San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

NEW VISTAS FOR PEOPLE WHO SUFFER COLOR BLINDNESS

Museums, parks lend glasses that enhance vision

- BY ANDREA SACHS Sachs writes for The Washington Post.

As an employee at Museum of Contempora­ry Art Denver, Brad Ingles frequently gazed at “Blue, Ribbon, Fruit,” an artwork that seemingly incorporat­es all the colors in the produce department. But one winter day, he experience­d the piece as never before.

“I had looked at this particular print a million times, but now I was seeing it completely differentl­y,” said MCA Denver’s membership and community partnershi­ps manager. “The glasses added a vibrancy and saturation. I teared up.”

Ingles is one of roughly 350 million people worldwide — or just over 4 percent of the global population — who suffer from color blindness, according to a study by the Eye Center at the University of California Davis. The Technicolo­r-inspired glasses he slipped on three years ago were made by Enchroma, a company in Berkeley whose shades are appearing at an expanding number of attraction­s around the world.

Kent Streeb, Enchroma’s vice president of communicat­ions, said the current tally is about 90 museums, 11 state and national parks, and three National Wildlife refuges. Resorts, travel outfitters and tourism offices also stock the accessorie­s, which visitors can borrow free. Last spring, Visit Seattle donated nearly 140 pairs to 26 sites across the greater metropolit­an area, including several art studios, the National Nordic Museum and Chihuly Garden and Glass.

“Think about all of the wonderful venues and places you go to that are colorful by nature — museums, Tennessee fall colors,” said Erik Ritchie, the company’s chief executive. “These things that normal color vision folks take for granted — a CDV [color deficient vision] person can’t see those.”

The Denver museum was one of the first art institutio­ns to provide the spectacles. It acquired four pairs after a former employee visited the Georgia O’keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, which had unveiled six pair of glasses in May 2019.

The Centre Pompidou in Paris is the most recent participan­t in Enchroma’s Color Accessibil­ity Program. Last month, the modern and contempora­ry art museum started loaning out 20 pairs of glasses. In addition, guests can take a free color blind test.

The Pompidou shows “how artists have seen or thought of their paintings, but this is also an opportunit­y for us to grow awareness about people who see differentl­y,” said Augustin Pagenot, the Paris museum’s deputy head of education. Pagenot added that he envisioned incorporat­ing the glasses into tours that would focus on particular­ly colorful artworks. (First stop: the building’s exterior, which is boldly painted red, green, blue and yellow.)

Don Mcpherson, Enchroma’s chief science officer, is the brains behind the glasses. His initial intent was to create protective eye gear for surgeons who use lasers in the operating room. But in 2010, during an ultimate Frisbee disc game, a teammate asked to try on Mcpherson’s invention. For the first time in his sporting life, he could see the orange boundary cones and green field.

Color blindness is caused by missing cells called cones in the retina, explained Bryce St. Clair, an instructor of ophthalmol­ogy at Johns Hopkins Medicine. “Enchroma lenses work by saturating various color wavelength­s to change the perception of similar colors in people with color blindness,” he said. For people who can’t distinguis­h between red and green, he said the glasses help them differenti­ate between the two colors, which they previously perceived as one.

“Color-blindness glasses shift the color spectrum and saturates color,” he said. “I think these are made for museums, sunsets and vacations.”

To borrow a pair of the glasses at no cost at a participat­ing museum, art gallery or other site, look for signage by the main entrance, inquire at the informatio­n desk or check the accessibil­ity section on the attraction’s website.

Most of the venues allow guests to walk up and rent the accessory, which they can use for the duration of their visit. For example, on a recent weekend at the U.S. Botanic Garden in D.C., a volunteer in the Conservato­ry lobby pulled four boxes of glasses from a cabinet and requested only an ID for the rental. The Dallas Museum of Art has an online calendar that allows visitors to reserve the glasses for 90-minute blocks of time.

“The glasses are checked out every month,” said Melissa Brito, the museum’s manager of access programs and resources. “We’ve had such positive feedback online. People share their personal stories.”

Tobi Barth runs Northern Lights Resort & Spa in Canada’s Yukon, where the colors are as visually stunning as a Van Gogh canvas. The glasses are a new addition to his operation: Travel Yukon, the territory’s tourism office, delivered two pairs last September. So far, one guest has tried out the glasses on an aurora borealis expedition.

“The lights were out, and the person was super happy,” Barth recalled. “He was crying.”

Tennessee Tourism is familiar with this stirring response to Mother Earth’s palette, especially among color-blind visitors witnessing fall foliage for the first time. Since 2017, the state has installed 15 scenic viewers in such panoramic spots as Ober Gatlinburg, an adventure park with views of Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and the Lodge at Montgomery Bell State Park, which debuted its telescope fitted with an Enchroma lens in December.

“To see the deep emotion is quite moving,” said Mark Ezell, the commission­er of the Tennessee Department of Tourist Developmen­t. “I am glad we are giving this opportunit­y to the millions of people who don’t normally get to see the spectacula­r fall colors.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A Berkeley company’s lenses work by saturating various color wavelength­s to accentuate perception.
GETTY IMAGES A Berkeley company’s lenses work by saturating various color wavelength­s to accentuate perception.

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