Join us for grown-up play at the foot of the Golden Gate Bridge! An extraordinary reception, auction, dinner and dancing await on Saturday, May 3 at 6 p.m.
The popular party band Notorious has just been booked - you may have heard they played the infamous wedding of Sarah and No Name on Alice Radio 97.3FM.
Fabulous auction items will include:
Style package: Full service one-on-one spa and stylist session
One-of-a-kind playhouse by designer Barbara Butler
Backroads family multi-sport vacation experience
Week’s stay at a San Diego beach house with amusement park pass
All proceeds support the Museums outreach and education programs in the arts and sciences.
We all know that kids play with toys because it's fun, but did you know that toys also help children develop important cognitive, social and motor skills? They help socialize children, teaching them to share, compromise and cooperate with their peers. Many toys also foster creativity and imagination, critical thinking and problem-solving.
Starting today, the real experts -- kids -- can don a lab coat and embark on an important mission: to inspect toys from around the world in our new special exhibition Top Secret: Mission Toy. They'll use their investigative and playtime skills to check out dolls and balls and secret codes, find out why tops are tops, and how string can be a fascinating thing.
Check out the San Francisco Chronicle's interview with our Director of Exhibitions, Mary Jo Sutton, to find out about the drama of pretend play, why dolls helps kids negotiate power, and why when you make a kite you learn more than when you buy a pre-made one.
Did you know that within the Amazonian, Andean and coastal regions of Peru there are more than 200 distinct ethnic groups and cultures?
The Peruvian Dancers will present an eclectic repertory from eight diverse natural regions of Peru this Saturday at 11 a.m. as part of our World On Stage series.
They will be performing with six live musicians! The dances include:
Huaylarsh, a vigorous dance for young people to flirt, play and liberate themselves, for a couple of weeks, of the responsibilities of the daily work.
Caporales is an Andean dance with strong African roots from the Yungas, Afro-Bolivian descendents of African slaves who arrived during colonial times.
Turcos de Cailloma is danced to thank the "pachamama" (mother earth) for the success of the harvest. This religious dance also has satirical connotations.
Over 1300 visitors enjoyed a (rainy!) celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s birthday, beatboxing to two sold-out performances by SoVoSo, creating Peace Flags in the Art Studios, and learning about his values in the Reading Room.
We made a short video of the day, set to the inspirational a capella sounds of SoVoSo singing live Stevie Wonder's "Higher Ground." View it here, or on our YouTube channel.
The Web is a great resource for parenting commentary and advice, and as mom to an almost-3-year-old and an almost-newborn (due in 23 days!), I'm on the Web all the time for both advice and "I'm not alone!" commentary.
Here's my shortlist:
Parent Hacks - tips from the real experts - other parents
Berkeley Parents Network - you may find the barrage of newsletters overwhelming if you sign up, but a lot of the great advice is archived on their Web site too, and it's all local!
Wondertime - I love this parenting magazine, and their Web site has lots of great play time ideas and crafts - it's a bit like the much-lamented Martha Stewart Kids - very high quality. And don't miss Catherine Newman's laugh-out-loud funny blog.
Babble - Parenting articles with a bit of snark, plus some great blogs, including my guilty pleasures Famecrawler (celeb babies!) and drool.icio.us (stylish clothes, toys, etc for modern babies)
Mommy Track'd - advice on simplifying the chaos for parents who work outside the home. Plus it's created by two Mill Valley moms!
Share your favorites in the comments - what am I missing?
We had dozens of truly adorable photos submitted for the Mission Toy photo contest of kids and their most prized and adored toys.
The winner was very difficult to pick, but we're thrilled to announce Natalie and her turtle Shelby was our winner! She's won a Museum goody bag and a Museum Passport membership.
There's a great interview with one of my favorite children's book authors and illustrators, Eric Carle, up on Babble.
Here at the Museum, we've been talking a lot about creativity - specifically about expanding the definition of creativity, and how creative play encompasses physical activity, innovative uses of materials, exploration of science and nature, and of course, arts, crafts and music.
Mr. Carle says, "But often children's art is expressive in a way adult artists have to work very hard to achieve. We have to unlearn so much to be like children; to be closer to pure creativity." Read the rest of the interview here to learn more about his favorite children's book illustrators, and where he came up for the idea for The Very Hungry Caterpillar.
Plus, did you know he founded the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art in Amherst, Massachusetts? They just celebrated their fifth anniversary - if you're ever in the area, it definitely looks worth a visit!
Today is your last chance to send us your pictures of your kids and their favorite lovies, snugglies, blankies, "transitional love objects" (the technical term!), and toys. The Grand Prize winner receives a Museum Passport Membership and Museum goody bag, and runners-up each receive a Family Five Pass. And the winners will also be printed in our Spring Newsletter for over 10,000 people to coo over!
Just email up to 3 pictures to Jennifer at jcaleshu(at)badm.org by the end of the day, and be sure to read the complete rules before submitting.
Of all the amazing performers during World On Stage, I think I might be most excited by the Barbary Coast Cloggers - an all-male company of percussive, syncopated, foot stomping dancers - performing Saturday January 26 at 11 a.m. Nothing like a little boot-stomping fun to chase away the January damp! They're also bringing along a special guest - Cheyenne Danner, a 13-year-old, third-generation clogger. We talked to the Cloggers to find out more about this uniquely American style of dance.
What do children learn from your dancing?
Kids love the boots, we get a lot of reaction to the boots and the noise our shoes make. Boys in particular really get excited about clogging because they rarely see men dancing. It’s a great influence for young boys to see men dancing in a way that isn’t ballet.
What do you feel clogging teaches?
I feel the history of clogging teaches about a mix of cultures coming together in the beginning of America. We learn in class about America in the 1700s and that there was a lot of hate and separation of people according to race. The music and dance we perform comes from that time and shows us that people came together and did get along in those times. The banjo is an African instrument and a lot of people don’t know that. Bluegrass and clogging show that there is a melting pot in America.
Read our complete interview to find out more about why they dress like Forty Niners and how cloggers are like Gene Kelly! Buy your ticket online so you don't miss the show - tickets are going fast!
Our staff is full of creative types - we even have a published author and illustrator, our Lead Art Guide Wednesday Kirwan. This Friday at 11 a.m., you have a chance to hear Wednesday read her first book Nobody Notices Minerva and buy a signed version to bring home. We took a bit of her time away from making mythical sea creatures with visitors in the Art Studios to ask her a few questions:
Where did you get the idea for this book?
Well, it's autobiographical - I'm the middle child and I needed attention! I made it for my dad as a Christmas present in 2006 - I made it as a 'dummy book' - a small version with small paintings, bound it, and gave it to him.
How did you pick the animal as the main character? Do you have a Boston terrier like Minerva?
I actually have a rat terrier named Nemo, and when I was writing the story, one day I took him for a walk to the dog park where we met a Boston terrier named Minerva. I went home and sketched it - the story was more interesting with a dog as the main character, rather than a little girl.
How did you end up going from a present for your Dad to a published book?
Well, I have an agent who handles my children's illustrations, so I sent her a copy of the book. She went to an event for writers and artists with the sample, and there were two publishers who were interested--
Bidding war!
Yeah, and I went with Sterling since I really liked the editor's vision. She was interested in the idea of a series, and had good ideas about aesthetic choices, like playing up the patterns and the style, which I think is reminiscent of a different era. I was thinking about the '60s and the Golden Books of that time.