Convincing John
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2003
- Messages
- 1,243
- Reaction score
- 195
Hey everyone,
A thousand posts ago, I rejoined Muppet Central (after a hiatus) back in 2004. My first post announced that I was working on an incredibly complicated piece of Muppet-related artwork (Gilda Radner-related to be specific). I find it only fitting that my 1,000th post would, coincidentally, be about the same type of thing.
Instead of creating artwork for my favorite charity (see my signature), I'm working on something very different.
Currently, I'm working on a library exhibit for a university in central Illinois. The subject, Sesame Street's 40th Anniversary. It will be going up on September 1st and be up all month.
You might think "well, it's almost Sesame Street's 41st Anniversary." You're right. First of all, our exhibit committee wasn't formed until three or four months ago. Second, I like to think of this exhibit as the grand finale to Sesame Street's 40th year. I chose to reserve September on our calendar in honor of Jim Henson's birthday being in that month.
There aren't a lot of specific details yet, but here's what I can tell you:
Just like every other exhibit we have done, it will be advertising the collection in our library. We pick a topic, find books or DVDs about that subject to display, then encourage our patrons to check out our collection and research the subject further with other references.
Some members do things simply: put a few books on a shelf, print out a page that says "Check out our collection on X" and that's it. That's OK, of course. But I thought that Sesame Street deserves better.
I brought up the idea to my boss, who suggested I use the glass exhibit cases to display the titles we have. The actual books will be on the shelves for people to check out, while the book jackets (or color photocopies) will be in the cases with the call numbers underneath them.
Now here's the fun part...
Since Sesame Street means so much to me, I volunteered to do the exhibit myself while the rest of the committee does a different exhibit (sometimes we split up to do different projects).
Aside from the book/DVD covers on display, I'm going to research the heck out of Sesame Street and fill every square inch of those cases to bursting with photos, facts, articles and more. Everything the people see will relate to the books/DVDs in our collection, yet it will be done with a lot of artwork and more importantly, respect for Sesame Workshop.
My main goal of this exhibit is not just to make people aware of our collection. I'm also going for quality. If Caroll Spinney or Bob McGrath or someone like that ever heard about it (or saw it), I'd want them to be impressed.
Aside from the main Sesame moments we all know (the Mr. Hooper episode, the wedding, etc.) there will be a lot of displayed facts the casual library patron won't know (like info about the pitch reel, Oscar being orange, etc.) I'm also going to debunk that razzafrazzin' "Veggie Monster" rumor, too. (I heard some patrons talk about it as theough it were the truth! GRRR!) Kids will probably see the exhibit too, so I'm not going to touch that other Sesame Street rumor...y'know...the Ernie and Bert one.
In the exhibit, kudos will be given (in photo or text form) to the main Muppeteers, the human cast, characters past and present, Sesame Street's philosophy, co-productions and so much more.
There will also be a list of websites our patrons can check out to learn even more about Sesame Street. The main Sesame Workshop websites will be listed of course, along with Muppet Central, Tough Pigs, the Muppet Wiki, The Muppet Mindset, The MuppetCast and even more! (Since that's where some of my research and pictures will be coming from, I gotta give those sites credit).
I don't have a full list of titles yet for what there will be (and the cases can only hold so much). The head librarian has to see if we can order anything else. I do have a lot of the big resources handy (most of which came out in the past few years).
In short, just imagine Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem reading "Street Gang", "Sesame Street Unpaved", "40 Years of Sunny Days" the Old School and 40th Anniversary DVDs, then cruised the net for more info. A rousing "Can You Picture That"-type number follows, ending with two glass exhibit cases filled with Sesame history, photos, facts, etc.
It's going to be a wonderful project. I'm going to do as much as I can in the time I have. Like the cover of the 40 Years of Sunny Days book, the composition will be a mix of the old and new. The mystery Proto-Gordon will be alongside Roscoe Orman. Fuzzyface (Proto-Grover) will rub furry elbows with Abby Cadabby. Leela will be next to...next to...um...what was that one cowboy's name? I can't remember...
