shop – BKM TECH / Technology blog of the Brooklyn Museum Fri, 04 Apr 2014 18:25:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 Shop ’til you drop and follow us on Pinterest! /2012/04/11/shop-til-you-drop-and-follow-our-product-pinning-on-pinterest/ /2012/04/11/shop-til-you-drop-and-follow-our-product-pinning-on-pinterest/#comments Wed, 11 Apr 2012 14:49:17 +0000 /?p=5537 If you’ve visited us sometime over the last year, you probably noticed a lot of construction activity that is part of a multiphase transformation of the first-floor. Behind those temporary walls, directly off the Main lobby, a huge renovation project to build a new Museum Shop was taking place. Designed by award-winning architectural firm Visbeen Associates, Inc., the new Shop just opened its doors and offers a totally new shopping experience for the Museum visitor. Over a year in the making, it took a resourceful and collaborative team to make this a reality. Come help us celebrate the new space and get a chance to meet some of the designers behind our new product at our open house on Thursday, April 12th, 7-9 p.m.

Brooklyn Museum Shop

For the new shop design, the architects took a typical box-shaped space and made it come alive with an organic curved ceiling that moves gently around the room from front to back. The curve is echoed on the floor with an arched jewelry counter and display tables, allowing you to meander around the shop with ease. Featured as part of the lighting design, there are two stunning, sculptural chandeliers created by Brooklyn designer, David Weeks.

With our expanded shop, we are featuring a special section dedicated to Brooklyn-designed products and we are highlighting a selection of the borough’s emerging and established designers, artisans, jewelers, authors and illustrators. We’ll also be highlighting collection-based products and have been particularly inspired by the Museum’s expansive Decorative Arts collection that has recently acquisitioned objects by Brooklyn designers, Jason Miller, Harry Allen and Paul Loebach. Among the pieces on display you will find nature inspired dinnerware by Jason Miller, the Chrome Brush Vase by Harry Allen, and Paul Loebach’s Distortion Candlesticks. In honor of Brooklyn’s bourgeoning culinary ventures and along with the new book Edible Brooklyn, we are offering Brooklyn Salsa, made with locally sourced ingredients as well as Mast Bros. Chocolate bars whose cocoa beans are selected from equatorial global regions.

 

Everyone on our staff has a favorite product and brought a different style to the evolution of the product selection—making it as diverse, exciting and eclectic as possible. Tracy Boni, our shop’s Associate Information Manager, will be using Pinterest to pin some of our favorites to a pinboard.  Follow us on Pinterest to learn more about new products we are featuring and tell us what you think!

Follow Me on Pinterest

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The Caillebotte Merchandise Challenge /2009/03/06/the-caillebotte-merchandise-challenge/ /2009/03/06/the-caillebotte-merchandise-challenge/#comments Fri, 06 Mar 2009 12:47:50 +0000 /bloggers/2009/03/06/the-caillebotte-merchandise-challenge/ nygs.jpg

As the head of merchandising at the Brooklyn Museum, it is my responsibility, along with my staff, to keep the Museum shop stocked with a wide range of items that relate to our permanent collections and the special exhibitions that we present here. I recently returned from attending the New York Gift Show, which consumes the entire Javits Center plus 3 Hudson River Piers featuring over 3000 gift product booths. If you walk every aisle, it can be over 8 miles long! Every year, I attend the show with my staff for several long days in search of the latest new products, hottest designs and trends, and most importantly merchandise that represents the upcoming exhibitions. The most recent trade show challenge for us? Caillebotte.

“Who” asked the vendors?? “Gustave Caillebotte”…”Who is he?? Can you spell his name??” So, my immediate reply was to say “you know this artist—he was an Impressionist painter who worked in the late 19th century along with Renoir, Monet, and Sisley.” Usually I still did not get any recognition from my suppliers, so I would continue… “You know his work—his most well known painting is the “Paris Street, Rainy Day” painting from the Art Institute of Chicago—you know the one with the man in the tall top hat with the umbrella”….and VOILA, …I finally would see some recognition. So, having accomplished vendor identification of the artist, now we are on to whether there was any product availability that would suit our needs.

shopping.jpg

Since most of the paintings in this upcoming exhibition are from a private collection, there is very little existing product with such images available and this means we will have to create custom products. As is the case with this particular example, we often seek out suppliers who can customize product with art images from an exhibition and these custom products might include posters, jewelry, sculptures, t-shirts, mugst, stationery products, etc. etc.

In addition to the custom assortment, we always search for related products that convey more knowledge or tell a story about the artist and the mileu in which he works. In the case of Caillebotte, we had a lot to consider. From reading the catalog and interviewing the curator, Judith Dolkart, we learned not only that he was a highly skilled Impressionist painter, but he also was an avid top notch sailor who innovated and designed racing boats as well as an avid gardener. All three of these facets of his life led us to look for related products and vendors who carried nautical books, gifts, boat models, floral and garden supplies. The aim is to set the ambiance in our Museum Shop by featuring the artist’s color palette, his period in art, his subject matter.

In our search for specially related product, I received a phone call introducing a new potential product referred to me from our Education Department. It turned out that a local Brooklyn vendor, Reiter8, who makes one of a kind tote bags from used canvas sails was going to do a workshop during the Caillebotte exhibition. It was a perfect fit for the Caillebotte’s merchandise assortment—the product was related to the show, made of recycled materials, and from a local Red Hook artisan. I leave you to enjoy this video from this vendor and hope you will visit the Museum Shop during the Caillebotte show.

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