2021–22 Annual Report: Campus and Community Programs

Nov 14, 2022

This chapter outlines the museum's engagement with campus, public, and K–12 audiences, respectively. Section narratives detail highlights from specific program areas. 

In FY22, the Hood Museum of Art produced a range of successful programs across all public and campus audiences. Responding to goals developed over the past year, especially in relation to the museum's 2022–26 strategic plan, staff prioritized accessibility to meaningful programming for all audience sectors in terms of both content and means of delivery. Those in museum-engagement positions displayed their tenacity and flexibility by offering hundreds of in-person, virtual, and hybrid programs throughout the year. This work across numerous platforms required both retooling programs as audience needs shifted and reestablishing relationships with those audiences and collaborators who had lost touch with the museum during the pandemic.

Campus Engagement: Curricular and Co-Curricular

Curricular Engagement

The museum area of academic programming returned to business as usual this year after (and despite) the immense disruptions of the pandemic. With a full roster of classes and restored student population on Dartmouth's campus, the Bernstein Center for Object Study (BCOS) and the galleries were nearly back to normal in terms of curricular campus engagement, with a particularly high number of class visits (143) during winter term 2022. Running BCOS is a team effort that relies upon art handlers performing the core function of pulling objects, setting up rooms, monitoring classes, and putting objects away again. This year, we welcomed three new members of exhibitions preparation to the BCOS art-handler team (Molly Hoisington, Lauri Kobar, and Matthew Oates) while also relying heavily on the handling skills of our colleagues in registration (Kristie Couser, Nicki Gaumont, and Nikki Gilbert) to ensure safe access to the collection for our faculty and students. As always, the experience and expertise of Sue Achenbach, our lead preparator, were invaluable to the smooth operation of BCOS. Nikki Gilbert also stepped into a leadership role as head of exhibitions in FY22, and her partnership was key to balancing the preparators' workload between BCOS and the galleries. 
 
Winter term 2022 was also an exciting time as Professor Roberta Stewart's met her course titled "Roman Coins as Text" met entirely in BCOS, with students studying coins at each class session. The class's work culminated in a coin case installed in the Kim Gallery featuring Roman coinage and global money. The class also produced a printed brochure, a binder of extended label texts, and a website with additional information about their research. This in-depth integration between the curriculum, collections, and exhibition spaces is a key example of the museum's commitment to enhanced engagement with both faculty and students. Similarly, Art History Professor Elizabeth Kassler-Taub taught two of her courses—the prints class titled "The Viral Image" and "Living Stone: Sculpture in Early Modern Italy"—primarily in BCOS. All three of these commitments would not have been possible without the work of Center for Object Study Coordinator Randall Kuhlman and Andrew W. Mellon Associate Curator of Academic Programming Elizabeth Rice Mattison.  

This deep curricular integration continued in the spring term as Art History Professor Allen Hockley taught "Japanese Prints" entirely in BCOS; Hood Museum Curator of Indigenous Art Jami Powell taught "Native American Art and Material Culture" primarily in the museum; and on multiple occasions Anthropology Professor Nathaniel Dominy brought students from his class "The Human Spectrum" to the museum to meet with experts and view objects. 
 
Mary Desjardins, a professor in the Department of Film and Media Studies, completed a Mellon Fellowship on the Hollywood photographs from the museum's John Kobal Foundation Collection in summer 2022. She plans to offer a Mellon seminar to faculty and museum staff in the fall. 

Courses that Utilized the Hood Museum of Art and its Bernstein Center for Object Study

African and African American Studies 10.01, "Introduction to African American Studies" 
Trica Keaton 

African and African American Studies 54.05, "Feminist and Queer Africa on Stage and Screen"
Laura Edmondson

African and African American Studies 67.50, "Black Consciousness Black Feminism"
Abby Neely 

African and African American Studies 83.08, "Global Caribbean"
Chelsey Kivland

African and African American Studies 88.08, "Ethnography of Violence" 
Chelsey Kivland 
 
African and African American Studies 90.01, "Identity and Power" 
Lisa Baldez 

Anthropology 3.01, "Introduction to Cultural Anthropology" 
Sienna Craig, Chelsey Kivland 

Anthropology 7.05, "Animals and Humans" 
Laura Ogden 

Anthropology 11, "Ancient Native Americans" 
Madeleine McLeester 
 
Anthropology 12.26, "Environmental Justice" 
Maron Greenleaf 

Anthropology 28 (*See African and African American Studies 88.08) 

Anthropology 33 (*See African and African American Studies 83.08) 

Anthropology 50.05, "Environmental Archaeology" 
Madeleine McLeester

Anthropology 50.34, "Peoples of Oceania" 
Brinker Ferguson 
 
Anthropology 50.50, "Archaeology of Food" 
Jiajing Wang 

Anthropology 55.01, "Anthropology of Global Health" 
Anne Sosin 

Anthropology 73.01, "Main Currents in Anthropology" 
Sienna Craig 

Anthropology 74, "The Human Spectrum" 
Nate Dominy 

Art History 5.01, "Introduction to Contemporary Art" 
Mary Coffey, Chad Elias 
 
Art History 7.02, "Paris in the Nineteenth Century" 
Kristin O'Rourke 
 
Art History 7.05, "Pompeii: Antique and Modern" 
Steven Kangas 

Art History 10.01, "Art of Ancient Egypt and Near East" 
Steven Kangas 

Art History 12.05, "Roman Art" 
Ada Cohen 

Art History 18.01, "Ancient Art and Myth" 
Steven Kangas 

Art History 27.02, "Living Stone: Sculpture in Early Modern Italy" 
Elizabeth Kassler-Taub 

Art History 27.03, "Building Boom: Architecture and Urbanism in Early Modern Italy" 
Elizabeth Kassler-Taub 
 
Art History 28.01, "The Global Renaissance" 
Elizabeth Kassler-Taub 
 
Art History 28.05, "Art & Society in the Rococo" 
Kristin O'Rourke 

Art History 40.04, "Mexicanidad" 
Mary Coffey 

Art History 41.02, "Twentieth-Century European Art, 1900–1945" 
Katie Hornstein 
 
Art History 48.05, "Satire: Art, Politics & Critique" 
Kristin O'Rourke 

Art History 62.30, "Japanese Prints" 
Allen Hockley 

Art History 81.03, "The Viral Image" 
Elizabeth Kassler-Taub 

Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages 51.06, "Buddhism, Sexuality, and Gender in Southeast Asia" 
Sara Swenson 

Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages 62.12 (*See Art History 62.30) 
 
Classical Studies 06, "Introduction to Classical Archaeology" 
Julie Hruby 
 
Classical Studies 11.19, "Before Billboards and Twitter: Roman Coins as Text" 
Roberta Stewart 
 