I'll post more news about it here as things develop.
Convincing John
A thousand posts ago, I rejoined Muppet Central (after a hiatus) back in 2004. My first post announced that I was working on an incredibly complicated piece of Muppet-related artwork (Gilda Radner-related to be specific). I find it only fitting that my 1,000th post would, coincidentally, be about the same type of thing.
Instead of creating artwork for my favorite charity (see my signature), I'm working on something very different.
Currently, I'm working on a library exhibit for a university in central Illinois. The subject, Sesame Street's 40th Anniversary. It will be going up on September 1st and be up all month.
You might think "well, it's almost Sesame Street's 41st Anniversary." You're right. First of all, our exhibit committee wasn't formed until three or four months ago. Second, I like to think of this exhibit as the grand finale to Sesame Street's 40th year. I chose to reserve September on our calendar in honor of Jim Henson's birthday being in that month.
There aren't a lot of specific details yet, but here's what I can tell you:
Just like every other exhibit we have done, it will be advertising the collection in our library. We pick a topic, find books or DVDs about that subject to display, then encourage our patrons to check out our collection and research the subject further with other references.
Some members do things simply: put a few books on a shelf, print out a page that says "Check out our collection on X" and that's it. That's OK, of course. But I thought that Sesame Street deserves better.
I brought up the idea to my boss, who suggested I use the glass exhibit cases to display the titles we have. The actual books will be on the shelves for people to check out, while the book jackets (or color photocopies) will be in the cases with the call numbers underneath them.
Now here's the fun part...
Since Sesame Street means so much to me, I volunteered to do the exhibit myself while the rest of the committee does a different exhibit (sometimes we split up to do different projects).
Aside from the book/DVD covers on display, I'm going to research the heck out of Sesame Street and fill every square inch of those cases to bursting with photos, facts, articles and more. Everything the people see will relate to the books/DVDs in our collection, yet it will be done with a lot of artwork and more importantly, respect for Sesame Workshop.
My main goal of this exhibit is not just to make people aware of our collection. I'm also going for quality. If Caroll Spinney or Bob McGrath or someone like that ever heard about it (or saw it), I'd want them to be impressed.
Aside from the main Sesame moments we all know (the Mr. Hooper episode, the wedding, etc.) there will be a lot of displayed facts the casual library patron won't know (like info about the pitch reel, Oscar being orange, etc.) I'm also going to debunk that razzafrazzin' "Veggie Monster" rumor, too. (I heard some patrons talk about it as theough it were the truth! GRRR!) Kids will probably see the exhibit too, so I'm not going to touch that other Sesame Street rumor...y'know...the Ernie and Bert one.
In the exhibit, kudos will be given (in photo or text form) to the main Muppeteers, the human cast, characters past and present, Sesame Street's philosophy, co-productions and so much more.
There will also be a list of websites our patrons can check out to learn even more about Sesame Street. The main Sesame Workshop websites will be listed of course, along with Muppet Central, Tough Pigs, the Muppet Wiki, The Muppet Mindset, The MuppetCast and even more! (Since that's where some of my research and pictures will be coming from, I gotta give those sites credit).
I don't have a full list of titles yet for what there will be (and the cases can only hold so much). The head librarian has to see if we can order anything else. I do have a lot of the big resources handy (most of which came out in the past few years).
In short, just imagine Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem reading "Street Gang", "Sesame Street Unpaved", "40 Years of Sunny Days" the Old School and 40th Anniversary DVDs, then cruised the net for more info. A rousing "Can You Picture That"-type number follows, ending with two glass exhibit cases filled with Sesame history, photos, facts, etc.
It's going to be a wonderful project. I'm going to do as much as I can in the time I have. Like the cover of the 40 Years of Sunny Days book, the composition will be a mix of the old and new. The mystery Proto-Gordon will be alongside Roscoe Orman. Fuzzyface (Proto-Grover) will rub furry elbows with Abby Cadabby. Leela will be next to...next to...um...what was that one cowboy's name? I can't remember...
I'll post more news about it here as things develop.
Convincing John