This spring The Penn Art Collection joined the ranks of Bloomberg Connects, a free app that allows anyone with a smartphone to explore audio and visual content and guides to over 1250 museums, galleries, sculpture parks, gardens, and cultural spaces around the world. Since the launch, the site has had nearly 1000 unique users.
Lynn Smith Dolby, Director of the Collection, is enthusiastic about the prospect of increased outreach, online or otherwise. The university’s fine art collection, though extensive, is not housed in a brick-and-mortar museum. Instead, it is dispersed in buildings and in public spaces all over the campus. Dolby offered a bit of cataloguing history: “In 1973, a facilities administrator named Joseph Looby and two students went around campus and recorded what they thought were important artworks on index cards—that’s how the inventory started.” There are currently over 9,000 artworks inventoried, and both Dolby and Molly Sampson (the Collections Manager) are eager to introduce students, faculty, alumni, visitors, and neighbors to this decentralized treasure.
The opportunity to marry The Penn Art Collection’s outdoor sculpture garden (along with highlights from the larger collection) with the Bloomberg Connects app was a no-brainer, especially as it offered a chance to involve current students in the cataloguing process. Of all the collection’s materials, the public art holds a particular place in Dolby’s heart. She has personally given traditional sculpture tours every homecoming and alumni weekend for eight years. For her, this is a way to meet alumni and hear their recollections of a changing campus. But Penn campus is also in the heart of West Philadelphia, open to visitors and neighbors—Dolby thought, “Why not use the sculptures’ public presence as an opportunity to connect with the larger community?”