Classical Studies 12.03, "Who Owns the Past?" 
Julie Hruby, Jesse Casana 
 
College Course 21, "What's in Your Shoebox?: Unpacking Your Study Abroad Experience" 
Francine A'Nesss, Mokhtar Bouba 

College Course 26, "What's in Your Toolbox?" 
Mohktar Bouba, Tania Convertini 

Economics 35, "Games and Economic Behavior" 
Christopher Adams 

Engineering 30.01, "Biological Physics" 
Kimberley Samkoe 
 
English 7.47, "Tales of the Avant-Garde" 
Andrew McCann 
 
English 52.10, "Vox Clamantis: Wilderness in Nineteenth-Century American Literature" 
Michael Chaney 
 
English 74.12, "Garden Politics" 
Melissa Zeiger 
 
Environmental Studies 7.15, "Future of Food" 
Sarah Smith 

Environmental Studies 26, "Soil Ecological Systems" 
Bala Chaudhary 

Film Studies 3.01, "Digital Arts and Culture" 
John Bell 

Film Studies 47.26, "Film and Fashion" 
Mary Desjardin 
 
French 11.01, "Intensive French" 
Kelly McConnell 
 
French 22, "Medieval and Renaissance French Literature" 
Andrea Tarnowski 

Geography 3.01, "Living with Nature" 
Christopher Sneddon, Abby Neely 
 
Geography 11.01, "Qualitative Methods" 
Abby Neely 
 
Geography 25, "Social Justice and the City" 
Erin Collins 
 
Geography 29, "Global Cities" 
Erin Collins 
 
Geography 31.01, "Postcolonial Geographies" 
Erin Collins 
 
Geography 72.01 (*See African and African American Studies 67.50) 
 
Geography 80.10, "COVID-19" 
Abby Neely 
 
German 7.06, "Diversity in the Media" 
Heidi Denzel 
 
German 7.07, "Babylon Berlin" 
Veronika Fuechtner 
 
German 10.06, "A Visual History" 
Heidi Denzel 
 
German 42.07, "Intercultural Communication" 
Heidi Denzel 
 
Government 84.06 (*See African and African American Studies 90.01) 
 
Government 86.43, "Intellectual History of Racism" 
Michelle Clarke, Jonathan Smolin 

History 7.19, "Medieval Paris" 
M. Cecilia Gaposchkin 
 
History 7.32, "Civil War Photographs" 
Robert Bonner 
 
History 13.01 (*See Classical Studies 12.03) 
 
History 15.01, "American Indian and Expansion: 1800–1924" 
Colin Calloway 
 
History 38.02, "Lewis and Clark in Indian Country" 
Colin Calloway 
 
History 63.02, "Material Culture of Science" 
Whitney Robles 
 
History 87.01, "Culture and Identity in Modern Mexico" 
Bryan Winston 
 
History 94.16 (*See Classical Studies 11.19) 
 
History 96.01, "Colonialism and Culture in Asia and Africa" 
Douglas Haynes 
 
History 96.39, "Saints and Material Devotion" 
M. Cecilia Gaposchkin 
 
Italian 3.01, "Introduction to Italian III" 
Damiano Benvegnu 
 
Italian 14, "Journey to Italy: An Introduction to Italian Culture" 
Tania Convertini 
 
Italian 23, "Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Italian Literature" 
Nancy Canepa 

Jewish Studies 4, "The Religion of Israel: The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)" 
Susan Ackerman 
 
Latin American / Caribbean Studies 9.01, "Global Race x Global Migration" 
Jorge Cuellar, Mingwei Huang 

Latin American / Caribbean Studies 30.09 (*See Art History 40.04) 

Latin American / Caribbean Studies 38.01 (*See African and African American Studies 83.08) 
 
Latin American / Caribbean Studies 80.02 (*See African and African American Studies 90.01) 
 
Latin 2, "Introductory Latin II" 
Jenny Lynn, Patrick Glauthier, Bryce Walker, Simone Oppen 
 
Latino American Studies 3, "Introduction to Latino Studies" 
Marcela Di Blasi 
 
Latino American Studies 5, "Complexities of Latinidad" 
Marcela Di Blasi 
 
Middle Eastern Studies 12.14 (*See Government 86.43) 
 
Music 3.02, "American Music: Covers, Theft, and Musical Borrowing" 
Richard Beaudoin 
 
Music 3.06, "Sound Relations: Indigenous Musical Perspectives" 
Sunaina Kale 
 
Music 38.01, "Noise: Liberation in Sound" 
Cesar Alvarez 
 
Music 42, "Early Classical Music" 
Richard Beaudoin 
 
Music 99, "Proseminar" 
Richard Beaudoin 
 
Native American Studies 8, "Perspectives in Native American Studies" 
Vera Palmer 

Native American Studies 11 (*See Anthropology 11) 
 
Native American Studies 15.01 (*See History 15.01) 

Native American Studies 30.21, "Native American Art and Material Culture" 
Jami Powell 

Native American Studies 30.24 (*See Music 3.06) 

Native American Studies 38.01 (*See History 38.02) 
 
OSHER, "European Manuscript and Print Culture (1300–1600)" 
Daniel Abosso 
 
Philosophy 1.11, "Art: True, Beautiful, Nasty" 
Jacob McNulty 
 
Physics 30.01 (*See Engineering 30.01) 

Portuguese 8, "Brazilian Portraits" 
Carlos Cortez-Minchillo 
 
Psychological and Brain Sciences 7.03, "Science and Pseudoscience" 
John Pfister 
 
Religion 2.01, "Religions of Southeast Asia" 
Sara Swenson 
 
Religion 4 (*See Jewish Studies 4) 
 
Religion 41.07 (*See Asian Societies, Cultures, and Languages 51.06) 

Religion 43.01, "Buddhism in American" 
Reiko Ohnuma 

Sociology 2.01, "Social Problems" 
Kristin Smith 
 
Spanish 20.02, "Writing and Reading: A Critical and Cultural Approach" 
Israel Reyes 
 
Spanish 65.15, "Cameras and Crisis" 
Martin Broner 
 
Speech 20.02, "Public Speaking" 
Svetlana Grushina 
 
Speech 36.01, "Sustainability Rhetoric" 
Svetlana Grushina 
 
Studio Art 15, "Drawing I" 
Karol Kawiaka, Jack Wilson 
 
Studio Art 16, "Sculpture I" 
Matt Seigle, William Ransom 

Studio Art 17.08, "Digital Drawing" 
Karol Kawiaka 
 
Studio Art 20, "Drawing II" 
Jen Caine, Oona Gardner 

Studio Art 23.01, "Figure Sculpture" 
Margaret Jacobs 
 
Studio Art 25, "Painting I" 
Viktor Witkowski, Tom Ferrara 
 
Studio Art 27, "Printmaking I" 
Jen Caine, Tricia Treacy 
 
Studio Art 28, "Printmaking II" 
Jen Caine, Tricia Treacy 

Studio Art 30, "Photography II" 
Virginia Beahan 

Studio Art 31, "Painting II" 
Colleen Randall, Tom Ferrara 

Studio Art 65, "Architecture I" 
Karol Kawiaka 
 
Studio Art 71, "Drawing III" 
Jen Caine, Oona Gardner 

Studio Art 72, "Painting III" 
Colleen Randall, Tom Ferrara 

Studio Art 74, "Printmaking III" 
Jen Caine 
 
Studio Art 75, "Photography III" 
Virginia Beahan 
 
Studio Art 76, "Senior Seminar" 
Enrico Riley 
 
Theater 10.08, "Creativity and Collaboration" 
Melinda Evans, Daniel Kotlowitz 

Theater 10.64 (*See African and African American Studies 54.05) 
 
