Garvan Woodland Gardens, the Little

Rock Zoo and the Fayettevil­le Roots Festival. In New York, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Metropolit­an Museum of Art also have used the sensors, Galloway said.

“Becoming John Marin: Modernist At Work” relies on 79 pieces from the the Arts Center’s extensive collection of Marin’s work — his daughter-in-law in 2013 donated 290 drawings and watercolor­s to the museum — as well as 33 pieces loaned by museums such as Crystal Bridges Museum of Modern Art, the National Gallery of Art and others.

Ann Prentice Wagner, the Arts Center’s curator of drawings, spent four years studying Marin in preparatio­n for the exhibition, billed as the first reunion of Marin’s finished watercolor­s and other paintings with their underlying sketches outside of his studio. Wagner also edited a 430-page accompanyi­ng catalog about Marin, who was deemed America’s greatest painter by a 1948 Look magazine survey of artists, curators and critics.

A dozen small, circular beacons are scattered throughout the Marin exhibit to send informatio­n about the artwork and the artist. The beacons have a radius of several feet.

One, for example, focuses on the Brooklyn Bridge. It sends to a nearby guest’s phone two paragraphs explaining how the artist used the bridge’s boardwalk as a vantage point to depict the changing Manhattan skyline and a link to more informatio­n.

Four more Marin-centric sensors are just outside the gallery in the museum’s atrium. Those welcome visitors to the exhibit, offer a comment form, a trivia question and informatio­n on Marin’s contempora­ries.

Visitors view the informatio­n through a free downloadab­le smartphone app, Beacon Sage, which relies on a Bluetooth connection to accept informatio­n sent by the sensors. The app allows people to save the informatio­n displays so that they can view them after leaving the museum.

The app draws informatio­n from a website the Arts Center launched alongside the exhibition, becomingjo­hnmarin.org. The site includes a timeline of Marin’s life and a digital map showing where, for example, he drew a specific piece. People without smartphone­s can access the informatio­n on a tablet inside the gallery.

Arts Center Executive Director Todd Herman, who praised the beacons as a “great way to give more informatio­n and a deeper experience for our visitors,” said the plan is to extend their use beyond the three-month showing.

“There are endless possibilit­ies,” he said.

Aristotle, a Little Rock company focused on Web-based business, developed the Beacon Sage app used by the Arts Center and other Arkansas organizati­ons. Carlos Lee, business developmen­t specialist at Aristotle, said the technology emerged about five years ago.

“We feel that we’re going to have an exhibit that’s going to be tailored to fit their needs,” said Lee, who worked directly with the museum ahead of the rollout.

Garvan Gardens, the University of Arkansas botanical garden in Hot Springs, introduced beacons last spring. It uses 25 sensors to link visitors with audio — narrated by a Morgan Freeman sound-alike — and explanator­y pictures while they take self-guided tours.

“It enhances the tour because it gives you the story behind what you’re seeing without having to read it on a map,” Garvan Gardens’ marketing director, Sherre Freeman, said.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE ?? Angel Galloway, director of marketing and communicat­ions for the Arkansas Arts Center, installs a beacon Wednesday at the arts center in Little Rock.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/THOMAS METTHE Angel Galloway, director of marketing and communicat­ions for the Arkansas Arts Center, installs a beacon Wednesday at the arts center in Little Rock.
 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/ THOMAS METTHE ?? Angel Galloway holds a beacon that will use Bluetooth technology to send informatio­n via a smartphone app about artwork on display in the John Marin exhibition, which opens today at the Arkansas Arts Center.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/ THOMAS METTHE Angel Galloway holds a beacon that will use Bluetooth technology to send informatio­n via a smartphone app about artwork on display in the John Marin exhibition, which opens today at the Arkansas Arts Center.

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