• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
    • Real Clear Arts
    • Judith H. Dobrzynski
    • Contact
  • ArtsJournal
  • AJBlogs

Real Clear Arts

Judith H. Dobrzynski on Culture

NGA makes me want to be a kid again

The National Gallery of Art’s Pride of Place: Dutch Cityscapes of the Golden Age is almost over — it ends May 3 — and, unfortunately, I have not been able to get down to Washington to see it. My bad, as kids say — much to the dismay of purists, including, on this particular point, me.

van Ruisdael.jpgBut a brochure that landed on my desk the other day made me wish I were a kid again. For this Saturday and Sunday, the NGA has created a Family “Weekend in the Dutch Republic” that sounds terrific. Aside from the usual family-activity booklets that help families explore the show and make-your-own Dutch cityscapes with rubber stamps, the NGA is showing a special doll house reproducing a period Dutch canal house and presenting a program of 17th century music for children with lute, violin, harpsicord dulcimer and voices of the National Gallery Chamber Players.

Museums everywhere are doing their best to attract families, but these programs sound particularly good to me. Take a look at the dollhouse here, for example — it’s interactive.  

The NGA’s “educational resource,” a 165-page book in PDF form, is great for older kids and adults. The podcasts are, too.

Imho, programs like these — actually attached to the art — are far, far better than the videos, games, sleepovers and yoga-for-children classes that other museums are now using to lure kids and their parents. For this exhibition, from afar, the NGA looks like a model worthy of imitation.   

Photo Credit: Jacob van Ruisdale’s Amsterdam, Seen from the South (c. 1680), National Gallery of Art

Primary Sidebar

About Judith H. Dobrzynski

Now an independent journalist, I've worked as a reporter in the culture and business sections of The New York Times, and been the editor of the Sunday business section and deputy business editor there as well as a senior editor of Business Week and the managing editor of CNBC, the cable TV

About Real Clear Arts

This blog is about culture in America as seen through my lens, which is informed and colored by years of reporting not only on the arts and humanities, but also on business, philanthropy, science, government and other subjects. I may break news, but more likely I will comment, provide

Archives