Theater 21, "Race, Gender, Performance" 
Laura Edmondson 
 
Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies 3.01 (*See Latin American / Caribbean Studies 9.01) 

Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies 10.01 
Doug Moody, Francine A'Ness 

Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies 37.03 (*See Geography 25) 
 
Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies 42.05 (*See African and African American Studies 88.08) 

Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies 59.04 (*See Theater 21) 

Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies 66.09 (*See African and African American Studies 67.50) 

Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies 66.15 (*See African and African American Studies 54.05) 
 
Writing 3, "Composition and Research II" 
Doug Moody 
 
Writing 5, "Reviewing Ourselves: Critical Writing and Personal Values" 
William Craig 
 
Writing 5.31, "Representing Immigrants" 
Melissa Zeiger 

Writing 7.28, "Team Communication and Identity" 
Svetlana Grushina 

Museum Collecting 101 

In FY22, Alisa Swindell, the museum's associate curator of photography, led students through the first in-person "Museum Collecting 101" class since 2019. After reviewing offerings based around the theme of "Touching History," students chose to acquire Tseng Kwong Chi's photographic self-portrait San Francisco, California (shown below), 1979, for the collection.

Co-curricular Engagement

Before fall term 2021 even started, the museum welcomed several groups into the galleries: the First Year Student Enrichment Program (FYSEP), First Year Trips, the women's field hockey team, and international students participating in Dartmouth's preorientation activities. While these groups worked with Hood Museum staff to create customized experiences at the museum, a shared, overarching goal of it all was community building, something that is critically important to the museum's strategic vision and to students beginning a new academic year.  

Various groups also engaged with the museum by participating in our escape room games: the Assyrian Relief Escape Room Challenge, which takes place in-person and focuses on the Hood Museum's six Assyrian reliefs, and the Escape to the Outdoors, a digital game that highlights Dartmouth's campus sculpture collection. Staff from the Office of Pluralism and Leadership (OPAL) and the Advancement Office, as well as students in the Allen and School Houses, all played along. 

This past year, we also witnessed the rise in popularity of a relatively new programming format: temporary, pop-up exhibitions in the Bernstein Center for Object Study. Lasting about two hours, these mini-exhibitions allow for informal visitation and discussion, bringing students and Dartmouth community members together for topical conversations. Working with OPAL, the Dartmouth Rude Mechanicals theater group, the South Asian Studies Collective, and the Middle Eastern and North African Student Association (MENA), museum staff created unique pop-ups throughout the year featuring objects relating to, for example, Blackness, queerness, colonialism and trade in South Asian art, and the aesthetics of the Art Deco movement.  

The Hood Museum staff was also proud to participate in campus-wide efforts such as the Explore the Arts orientation event, the Human Resources Student Appreciation Fair, the Counseling Center's Unwind Your Mind gathering, and Student Involvement's Class of 2025 Family Weekend, all which were held in-person in FY22. 

Last but not least, spring term 2022 brought exciting engagement opportunities with the newly admitted students of the Class of 2026 and their families, who came to several tours hosted throughout the month of April, and a bittersweet, congratulatory farewell to the graduating Class of 2022, whom we toasted during a lively Mimosas at the Museum event attended by over five hundred visitors.

Museum Club 

After a full year of virtual meetings in FY21, the Museum Club was finally able to gather in person again starting in fall 2021. The excitement was palpable each week as members gathered over pizza in the Hood Museum's conference room to learn about museum practice and generate new ideas for student engagement. 

Now in its fourth year, the club was faced with an interesting challenge. How would it return to prepandemic projects, such as the once-a-term Hood After 5 student party, while sustaining successful initiatives from its remote-engagement year, such as its new committee structure and the Alumni in the Arts webinar series? The solution was to assign committees to both in-person and virtual projects, including Hood After 5 and Alumni in the Arts, as well as whatever else the members might be interested in. 

Hood After 5 parties were hosted in the fall, winter, and spring terms, bringing to the museum a lively mix of music, entertainment, and interactive activities. Throughout the year, the club's committees also organized riddle hunts, gallery chats, art-making stations, and more. The Dartmouth student newspaper even covered the winter 2022 event that highlighted the exhibition This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World (see the list of media highlights elsewhere in this report).

The Alumni in the Arts committees experimented with different formats. In the fall, the students hosted a hybrid event at which speakers James Nachtwey '70, award-winning photojournalist, and Anna Serotta '03, object conservator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Zoomed into a conversation with a live student audience in the museum's Gilman Auditorium. In the spring, the students opted for a more informal gathering, so Liz Tunick Cedar '05, Manager of Global Cultural Sustainability Programs in the Office of International Relations at the Smithsonian Institution, Zoomed into a Museum Club meeting catered by Trail Break Tacos.

Other highlights of the year include a student-written Meet the Artwork email campaign and student-designed "Hood hoodies" clothing that featured Joel Shapiro's well-known Dartmouth sculpture Untitled (1989–90). In a very special weekly meeting, the students met with visiting Montgomery Fellow Diego Romero and his partner, Cara Romero, in the galleries, where the artists spoke about their work on view in the exhibition Unbroken: Native American Ceramics, Sculpture, and Design.

FY22 Museum Club Members

Kaitlyn Anderson '24 
Emily Andrews '22 
Katherine Arrington '24 
Sabrina Barton '24 
Margaret Davidson '23 
Cristal De La Cruz '22 
Cleo De Rocco '24 
Samantha Fried '22 
Maclean Hadden '25 
Chloe Jung '23 
Caitlyn King '24 
Emily Levonas '24 
Justin Lewis '25 
Ellie Mclaughlin '25 
Peter Mikhlin '23 
Sheila Milon '22
Bridget Parker '23
Nathan Savo '24 
Abigail Smith '23 
Emma Troost '24
Carly Walther-Porino '25 
Junying Wang '23 
Sadie Weil '25 
Amy Zaretsky '23 
Brian Zhang '24 

Programs for Dartmouth Student Groups, Dartmouth Faculty and Staff, and Hood Museum Affiliates

July 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 13, 14, 15, 17, 21, 22, 23, 28
Tiny Visits with Visitor Services Guides

August 14
Facilitated Experience: First Year Student Enrichment Program (FYSEP) with Abby Smith '23

August 23
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Field Hockey Team

September 1 
Native Indigenous Student Preorientation Breakfast and Tour 

September 1 
Unfacilitated Experience: International Student Preorientation  

September 4 
First Year Trip: Museum Exploration 

September 9 
Explore the Arts Marketplace  
The Hood Museum staffed a table to welcome incoming students to Dartmouth.  

