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established in 1968

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Capital Update – April 2015

March 26, 2015 By Vega Pratt

As we move forward on the Capital Project and architectural work for the new Pratt Museum, the design and curatorial team are already at work developing exhibits to fill this exciting new space. We invite you to be a part of this process!

Over the next 18 months, the lower galleries will feature a series of prototype exhibits to invite your feedback. These are works in progress and need your input as we refine them into permanent installations.

Currently on display is “Community Connectors: Radios, Telephones and Pathways.” Please stop by and let us know what you think or if you can help contribute to the story.

Additionally, you can visit a new section of our website on the Master Exhibit Plan and see what we’re looking for right now—be it stories, artifacts, photographs, or information on materials in the Pratt’s collection. We’ll also use this area to post future public meetings and feedback sessions about the exhibit development process.

Thank you for being a part of the Pratt!

Filed Under: Capital Updates

Jubilee: Festival of Young Artists

March 23, 2015 By Vega Pratt

April 3 – May 10, 2015
Opening reception: Friday, April 3, 5-7 p.m.

Birch Trees by Kaitlyn Johnson, West Homer Elementary, 2013.

The annual student art showcase will open in the lower level Art Gallery on April 3, in conjunction with the opening of Bird Dance. Come celebrate works of art in all media by area students from Kindergarten through High School.

Filed Under: Exhibits, Past Exhibits

Capital Update – March 2015

March 10, 2015 By Vega Pratt

CHAMP (Culture Humanities Arts Museums Partners) Advocacy Fly-In, January 28-29, 2015

Delegates from Alaska State Council on the Arts, Alaska Humanities Forum, Museums Alaska and Alaska Historical Society met in Juneau on January 28 and 29, where they participated in advocacy training, gave a luncheon presentation at the capitol, and met with legislators.

Specific to museums, in 2014 a McDowell Group survey demonstrated critical infrastructure needs for Alaska’s cultural institutions. 27 museums cited the need for significant capital improvements within the next five years: exhibition space expansion or improvement; increase in facility size; collections storage expansion; and security improvements.

To address this need, the Museums Alaska delegation asked Representative Bob Herron to sponsor a bill to establish a Museum Construction, Expansion, and Major Renovation Matching Grant Program. This legislation, HB 52, mirrors an existing program for libraries, providing matching grants to those selected from the prioritized list of projects around the state, based on their readiness.

While in Juneau, 15 Museums Alaska advocates met with over 30 legislators and staff to educate them about the issues and gauge their support of the bill. Legislators were generally supportive of the concept, particularly because it carries a zero fiscal note. Senator Gary Stevens has filed a companion bill, SB 61. Please thank Representative Herron, rep.bob.herron@akleg.gov,and Senator Stevens sen.gary.stevens@akleg.gov, for their leadership in sponsoring the legislation.

Once the bill has been scheduled, public testimony will be taken and we will send an eblast as to time and date. Please contact Michele Miller, mmiller@prattmuseum.org, for more information.

Senator Stevens visited Homer Monday and Tuesday, March 9 and 10, at which time he briefed the Board members and staff on the state’s financial status. This year’s capital budget will be minimal in comparison to previous years. Only critical projects will be funded. It is unlikely that the Pratt will receive capital funds this year.

Filed Under: Capital Updates

One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Brooks Fish

January 2, 2015 By Vega Pratt

Thirty Years of Counting Fish at Brooks Lake,
Katmai National Park and Preserve
February 1 – March 29, 2015Brooks lake fish racks 1940

The Bristol Bay Investigation’s temporary tent camp and fish weir established at the outlet of the Brooks River in 1940.  Photographed by Robert Hacker.  “Brooks Camp Interpretive Collection,” KATM Photo Archives, Records of Katmai National Park and Preserve, Anchorage, Alaska.“One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Brooks Fish” shows visitors how counting fish at the outlet of Brooks Lake helped develop the management methodology used to regulate one of the most important sockeye salmon fisheries in Alaska. Thanks in part to the scientist’s eye for detail, the composition of the photographs are compelling and engaging. Most importantly, this exhibit underscores the conclusion that salmon-pursuing human beings have been an integral force that have profoundly shaped the salmon resource since the Brooks River formed nearly 4,500 years ago. Contrary to most salmon and people stories, the fish runs of Bristol Bay remain healthy, they serve as the ecological engines for an entire ecosystem, and support an industry that employs a high number of Alaskans. Simply put, this is a resource management story Alaska got right.

Biologists find the perfect balance for photographing salmon near the weir site in July 1959. “Theodore Merrell Collection,” Records of Katmai National Park and Preserve, Anchorage, Alaska.

Curators Kathryn Myers (Katmai National Park and Preserve) and Katherine Ringsmuth (Anchorage Museum, formerly Katmai National Park and Preserve) will give a curators’ talk as part of the Pratt Museum Annual Meeting: Tuesday, February 3 at 6pm.

This exhibit is supported in part by Icicle Seafoods, Alaska State Council on the Arts, National Endowment for the Arts, and City of Homer. Developed in partnership with the National Park Service.

Filed Under: Exhibits, Past Exhibits

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PRATT MUSEUM
3779 Bartlett Street Homer, AK 99603
907-235-8635 phone | 907-235-2764 fax


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