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The Tufts Daily
Where you read it first | Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Two new arts spaces in Barnum Hall set to open spring 2020

barnum
Barnum Hall, home of Tisch College, is pictured on April 20, 2018.

Barnum Hall, which is currently undergoing renovations, will serve as shared space for new classes between the School of Arts and Sciences and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts (SMFA) spring 2020, according Dean of the SMFA Nancy Bauer. Bauer said that both the School of Arts and Sciences and the SMFA made the decision to renovate about one year ago.

“We found out that we were ... getting two large lab spaces all the way to the left of the building, closest to Ballou,” Bauer said.

Gretchen Von Grossmann, who is the director of Capital Programs, part of Tufts' Operations Division, confirmed this location in an email to the Daily.

“The two art studios are located on the lower and second levels in the east wing of Barnum,” Von Grossmann said.

Lois Stanley, director of campus planning, explained how space within Barnum Hall could be allocated to other Tufts programs.

“The renovated space in Barnum is available because some programs and offices were moved to the new [Science and Engineering Complex (SEC)] building," Stanley said in an email to the Daily. "Former science labs are fairly ideal in size and utility service to repurpose for art studio use. This is a great opportunity to repurpose the building to support the arts and make more suitable spaces available to students.”

The need for these spaces has been a common concern among dual-degree students on the Medford/Somerville campus looking to find areas to complete their art-related work, according to a March 2017 Daily article. The article adds that many dual-degree students find the current studio spaces located in Lane Hall to be inadequate. Bauer said that Lane Hall will remain a space for classes and open-studio time for students working on long-term projects.

Zoe Raad, a first-year dual-degree student, said that she has had trouble finding places to get her work done away from the SMFA campus.

“I think [the studios] will be so helpful to have a space to work on art in Medford because most of us end up having to turn our rooms into a studio,” Raad said.

Bauer explained how two new large studios Barnum Hall studios will satisfy demands which Lane Hall does not meet.

“Because the space in Lane Hall is limited to certain kinds of mediums, for example, it is hard to do filmmaking," Bauer said. "This opens up possibilities for other mediums to come on the campus and for us to have more advanced classes than we could have when we had this very small amount of space in Lane Hall.”

Stanley explained the reasoning behind creating additional arts spaces other than those in Lane Hall.

“Studio space in Lane Hall was inadequate due in part to the size of the rooms and lighting," Stanley said. "Film and media studies spaces across campus were insufficient for [this growing] program and there was an opportunity for shared space and synergy.”

In addition to being home to new arts studios, Barnum Hall will also house other organizations on campus, according to Stanley. She explained that building occupants will include the Film and Media Studies (FMS) program, the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life, the Metric Geometry and Gerrymandering Group, Tufts Institute of the Environment (TIE), the Environmental Studies Program, the Office of Sustainability and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. Stanley said the renovated building will also include common spaces.

Von Grossmann explained that the occupants would move in during the summer.

"The occupants of the first floor — Tisch College — expect to move their entire operations out of Lincoln-Filene at the end of 2019, since they will occupy the first level of the east wing,” Von Grossmann said.

The second of the two arts studios will be used as a film space to accommodate for the growing Film and Media Studies program.

Film and Media Studies will be moving its operations into the space in Barnum," Bauer said. "There will be a lot of space allocated to Film and Media Studies with computer labs that students can use to edit film or to record and edit sounds.”

Malcolm Turvey, director of Film and Media Studies, wrote in an email to the Daily that he is “very excited about the new filmmaking studios in the building.”

He explained that the policies for the use of the space have not been fully devised yet, but one of the studios will be devoted to the FMS program.

"The other will be a larger, shared studio space used by a variety of groups,” he said.

Although Bauer is also still unsure of whether the rooms will be only used as classrooms or workspaces, she remains positive of their inclusivity. She said that the spaces will be open to students that both are and are not pursuing an SMFA degree.

"They will be studio spaces where students can come and work and won’t just be used for classes, if they are used for classes at all," Bauer said. "We are still in the midst of deciding how these spaces are going to function, as the SMFA is still figuring it out, but we will have it settled by the time we post courses in the fall for the spring of 2020.

Bauer explained the final goal behind the creation of these SMFA spaces on the Medford/Somerville campus. She said she understands the difficulties that many students in the School of Arts & Sciences and School of Engineering face in taking arts classes.

“We are trying to work towards a model in which anybody can take any SMFA classes that they are prepared for on either campus, whether they are arts students or not," Bauer said. "Many of our classes don’t require prior experience, as they are intro-level courses.”

Bauer emphasized the importance of allowing non-SMFA students to have art spaces on the Medford/Somerville campus.

“We are trying to get students who are not at the SMFA used to the idea that taking classes in art-making should be no more daunting to them than acting or music history,” she said.

Stanley said these spaces would be available for arts courses in the spring of 2020.

This article has been updated to reflect that the renovation includes installing two large studios in Barnum Hall, and that Lane Hall will still be used for open-studio time and art classes.