September 11 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Class of 1956 

September 11 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Class of 1951 
 
September 14 
Facilitated Experience: Undergraduate Admissions Tour Guides Presentation 
 
September 17 
Virtual Facilitated Experience: Geisel School of Medicine Fall Reunion 
 
September 23 
Reception: Middle Eastern North African Student Association 
 
September 27 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Class of 1955 Minireunion 
 
October 8 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Writer's Society 
 
October 8 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Class of 1971 
 
October 8 
Facilitated Experience: Geisel School of Medicine, Dermatology  
 
October 14 
Hood After 5 

October 14 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Advancement Family Weekend Programs 
 
October 28 
Facilitated Experience: Geisel School of Medicine, Humanities  
 
October 29 
Unfacilitated Experience: Dartmouth Japan Society 
 
November 3 
Queer History Celebration: Art Viewing and Discussion 
Queer Art Pop-Up exhibition in BCOS hosted in collaboration with OPAL's annual Queer History Celebration.  
 
November 4 
Alumni in the Arts: Photography and Conversation 
James Nachtwey '70, award-winning photojournalist, and Anna Serotta '03, object conservator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, spoke about their work, how their time at Dartmouth influenced their career paths, and the trends they are seeing in their respective fields. Sponsored by the Museum Club.  
 
November 10 
Unfacilitated Experience: Institutional Diversity and Equity Conversation Group 
 
November 15 
Facilitated Experience: School House and Allen House Escape Room 
 
November 18 
Unfacilitated Experience: Allen House Study Break 
 
November 19 
Facilitated Experience: Rockefeller Board of Trustees Group 
 
December 2 
Facilitated Experience: Winterim Assyrian Relief Escape Room Challenge 
 
December 6 
Facilitated Experience: Counseling Center Staff  

December 8 
Facilitated Experience: Dickey Center 
  
December 15 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Center for Social Impact 

January 2 
Facilitated Experience: Geisel School of Medicine, Training the Eye 
 
January 13 
Facilitated Experience: Office of Visa and Immigration Services 
 
January 22 
Customized Engagement: Geisel School of Medicine, Training the Eye 
 
January 24 
Facilitated Experience: Escape to the Outdoors with Advancement Staff 
 
January 25 
Escorted Experience: Sugarplum Dance Group Photoshoot 
 
February 1 
Facilitated Experience: Italian Language Living, Learning Community 
 
February 4 
Facilitated Experience: Escape to the Outdoors with Advancement Staff 
 
February 5 
Facilitated Experience: Programming Intern Wellness Program 
 
February 9 
Facilitated Experience: South House Exhibition Tour of This Land 
 
February 10 
Customized Engagement: Geisel School of Medicine, Engaging the Senses 

February 15 
Facilitated Experience: Dickey Center  
 
February 17 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth Center for Social Impact 
 
February 18 
Hood After 5 
 
February 23 
Unfacilitated Experience: OSHER Class 
 
February 24
Learning to Look training workshop for medical students who work with the elderly in assisted living facilities

March 2 
Unfacilitated Experience: OSHER Class 
 
March 31 
Facilitated Experience: A Space for Dialogue Private Tour with Alice Crow '22 
 
April 1 
Facilitated Experience: Thayer School of Engineering Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Community Engagement Tour of This Land 
 
April 6, 7, 13, 14, 20, 21, 27, 28 
Facilitated Experience: Admitted Students and Families Tour 
 
April 8 
Facilitated Experience: Escape Room with the Young Professionals at Dartmouth Group 
 
April 11 
Facilitated Experience: Class of 2026 Discover Dartmouth: Access Days 
 
April 15 
Facilitated Experience: New Tour Guide Presentation 
 
April 19 
Facilitated Experience: Undergraduate Admissions: Discover Dartmouth  
 
April 28 
Unfacilitated Experience: North Park Writing Experience 
Campus Engagement Manager Isadora Italia hosted a writing workshop for six attendees of In the Moment: Recent Work by Louise Hamlin
 
April 28 
Hood After 5 
 
April 29 
Facilitated Experience: Dartmouth College Ecology, Evolution, Environment, and Society Graduate Program 
 
April 30 
Customized Engagement: Geisel School of Medicine, Training the Eye 
 
May 4 
Unfacilitated Experience: OSHER Class 
 
May 5 
Unfacilitated Experience: OSHER Class 
 
May 6 
Facilitated Experience: Photography's Afterlives Conference Artist + Student Lunch 
Artists Mirta Kupferminc, Sandra Ramos, Lorie Novak, and Susan Meiselas joined students following their visit to the Hood Museum for a private lunch event. 
 
May 10 
Facilitated Experience: Office of Institutional Diversity and Equity Book Club  
 
May 11 
Facilitated Experience: South Asian Studies Collective Event 
 
May 11 
Unfacilitated Experience: OSHER Class 
 
May 12 
Unfacilitated Experience: OSHER Class 
 
May 12 
Unfacilitated Experience: Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center Pacific Asian Heritage Group 
 
May 13 
Facilitated Experience: French Language Living and Learning Community 

May 13 
Facilitated Experience: Tour for Dartmouth Aires 
 
May 14 
Facilitated Experience: Private Film Project  
Emily Charland '22 invited a small group of students into the galleries and gave them a prompt. Afterwards, the students were asked to create a short film based on works in the galleries. The students then developed their projects at the Black Family Visual Arts Center.  

May 18 
Unfacilitated Experience: OSHER Class 

May 28 
Facilitated Experience: Book Arts Program 
Students were invited to a hands-on workshop for stitching books. 

June 8 
Facilitated Experience: Assyrian Relief Escape Room with OPAL Staff 

June 10 
Mimosas at the Museum 
Event celebrating graduating seniors and Hood Museum senior interns during commencement. Open to students and their families.  

June 13 
Facilitated Experience: Class of 1971 

June 14 
Facilitated Experience: Class of 1970 

June 18 
Facilitated Experience: Reunion Public Art Tour with John Stomberg 
A walking public art tour was offered to all visitors on campus for reunion events. 

June 18
Facilitated Experience: Class of 1977

Intern Engagement

Staff was delighted to welcome interns back into the museum's office space in FY22, which saw fifteen interns working on a variety of projects ranging from object research to programming and engagement. 
 
