I don't know about you, but last winter about put me under. Under
nearly 100 inches of snow, if memory serves, and about as cold,
miserable and slippy-slidey as I've ever been.
My family spent
waaaaay too much time in the house with the heat cranked and the TV
blaring. I went into this fall desperate to avoid the dire straights of
last winter at any cost, so I started compiling a list of things I'm
going to do with my family when the wind is howling.
The kids
and I tested out No. 1 on my list the other day, and if you don't get
there to see it yourself by Jan. 11, 2009, you are really missing out. We went to the Act/React interactive art exhibit at the Milwaukee Art Museum, and I know we'll be back again before it leaves.
Act/React
is an explosion of light, sound, texture, color and movement -- and
best of all, you're in control. Upon entering the exhibit, one of the
first things you see is a large area sectioned off on the floor, which
is artist Scott Snibbe's Boundary Functions. Step upon it, and you are
sectioned off by light beams into your own little pod. As more people
step on, more pods are divided off until you're looking at a crazy web
of lines of light -- each containing one person. As you move, your pod
moves with you. Jump, leap, do what you can, but you'll keep your own
section. (Believe me, my kids tested this.)
Also
in the same room is your chance to act out your own personal iPod
commercial. Reflected on the wall are 16 squares, each containing the
silhouette of someone else who's visited. You walk in front of a
camera, and suddenly your silhouette is added to the screens before
you. My kids were doing all sorts of body contortions and little boogie
dances to see if it really was their actions showing up, making for a
very active (and funny!) display.
We especially enjoyed watching
some of the more staid-looking museum visitors drop their inhibitions and do
the chicken dance for the screen.
Another
room was filled with pieces by Camille Utterback, large paintings projected onto the walls. 
As you move in front of the paintings and
wave your arms, the image shifts. Colors change, brush strokes change,
the whole texture of the work appears to change -- all under the
control of your hands.
These were just some of the highlights of
the exhibit, which features a wide variety of pieces to inspire your
curiosity and creativity. Others pieces include a table that talks when
you touch it (watch out for this one; you might not want your younger
kids to hear some of what this table has to say); a floor that changes colors
like flowing lava when you walk over it; and a room of light and sound.
All
of these pieces encourage you to put your stamp on them and make them
your own.
If you go, plan to spend some time in front of each piece,
and don't leave the kids at home. You'll want some partners for dancing
around in front of all these cool pieces.
This is a perfect way to break up the "here comes winter" blues, and underground, heated parking at the museum makes it all the more pleasant.