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Ex Lab 2012: Get Ready to Say Cheese!

I’m pleased to introduce a guest post by new-bloggers, David Estevez and Crystal Lau.  David and Crystal are both students at Brooklyn Technical High School and part of BHS’s Exhibition Laboratory (or “Ex Lab”) after-school museum studies program.  The Ex Lab students have been meeting twice a week since February to create the newest exhibit for Brooklyn Historical Society, Say Cheese! Portraits to Pics.  Here’s a sneak peek from David and Crystal about what they’ve been working on and what you can expect to see in the exhibit (opening June 6th)!  Connect to the Ex Lab-ers on twitter @brooklynhistory using hashtag #ExLab.

Brooklyn Tech Junior Crystal Lau

Brooklyn Tech Junior David Estevez

Starting off each class in the unfinished basement underneath the Brooklyn Historical Society, the Ex Lab-ers (or The X LAB-ers, as we’ve deemed our superhero alter-egos) worked together this spring to create a cool, fun, educational, entertaining, home-y exhibit for you! Comprised of fourteen extremely talented students (including us) the X LAB-ers worked together to create the newest exhibit at BHS, Say Cheese! Portraits to Pics. We worked our tailbones off, and despite occasionally butting heads together, we were able to complete our task. As the process continued, our friendships began to take form as we come from four different schools and many of us had never met before the program.

Along the way through this  journey we learned about the history of photography, and how it developed over the past 150 years. We had professional photographers Harvey Stein and Nora Herting to teach us about their work and the cameras they use.  We also had experts such as photography scholar Sarah Katie Gillespie, image conservator Amanda Maloney, and exhibit text specialist Paul Rosenthal who also shared their expertise.

Ex Lab-ers Massy Vainshtein and Will Warren try out the Optivisor, a tool used to assess photo conservation concerns.

The earliest types of photos we learned about were the daguerreotype and the ambrotype which were some of the mediums we have in our archives. Then we looked at tintypes, cabinet cards, carte de visites and lots of 20th century prints – by professionals and amateurs alike – to choose from for the exhibit.  We also visited the International Center of Photography where we looked at other photography exhibits and the curators’ design choices. Along the way, we did everything from overseeing the design of the exhibit to selecting the best images that we wanted to display to weighing in on the graphic design for the exhibit’s marketing material.  In fact, we’re just finishing writing the labels and starting to install the exhibit right now!

Janet Ortiz and Alexa Wheeler decide how to arrange our photos on the walls.

One of our favorite things about the Ex Lab experience was being able to work hands-on with actual artifacts.  It was always a race to find archival gloves that fit to be able to get our hands on the material! To be honest, we also enjoyed the after-school snacks and time spent with a new group of friends. All told, through countless hours of explosive innovation and mind busting, gut wrenching hard work we somehow managed to give birth to our brain child which we named Say Cheese! Portraits to Pics. Join us at the opening reception for Say Cheese! Wednesday, June 6th from 5:30 to 7:30pm.

Who’s a Brooklynite? Oral Histories from Inventing Brooklyn

Inventing Brooklyn Postcard FINAL2Inventing Brooklyn: People, Places, Progress, now open at Brooklyn Historical Society, traces the evolution of Brooklyn into the place we know today. From Native American roots and lasting Dutch colonial influences to icons such as the Brooklyn Bridge and the Dodgers, Inventing Brooklyn looks at how various peoples, places, and historical events have shaped the development of the borough. 

Brooklyn’s diversity has long been a point of local pride and continues to define the borough today.  The oral histories featured in the exhibit speak to the diversity of Brooklyn’s people, neighborhoods, and many immigrant experiences. 

Paul Mak  was born in Hong Kong and immigrated here with his family.  He is the founder of the Brooklyn Chinese-American Association, which serves the Chinese-American population of Brooklyn, and specifically Sunset Park.  In this clip, Paul recalls his experience at James Madison High School where he witnessed the influx of Chinese immigrants as a student in the 1980s.

8th Avenue Sunset Park Oral History Collection (1993-1994)

Interview date: March 26, 1993

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Encarnacion Armas, a well-educated and well-traveled resident of Brooklyn, describes her involvement with the Puerto Rican community in Brooklyn in the 1940s.  In this clip, Armas reminisces about moving to Bay Ridge as a teenager and shares her experiences serving the Puerto Rican community.

Puerto Rican Oral History Project (1973-1976)

Interview Date: October 21, 1974

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Milton Wurtzel  was born in Manhattan and grew up in the Bronx and in Stuyvesant Heights, Brooklyn on Kosciusko Street. Wurtzel worked at Lieberman Shoe Factory as a foreman and at a slipper factory before he began his job as a welder at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. In this clip, Wurtzel discusses the ethnic diversity at the Navy Yard during the 1940s.

Brooklyn Navy Yard Oral History Project (ongoing)

Interview Date: February 12, 2009

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Inventing Brooklyn: People, Places, Progress was created by the high school students in Brooklyn Historical Society’s Exhibition Laboratory program.  From archival research to writing labels to selecting these oral history clips, the 2011 Ex Lab students worked closely with BHS staff, consulting historians, and professional exhibit designers over the course of the spring in order to make Inventing Brooklyn come to life.

Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field

Through archives, photos and oral histories, Home Base: Memories of the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field explores the connection between Ebbets Field, the Dodgers and the Brooklyn community.

This exhibition is curated by high school students from Brooklyn Technical High School, Cobble Hill School of American Studies, The Packer Collegiate Institute and Saint Ann’s School as part of the Brooklyn Historical Society’s Exhibition Laboratory (Ex Lab) after-school museum studies program. Ex Lab introduces high school students to the art of exhibition development: conducting research, selecting artifacts, writing text and working with scholars and curators to understand how to communicate ideas through an exhibition.

Listen to Memories of the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field:

The Green Grass

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Date Nights at Ebbets Field

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Famous Fans

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George Shuba & Carl Erskine

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Red Barber

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Ebbets Field’s Corner Stone

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The Battle for Space

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A Stadium in Brooklyn: The Nets and Atlantic Yards

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For more memories of the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field, visit this exhibit at BHS opening June 3, 2010 and tune in to the BHS podcast (search iTunes for Brooklyn Historical).


ExLab Students on WNYC!

Listen to the Ex Lab student curators of Pages of the Past: The Breukelen Adventures of Jasper Dankaerts on WNYC:

And here they are giving a virtual tour of the exhibit which is on view now:

AND the students have a blog where they wrote about foot-long oysters and much more…