Emily Andrews '22, Homma Family Intern, worked closely with Jami Powell, the museum's curator of Indigenous art, to research and update NAGPRA (the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act) inventories with the aim of affiliating all unidentified human remains in the collection with their appropriate tribal nations. Concurrently, she worked to create lists of all objects that may be of interest to these tribes and set about producing PDFs with information surrounding the most relevant objects in the hopes of streamlining the consultation process, should additional information on these objects be requested. After her graduation in June 2022, Emily transitioned to a full-time staff position at the museum as its NAGPRA research assistant. 
 
Yliana Beck '22, Conroy Intern, created her A Space for Dialogue exhibition A DREAM Deferred: Undocumented Immigrants and the American Dream using prints and photographs from the collection including a new acquisition by Karla Rosas. While researching her objects, she also spoke directly with artist Oscar Magallanes. Yliana also worked on the audio labels for This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World.  
 
Emily Charland '19, Erbe Intern, curated her A Space for Dialogue exhibition, Journeys Beyond: Faces and Forms of Pilgrimage
 
Amy Zaretsky '23, Conroy Intern, curated her A Space for Dialogue exhibition, Nothing Gold Can Stay, which centered on the theme of grief.  
 
Working with Hood Foundation Curator of Education Neely McNulty, programming interns Emily Charland and Amy Zaretsky supported educational initiatives and developed their own programs for Dartmouth students throughout the year. They contributed to the audio labels for This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World (the first of their kind at the Hood Museum), which entailed learning interviewing and editing techniques very quickly and coordinating schedules with label contributors. Later in the fall, they participated in an art-making project at the Hop's annual Hop-O-Ween event. Additionally, they led two stress-relief maker sessions in the Russo Atrium, Zen Zines and Stitch and Sketch, where students made zines connected to exhibitions and stitch-and-collage pamphlet books. In conjunction with the John Kobal Foundation Collection exhibition, they planned and led a filmmaking program titled "Reel Time at the Hood," in which students first learned about Hollywood photography and then made short films in pairs in the galleries and developed those films at BVAC (Black Family Visual Arts Center). Lastly, the programming interns gave highlight tours and supported the spring Family Day event. 
 
Alice Crow '22, Levinson Intern, worked with the Museum Club, solving problems around COVID restrictions, leading committee groups, and serving as a liaison between club members and the museum staff. She also designed event posters and created materials for art-making activities. Her A Space for Dialogue exhibition, Transcendent Landscapes: Abstracting Nature, featured work by painters Rebecca Purdum and Colleen Randall. Toward the end of the academic year Alice began giving tours, some of which featured her exhibition and others the museum more broadly. 
 
Malia Chung-Paulson '24, Class of 1954 Intern, was the Native American and Indigenous arts intern supervised by Curator of Indigenous Art Jami Powell. She worked closely with museum and library staffers Richel Cuyler and Jess Pena to digitize the Gordan Day Papers held at Rauner Library in order to provide the Abenaki community with wider access to these resources. 
 
Lydia Davis '23, Souls Grown Deep Intern, worked with Alexandra Thomas, the Hood Museum's curatorial research associate. Lydia researched and wrote about works the museum acquired through the Souls Grown Deep foundation, including a quilt by Gee's Bend quilter Louisiana Bendolph. 
 
Clay Foye '22, a summer intern, assisted with handling, numbering, and cataloging the John Kobal Foundation Collection of Hollywood photographs. He also assisted with Professor Mary Desjardin's Mellon Fellowship. 
 
Chloe Jung '23, Class of 1954 Intern, worked with Hood Museum Director John Stomberg. She wrote over a half a dozen curatorial reports for new acquisitions, including one for the new bronze bust of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. by John Wilson destined for the renovated Dartmouth Hall, and another for a tooled leather painting by Wilfred Rembert. Chloe's A Space for Dialogue exhibition, Coloring the Western Canon, featured a spectacular work by Jacob Hashimoto in conversation with a global array of pieces by Guatemalan, Indigenous Australian, Native American, and Beninese artists. 
 
Devon Kurtz '20, a curatorial intern with Professor Julie Hruby, identified and photographed ancient Roman lamps in the museum's collection. Devon then wrote brief informational paragraphs for the museum's internal catalog to be used for future reference. 
 
Peter Mikhlin '23, Erbe Intern, coauthored an article with Professor Robert Welsch identifying and explaining the iconography in the museum's collection of Sepik River objects from Papua New Guinea. Focusing on the domestic hooks, Peter worked to develop a theory concerning the purpose of their decoration. The project was a result of a class visit to the Bernstein Center for Object Study. 
 
Mikalia Ng '22, Levinson Intern, planned the annual Native and Indigenous Fashion Show, which included developing marketing materials, collaborating with campus and student partners, and directing the show. She also collaborated with Curator Jami Powell and her fellow interns to develop a children's coloring book for Dartmouth's annual Powwow festival that featured work from the museum's collection. 
 
Jessica Pena, Erbe Intern, digitized the hardcopy files of each object related to the course, "Who Owns the Past?" taught by Professor Julie Hruby and Professor Jesse Casana. These files were shared on a Google Drive so that students and professors could discuss the objects in their classroom lectures rather than scheduling multiple visits to the museum.  
 
Kylie Romeros '22, Conroy Intern, completed object-based research in connection with Professor Roberta Stewart's course, "Before Billboards and Twitter: Roman Coins as Text," which met in BCOS for each class session during the winter term. Kylie also helped developed a Wordpress site for supplemental resources as a part of the coin case installation Money Talks on view in Kim Gallery.  
 
Abigail Smith '23, Conroy Intern, worked with Amelia Kahl, curator of academic programming, on various curatorial projects including cataloguing a new acquisition of Henri Daumier prints. Her A Space for Dialogue exhibition, Southern Gothic, explored the complexities of the region she calls home.

Public Programs: Highlights

In keeping with last year's priorities, public programs foregrounded initiatives that support diversity, equity, accessibility, and inclusion (DEAI) goals across all audiences, both in-person and using hybrid and virtual platforms.

Throughout summer 2021, programs remained entirely virtual. As a part of the monthly Virtual Conversation and Connections series, regional, national, and international audiences engaged with artists, including María Magdalena Compos-Pons, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, and Anita Fields. Interns gave public gallery talks for their A Space for Dialogue exhibitions, and Hood Museum Director John Stomberg presented portrait photography from the Bernstein Family Collection. Final virtual programs were two Spotlight on Public Art at Dartmouth programs focused on Allan Houser's Peaceful Serenity sculpture and Ellsworth Kelly's Dartmouth Panels, respectively.

