Seeing by Touch – Inclusive Exhibition
Seeing by Touch is one of the few exhibitions where you can touch everything—all 120 artworks of visually impaired students, 26 classic sculptures and one spatial installation.
The Challenge
How do blind and partially sighted people create works of art? How can sighted people experience their world? And, what is the best way to design an exhibition for blind and partially sighted people?
Blind and visually impaired people do not paint, sculpt, make reliefs or draw standing up. They create their artworks while sitting down at a table and find it the easiest to work on a flat surface. This is why all the exhibits and their captions, written in the Braille alphabet, were laid out on flat surfaces and made easier to touch.
Project Vision
Blind and visually impaired people do not paint, sculpt, make reliefs or draw standing up. They create their artworks while sitting down at a table and find it the easiest to work on a flat surface. This is why all the exhibits and their captions, written in the Braille alphabet, were laid out on flat surfaces and made easier to touch.
The exhibition begins with a dark room, which offers a simulation of blindness and an impaired sense of mobility and spatial orientation to sighted visitors. In this dark room, there is a sculpture perceptible only by touch, thereby placing sighted visitors in a situation commonly experienced by blind and partially sighted people and in this way the design team intended to make an introduction into their world.
Design + Execution
The students’ artworks and captions in the Braille alphabet are mounted on an eighty-meter-long, meander-shaped base, positioned along the gallery walls.
A special atmosphere is created by the lighting—custom made for this exhibition—consisting of seventy “probe lamps,” each of them illuminating and accentuating an artwork. As the exhibition was produced with a very low budget, the lighting was ingeniously created using cheap PVC pipes, which were painted black and inserted with LED lamps.
Children’s direct contact with the works of art is an indispensable component of art education. This exhibition is a rarity in that it also enables the tactile experience of the works of major 20th century Croatian sculptors. The exhibition closes with the art installation which offers an extraordinary spatial-tactile experience.
Exhibitions for blind and partially sighted people are often mounted with captions laid out at an angle, which makes reading difficult and puts a strain on the wrists. Likewise, hanging artworks on walls is not the best way to present the creations of the blind and partially sighted. This exhibition is therefore designed to enable any blind or partially sighted person to walk through it almost completely unassisted. Sighted visitors wishing to experience the exhibition the way visually impaired people do can walk through it blindfolded.
The exhibition garnered media interest, received great press coverage, and attendance was higher than usual for this Gallery. People showed great interest for art of the visually impaired and also other galleries and museums have shown interest in the exhibition. Just a few months later the whole exhibition was “recycled” and set up in other city.
Project Details
Design Team
Marko Rasic
Vedrana Vrabec
Consultants
Karlovac City Museum, Center for Education ”Vinko Bek” (organizers)
Lana Bede, Tanja Parlov (exhibition authors)
Lazo Cuckovic (production consultant)
Fabricators
Center for Education ”Vinko Bek” (braille printing)
Studio Barjaković (printing)
Regeneration Factory (tuft installation)
Karlovac City Museum Production (probe lights)
Photo Credits
Rasic+Vrabec
Open Date
September 2019