
Through the realisation of this project, we brought together our museums, in-tertwined the previous experience and knowledge of our experts, made a joint step forward in the programme activities of the educational departments and provided the opportunity for young people in Ljubljana, Vienna and Novi Sad for some new experiences through entertainment and dialogue in the museum. We present all this in the HearMe Museum Manual with the desire to encourage museum professionals throughout Europe and the world to explore new ways of thinking about their collections and their young audience.Every museum, whether small or large, more or less known or recognised as a cultural and a tourist destination, strives to achieve as much communication as pos-sible with the widest audience. Attracting young people to a museum or a gallery, offering them an attractive theme with tailored methodology was a challenge that brought together the Narodna galerija in Ljubljana, the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna and the Galerija Matice srpske in Novi Sad. Daniel Weiss helped us in finding the way with his BRICKme methodology, and our education departments successfully implemented the conceived programme in practice. We analysed the themes of the present moment that preoccupy young people on artworks from our collections. We presented them with works, listened to their thoughts and encouraged them to build, treasure and expose their attitudes through LEGO® bricks, all with the idea to show that the Museum is a place to ask questions, en-courage thinking and offer the possible answers. We have shown that the artworks from the past can be inspiring, attractive and provocative in the present to young people.
Barbara Jaki, PhD, director of the Narodna galerija Sabine Haag, PhD, general director of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien
Tijana Palkovljević Bugarski, PhD, director of the Galerija Matice srpske
In this section, we explain the structure of the HearMe training. You learn the steps.
The best-known works of art by Kobilca and Petkovšek, Summer and At Home, were painted in the same year, both depict the members of the artist’s family after she/he returned home from abroad, yet their mood and look stand in stark contrast.
The workshops focused on the life and work of three Slovenian artists, whose formative years were spent abroad in three completely different circumstances.
This workshop deals with group dynamics, their rules and modes of inclusion. In both artworks there is a leader, but with differing goals and caught up in un-equal scenarios.
The Galerija Matice srpske developed two workshops with more specific topics related to migration issues in the Serbian environment. The questions and problems we wanted young people to expose to, were:
What are the consequences of choices and decisions young people make by leaving the country in seeking a better life and education?Along five different sessions, we have explained the central concept of HearMe project.
We asked you to reflect on four fundamental questions, the same we did ourselves before starting the project.
Illustrative videos are on each section to guide you. The workshop's structure is provided as a resource to guide you.
Now is your turn to implement HearMe in your Museum/Gallery.
To design your HearMe workshop, you need to implement the following steps:
1.Decide with your team the subject and the goals of the workshop. Examples of this can be empathy, critical thinking, group dynamics, family, justice, migrations.
2.Select the paintings that match the concepts you have decided.
3.Design the questions connected to the paintings; this is very important.
4.Rehearsal the workshop with your target group profile.
5.Be open to change the piece of art and what you ask if needed.
The video recorded at the KHM in Vienna during a practical exercise is an example to guide you.
The material you will need are prints of the piece of art and LEGO bricks. In the HearMe project, we used the starter kit of LEGO SERIOUS PLAY minimum one box for two teachers or students.
How can museums and galleries reach young audiences, and make them gain insights and develop empathy?
To change the museum's way of working, means to disturb their business as usual, and have them interact with their audiences – making especially the young visitors part of the experience across their collections. To do this we need to train the trainers, speak daringly and focus on emerging global topics. By choosing works of migrants in national galleries and museums we demonstrate that migrations are not a new phenomenon: some migrants from previous centuries were artists whose works became national treasures. In the course of time also art works migrate from an author to an owner and to a museum, and from there between museums, audiences and collectors.
Culture has the power to expose what is happening around us and nourish critical thinking by supporting social values and rights. Only deep experienced culture can bring to life artworks, reveal their inherent values and provoke the dynamic interactivity of the contents and topics connecting, in our case, to the present situation with migrations and migrants.
This is the thread of this project. To let strong emotions emerge by actively engaging young audiences with societal values and create a virtual collection of their reflections about the world around them. Brick them. Make them change their viewpoint. Initiate dialogue. Augment the cultural capital. Create responsible citizens.
What the goals are:
· To build deeper relationships between youth and partner museums;
· To develop skills of museum educators for open concepts and programmes based on audience participation and involvement, most particularly the youth, considering their expectations, wishes, and needs;
· To incorporate advanced methodologies into museum training and educational programmes towards the inclusion and participation of the audience
The HearMe workshop blends several methodologies (BRICKme, Design Thinking, Gamification, Open Art Dialogue, Agile, Kanban, LEGO SERIOUS PLAY and Business Model You) and adapts them to the museum environment. In the workshop, we construct out of the physical material our own statements. Although everybody uses the same material, each model looks different. We explore the differences and similarities through critical thinking. We contextualize our positions. Everything becomes more complex and multifaceted: connections are made, relations between models are built. Our absolutist view becomes part of an intricate web. Then, a hypothetical situation arises and we have to solve it.
Who moves where? What does that mean? Who does it affect? Through teamwork we develop ingenuity and improve social skills that lead to problem solving and co-creative solutions.
Assisted by technology and mobile telephony we achieve the viral communication of processes and benefits. We connect our realizations with works of art. In the permanent collections of museums, we explore art made by migrant artists, migrant motifs and works that moved between countries, regions and peoples. Why did they move? What did they leave behind? How did they change? How would we act in a similar situation? Thus, through a series of exercises, art leaves the frame and comes to life becoming an integral part of the everyday experience, observation and open dialogue. We experience art as the catalyst for solutions to pressing social issues.
Now, we understand.
Now, we work together. Now, we hear.