In the fall, the museum transitioned to in-person public programming, beginning with a public reopening celebration. Scholars brought their insights to Hood Museum collections: Harvard Professor Melissa McCormick lectured on traditional Japanese art from the Bernstein Family Collection and filmmaker/historian Kevin Brownlow Zoomed in from Britain to speak about the John Kobal Foundation Collection of Hollywood photographs. In a fascinating conversation about the intersection between art and physics, the Dr. Allen W. Root Lecture brought artist Julie Mehretu together with Ugochukwu-Smooth Nzewi, the Steven and Lisa Tananbaum Curator, Department of Painting and Sculpture, The Museum of Modern Art, and Marcelo Gleiser, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Appleton Professorship of Natural Philosophy, and Director, Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Engagement, Dartmouth. Focusing on her exhibition in the Hood Museum, former Dartmouth Studio Art Professor Louise Hamlin gave a public talk about her artistic engagement with regional landscapes through painting, printmaking, and drawing. The Conversations and Connections series featured a discussion of the work of African American artist Thornton Dial, a dialogue with Chemehuevi artist Cara Romero, and a talk with former Diversifying Art Museum Leadership Initiative (DAMLI) Native American Art Interns who gave curatorial overviews of their exhibition Unbroken: Native American Ceramics, Sculpture, and Design

A spring 2022 public program highlight was the milestone convening "Re-envisioning Histories of American Art," held in conjunction with the Hood Museum exhibition This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World. The convening explored how museums are challenging, rethinking, and expanding traditional definitions of "American" art through a day of public panels with curators, professors, artists, and fellows from across the country who are contributing to a forthcoming publication on the subject.

Community-based, in-person workshops and public tours were reintroduced in the fall, and attendance climbed steadily during the year. They included registered program series Maker Night, Expressive Writing, Storytime in the Galleries, and family workshops. The newly returned drop-in public tours were in great demand, and we held a small but successful Family Day in the spring. Maker Drop-In was introduced in the atrium as an option for those who want to sit at a table full of art materials and work independently.

To broaden accessibility, larger programs were held in a hybrid format, a practice that will continue. We used auto-generated captioning for all online programs and contracted remote live-captioning services for major in-person programs such as symposia and endowed lectures, providing improved accuracy in real time for our livestreaming audiences. Some student-centered programming, such as A Space for Dialogue gallery talks and the annual Indigenous People's Fashion show, will continue as in-person, livestreamed programs. 

Public, campus, and community programs

July 7 
Virtual Conversations and Connections: One Artist, Two Objects, Many Approaches
Artist María Magdalena Campos-Pons and staff members Amelia Kahl and Vivian Ladd discussed the varied ways audiences can engage with Campos-Pons's work. 
 
July 15 
Virtual Adult Workshop: Expressive Writing Workshop 
This workshop fused explorations of works of art with fun and meaningful expressive writing exercises. Facilitated by Joni B. Cole, Hood Museum education staff, author, and founder of the Writer's Center of White River Junction. 
 
August 4 
Conversations and Connections: Exploring the Narrative—A Discussion with Artist Jaune Quick-to-See Smith 
In conversation with Curator Jami Powell, artist Jaune Quick-to-See Smith discuss her life's work and gift for storytelling, which often manifests in her work as an exploration of ancestral knowledge in relationship to current issues. 
 
August 5 
Hood Highlights Tour: Staff Led

August 11 
Virtual A Space for Dialogue Gallery Talk: Process, Product, and Black Practice 
Process, product, and practice. Turiya Adkins '20 discussed her A Space for Dialogue exhibition, which investigated these three P's and their intersections with African American artists. An artist herself, Adkins's 2020–21 show was an exploration into how the Black experience informs Black artists' use of their materials. 
 
August 12 
Hood Highlights Tour: Staff Led 
 
August 18 
Virtual Spotlight on Public Art at Dartmouth: Peaceful Serenity by Allan C. Houser 
In this program, audiences explored Peaceful Serenity (1992), a life-size bronze-plated-steel figural sculpture by Allan C. Houser (Chiricahua Apache, 1914–1994). Following a brief pre-recorded introduction, Curator Jami Powell spoke with David Rettig '75, curator of collections for the Allan Houser Foundation, followed by a live Q&A. 
 
August 19 
Hood Highlights Tour: Staff Led 
 
August 26 
Hood Highlights Tour: Staff Led 
 
September 11 
Storytime in the Galleries: Outdoor Sculpture 
Through facilitated engagement and art-making activities, kids ages 4–5 and their adult caregivers explored two outdoor sculptures, X Delta by Mark di Suvero, and Wide Babelki Bowl by Ursula von Rydingsvard. 
 
September 11 
Family Workshop: From Chainsaws to Cranes 
Through facilitated engagement and art-making activities, kids ages 6–9 and their adult caregivers explored two outdoor sculptures, X Delta by Mark di Suvero, and Wide Babelki Bowl by Ursula von Rydingsvard. 
 
September 18 
Fall Opening Celebration 
A celebratory reintroduction to the Hood Museum of Art featuring open galleries, an a cappella performance, button-making, raffles, and live music. 
 
September 22 
Virtual Public Gallery Talk: Both Sides of the Lens; Portrait Photography 
Featuring portraits collected by Raph and Jane Bernstein, Hood Museum Director John Stomberg gave a talk that considered the special balance of creative powers required between portraitists and their subjects. 
 
September 23 
Adult Workshop: Expressive Writing Workshop 

September 25 
Hood Highlights Tour: Staff Led 
 
September 30 
Virtual Adult Workshop: Expressive Writing Workshop 

October 6 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 
 
October 9 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 
 
October 13 
Virtual Conversations and Connections: So Many Ways to Be Human; Artist Anita Fields 
Artist Anita Fields, Hopkins Center for the Arts Director and Ceramics Instructor Jenny Swanson, and Curator Jami Powell discussed works by Fields in the exhibition Form and Relation: Contemporary Native Ceramics
 
October 20 
Virtual A Space for Dialogue Gallery Talk: Images of Disability 
Intern Maeve McBride '20 presented her exhibition Images of Disability which examined how artists with and without disabilities have approached the subject.  
 
October 21 
Third Annual Indigenous Peoples' Fashion Show 
The public was invited to join this celebration of Indigenous fashion, creativity, expression, and design. This program was cosponsored by Native Americans at Dartmouth, Hōkūpa`a, the Native American Program, and the Hood Museum of Art. 

October 22 
Lecture
A Legacy for Learning: Traditional Japanese Art from the Bernstein Family Collection 

October 23 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 

October 28 
Conversations and Connections: Thornton Dial: The Tiger Cat 
A discussion between John Stomberg, the Virginia Rice Kelsey 1961s Director of the Hood Museum of Art, and Alexandra Thomas, curatorial research associate, about three new expressive works by pioneering African American artist Thornton Dial.  

November 3 
Virtual Spotlight on Public Art at Dartmouth: Ellsworth Kelly Panels 
 
November 6 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 

November 12 
The Dr. Allen W. Root Contemporary Art Distinguished Lectureship
In Conversation with Julie Mehretu: An Artist's Voice
A program panel featuring Julie Mehretu, artist, Ugochukwu-Smooth Nzewi, Steven and Lisa Tananbaum Curator, Department of Painting and Sculpture, The Museum of Modern Art, and Marcelo Gleiser, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Dartmouth College. 
 
November 17 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 
 
December 1 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 

December 11 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 
 
January 12 and 19 
Exhibition Tours
This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World 
Jami Powell, curator of Indigenous art, and Michael Hartman, Jonathan Little Cohen associate curator of American art, introduced This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World, which explores responses to the natural world by diverse American artists working from the early nineteenth century to the present.  
 
January 14 
A Space for Dialogue Gallery Talk: Southern Gothic 
Intern Abigail Smith presented her A Space for Dialogue exhibition, Southern Gothic, which explored the complex and often macabre world of the Southeastern United States in the context of racial tensions, Reconstruction, the Great Depression, and the ghostly remains of the Antebellum era.  
 
January 22 
Hood Highlights Tour: Staff Led 
 
January 27 
Adult Workshop
This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World 
In this discussion-based, interactive workshop facilitated by Teaching Specialist Vivian Ladd and Hood Foundation Curator of Education Neely McNulty, participants explored objects by Native and non-Native artists featured in This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World
 
February 5 
Facilitated Experience: Programming Interns Wellness Program
Programming Interns led participants in a Zine-making activity. 
 
February 9 
Conversations and Connections: Artist Cara Romero 
Artist Cara Romero and Curator of Indigenous art Jami Powell discussed Romero's 2015 Water Memories series and her photographic practice within the exhibition This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World

February 16 
Exhibition Tour: This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World 
An introduction to This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World. Led by co-curators Jami Powell and Michael Hartman. 

February 17 
Manton Foundation Annual Orozco Lecture: Emiliano Zapata, a Revolutionary Icon for Mexico and the United States 
Speaker Luis Vargas-Santiago of the Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, explored how popular representations of the Mexican Revolution by agrarian leader Emiliano Zapata (1879–1919) have moved freely across national boundaries through a "visual diaspora," causing political, social, and cultural repercussions. He also reflected on the key role that American expatriates had in promoting and commodifying Mexico's art and imageries internationally. 

February 24 
Winter Opening 

February 26 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 
 
March 2 
Conversations and Connections: Sustenance 
Professor Jorge Cuéllar and Curator Jami Powell considered the diversity of "American" relationships with corn as a food staple. 
 
March 3 
Virtual Inaugural John Kobal Lecture: The Great Collector 
Acclaimed filmmaker and film historian Kevin Brownlow shared the story of the almost accidental way John Kobal's collection of film stills was formed and how it expanded to become one of the finest held in private hands. Presented in conjunction with the Hood Museum's exhibition Photographs from Hollywood's Golden Era: The John Kobal Foundation Collection
 
March 10 
Virtual Adult Workshop: Expressive Writing Workshop 

March 11 
Maker Drop In: Unfacilitated Art Making in the Atrium 
Materials theme: Washi tape collage. 
 
March 16 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 

March 24 
Maker Night: On the Edge 
Special guest artist Louise Hamlin joined this Maker Night. The effects of art—emotional, metaphorical, and historical—are much discussed, but how artists actually create those effects is not. One of the often-unobserved ingredients of art is the edge. Taking inspiration from her current exhibition, Hamlin taught participants ways to manipulate the edge with pencil, charcoal, and pastel.  
 
April 2
Hood Highlights Tour: Staff Led  

April 7 
Convening: Re-Envisioning Histories of American Art  
Reception followed in the Russo Atrium.

April 8 
Convening: Author Workshops 
Small, private group workshops for convening catalogue contributors.  

April 9 
Hood Highlights Tour: Intern Led 

April 13 
A Space for Dialogue Gallery Talk: Transcendent Landscapes 
Intern Alice Crow '22 presented her exhibition, which focused on five monumental works by female painters, in order to study the spiritual role landscapes play in painting and consider the ways in which these works evoke metaphysical experiences for both the artist and the viewer. 
 
April 20 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 
 
April 27 
Exhibition Tour: This Land and Histories of Enslavement 
Jonathan Little Cohen Associate Curator of American Art Michael Hartman discussed the relationship between enslavement and American Art in the United States through a guided tour of This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World

May 4 
A Space for Dialogue Gallery Talk: A DREAM Deferred: Undocumented Immigrants and the American Dream 
Intern Yliana Beck '22 presented her exhibition, which focused on the challenges undocumented immigrants face living in the United Sates, in pursuit of the so-called "American Dream." This exhibition focused primarily on poster prints, which have become a popular and effective tool to spread the word on injustices and reach mass audiences. 
 
May 7 
Family Day: Celebrate This Land 
This Family Day celebrated the creativity and innovation of Native American artists featured in This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World. Participants explored an artist's underwater installation, drew in the galleries, went on a natural materials hunt, relaxed in the reading nook, and made art in the atrium.  
 
May 18 
Hood Highlights Tour: Docent Led 

May 19 
Gallery Talk: Louise Hamlin: Seeing New Things 
Louise Hamlin taught in the Studio Art Department at Dartmouth College for twenty-nine years, while also exhibiting her own work nationally and internationally. In this lecture, Hamlin reflected on her long career and how she finds subject matter and develops it in her paintings, prints, and drawings.  

May 19 
Louise Hamlin Reception 

May 25 
Conversations and Connections: Unbroken 
Cocurators Dillen Peace '19 (Diné) and Sháńdíín Brown '20 (Diné), former Diversifying Art Museum Leadership Initiative (DAMLI) Native American art interns, discussed their exhibition, Unbroken: Native American Ceramics, Sculpture, and Design. The exhibition draws from the Hood Museum's permanent collections to create dialogue between historic and contemporary works made by Indigenous North American artists. 
 
June 2 
Adult Workshop: Expressive Writing Workshop 

June 9 
Virtual Adult Workshop: Expressive Writing Workshop 
 
June 25 
Hood Highlights Tour: Staff Led 
 
June 24 
Maker Drop-In: Unfacilitated Art Making in the Atrium 
Materials theme: Adhesive foam collage. 

Programs for Schools

The 2021–22 academic year remained challenging for school participation due to the ongoing pandemic and varied COVID restrictions across school districts. During the fall of 2021 and through the early spring of 2022, most schools did not have permission for field trips. Educators were understandably exhausted from the stresses of of returning to in-person teaching with students who had lost academic and socialization time the previous year and were not yet eligible for a vaccine. Nevertheless, the museum hosted more than 140 guided and self-guided tours to 2,079 visitors during 2021–22. Of those visitors, 115 were elementary students, 163 were middle students, and 617 were high school students.

The museum staff did its best to support both teachers and students at this time. It heavily promoted virtual tours, which offer exciting opportunities for schools. Teachers and students benefited from classes led by professional museum educators and had access to the full range of the Hood Museum's collections, all from the comfort of their classroom. A handful of teachers took advantage of this opportunity, and tours were offered to 137 high school students on subjects as diverse as the Assyrian reliefs, contemporary Native American art, and art between World War I and World War II.

The Hood Museum's multiple-visit elementary school programs, ArtStart and Images, have run continuously for decades, even predating the museum's opening in 1985. In 2021–22, they carried on via a hybrid model. Six schools from Vermont and eight schools from New Hampshire participated in Images and ArtStart. Of the twenty-seven classes that participated from fourteen schools, ten joined virtually while seventeen were present in person. Images students had five lessons and ArtStart students had four lessons, and each ninety-minute session included art making. For those participating virtually, Hood Museum education staff mailed art supplies to each school; virtual classes did require a different curriculum from those who came to the museum. 

Sixteen docent training sessions were held over the year, which represents about fifty percent of our normal training schedule. Fewer school tours (due to COVID) necessitated fewer trainings; we anticipate recovering our tour numbers over the next few years.

The exhibition This Land: American Engagement with the Natural World offered an exciting opportunity for regional teachers in the winter of 2022 to consider respectful ways of teaching with Indigenous art and culture. Under the leadership of Vivian Ladd, the Hood Museum's teaching specialist, the museum offered a four-part teacher workshop concurrently on Zoom and in person, and, for the first time it was eligible for graduate credit at Castleton University. Through a teaching-lab model, curatorial presentations, readings, and open dialogue, educators were challenged to envision what teaching about Native American culture and history should look like. Curatorial presentations helped teachers critically reframe how they see art made in North America, an important step in developing a curriculum that centers Indigenous culture and history. They were also encouraged to practice teaching with objects from the collection in order to become more comfortable facilitating conversations about this material and to gain confidence using art as catalyst for dialogue. Cannupa Hanska Luger's (Be)Longing was an ideal resource for this endeavor. Comprising a video, poem, and sculpture, this poignant installation pays tribute to the reciprocal relationship between Plains cultures, the bison, and the land. It also points to the consequences of colonial settlement in the American West, including, among other impacts, the destruction of this ecosystem. This work inspired nuanced conversations about how and what we can learn from Indigenous ways of knowing. Additionally, in the spirit of transparency and mutual learning, staff from our Cultural Heritage team shared the history of museum collecting and the Hood Museum's current efforts to be a better partner with the Indigenous communities whose cultural heritage it stewards. This important initiative is ongoing, as are the museum's efforts to elevate voices and center Indigeneity in its teaching practices.  
 
Schools that participated in the Hood Museum's multiple-visit programs 

Barnard Academy
Grantham Village School
Haverhill Cooperative Middle School
Hanover Street School 
Newton Elementary School 
Plainfield School 
Richards School 
Samuel Morey Elementary School 
Sharon Elementary School 
Unity School 
Waits River Valley School 
Westshire Elementary School 
White River School 

Access Programs

Our partnership with the Aging Resource Center at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (DHMC) flourished this year. We continued to partner with them to provide enriching virtual programs for those living with cognitive impairments through the Perspectives program, and we also offered facilitated virtual experiences for neurotypical elderly audiences through the Learning to Look program. The dates of these virtual programs are below. Additionally, we offered in-person and Zoom tours for area assisted-living facilities including Woodlands Assisted Living, Woodstock Terrace, and Sunapee Cove.  

We also had the good fortune to work with developmentally disabled communities at Zack's Place, MainStreet (a residency for disabled adults in Maryland), and the Global Campuses Foundation. 
 
DHMC Aging Resource Center programs: (Virtual) Learning to Look  

July 2
July 16
August 6 
August 20 
September 3 
September 17 
October 1 
October 15 
November 5 
November 19 
December 3 
December 17 
January 7 
January 21 
February 18 
March 4 
March 18 
April 1 
April 15 
May 6 
May 20 
June 3 

DHMC Aging Resource Center programs: (Virtual) Perspectives 

September 28
October 26
November 23 
December 28 
February 22 
March 22 
April 19 
June 28

Other customized community tours 

July 1 
Misa Tours 

September 17 
Cornucopia Journeys 

October 7 
Lifelong Learning 

October 14 
(Virtual) All Aboard Travel Tours 

December 11 
Lebanon Conservation Group 

January 21 
Classical Conversations Group  

February 22 
Heart of the Valley Mindfulness Center 

March 22 
Lyme Utility Club 

April 14 
P.E.O. Philanthropic Group 

Special request adult tours 

October 6 
December 2 
January 26 
January 23 
February 11 
February 18 
February 24 
April 23 
May 12 
May 25 

September 29 
Customized Engagement: St. Johnsbury Academy 

September 30 
Customized Engagement: Hanover High School  

October 1 
Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

October 7 and 8 
Virtual Customized Engagement: Kimball Union Academy 

October 12 
Virtual Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

October 14 
Facilitated Experience: Lebanon High School 
 
October 15 
Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

October 18 
Virtual Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

October 18 
Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

October 21 
Facilitated Experience: Gould Academy 

October 22 
Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

October 28 
Facilitated Experience: Middlebury Union High School 

November 5 
Facilitated Experience: Trinity College 

November 12 
Facilitated Experience: Kimball Union Academy 

February 11 
Virtual Customized Engagement: Kimball Union Academy 

February 24 
Virtual Facilitated Experience: Hanover High School 

February 25 
Virtual Facilitated Experience: Hanover High School 

March 1 and 2 
Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

March 3 
Customized Engagement: Kimball Union Academy 

March 15 and 16 
Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

March 16  
Facilitated Experience: Provost Office Student Group 

March 16 
Facilitated Experience: Parker Academy 

March 17 and 18 
Customized Engagement: Hanover High School 

March 25 
Customized Engagement: Barre School Art Teachers 

March 28 
Virtual Customized Engagement: Lyme School 

April 18 
Facilitated Experience: Mt. Mansfield Union High School 

April 20 
Facilitated Experience: Hartford High School 

April 29 
Facilitated Experience: Rutland High School 

April 29 
Facilitated Experience: Ledyard Charter School 

May 11 
Customized Engagement: Marion Cross Elementary School 

May 13 
Customized Engagement: Vermont Art Educators Association Tour 
 
May 24 
Facilitated Experience: Goffstown High School 

May 25 
Facilitated Experience: Hanover Street School 

May 25 
Customized Engagement: Vermont Commons School 

May 26 
Facilitated Experience: Woodstock Union High School 

June 1 
Facilitated Experience: National Art Honor Society Student Group 

June 7, 8, and 9 
Customized Engagement: Kearsarge Middle School