First, go to the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University. You know the building — the architectural marvel at the corner of Grand River Avenue and Farm Lane constructed of steel and glass angles that create stunning lines as they meet the sky. Once you’re inside, take the elevator or the stairs to the lower level. Then, take a deep breath. Slow down.
You’ve arrived at the Center for Object Research and Engagement, or The CORE, an active, educational space open to the public that features art from the museum’s permanent collection that opened in November 2023. A central idea of the collection is for visitors to take their time and get to know the art. With more than 300 rotating works from MSU’s collection of 10,000 that span over 5,000 years of history, plus innovative sensory stations that invite visitors to touch, hear and even smell, The CORE is providing new ways for the MSU community to experience, interact with and interpret art in academic and research pursuits.
So, be prepared to take your time and immerse yourself in The CORE — a museum experience like no other.
The way Michelle Word describes it, most people spend far too little time with a work of art at a museum. Visitors are getting an experience more akin to a movie trailer, she says, compared to a full movie.
Word earned her Master of Fine Arts in painting from MSU and now is the director of education at the MSU Broad Art Museum. And while she would hope that any visitor to the museum would take their time, The CORE actively encourages it.
“One of the things that is key to the educational approach of The CORE,” she says, “is hoping that if we talk more about slowing down — and the ways we can do that — we can engage artwork in a conversation to learn more about ourselves and our world.”
The CORE focuses on object-based learning, a technique that emphasizes up-close experiences with material objects and facilitates deep critical thinking with, through and about art. To allow for object-based learning, the entrance to the collection offers stacks of cards to visitors that prompt actions, like: “Describe the details of an artwork. How might someone with a background different from yours describe this same artwork?” There are also innovative, accessible sensory stations that allow for visitors to touch, listen to and smell replicas of works of art — which were made with support from faculty and students at MSU.
A model of the sound sculpture “Untitled (Sonambient)” by Harry Bertoia allows users to “play” the sculpture and listen to its chimes. There is also a “ding,” a three-legged vessel once used for cooking. The original, which was made sometime between 659 and 621 BCE, was used in religious and state rituals, feasts and ceremonies honoring ancestral spirits, displayed in temples and buried in tombs with important people. At the sensory station in The CORE, the vessel is displayed next to jars containing scents that would have been found inside or around an object like a ding. Smelling ginger or sandalwood incense encourages the discussion of a scent’s relationship to memory.
Listening to works or taking the time to immerse oneself in the smells of other cultures invites the practice of concentration and discussion. “Object-based learning is really built on not what to think,” Word says, “but how to think.”
“That’s a skill that is really transferable,” she continues. “Whether you’re going to have a career in the arts, whether we are studying in a STEM field, education or the list can go on and on, all of us need moments where we can practice slowing down and focusing, listening — not just talking. That model of art being a conversation, it really gives us a lot of space for that.”
The CORE is also an important part of a larger conversation about the arts happening at MSU. Arts MSU — the university’s arts strategy — is amplifying the impact and presence of the arts on campus and beyond, and integrating them deeply into teaching, research and physical spaces.
“Our collection is, quite literally, at the core of who we are as a museum,” says Steven L. Bridges, interim director and senior curator and director of curatorial affairs at the MSU Broad Art Museum. “We firmly believe that art plays a critical role in our lives, and so it was vitally important as we developed The CORE to ensure it was open, accessible and truly celebrated our collection in a space where everyone feels welcome. It’s why we intentionally developed this space in dialogue with so many campus and community partners, and why the future of The CORE will continue to be shaped by the very communities it serves.”
At MSU, the arts support curriculum and research, and The CORE is a perfect case study in their benefits. Word says that the skills associated with object-based learning are transferable across essentially any discipline, and faculty members Leanne Kent and Jiahang Li are already utilizing The CORE’s offerings.
Kent is an assistant professor in the Department of Writing, Rhetoric and Cultures. She teaches courses in the first-year writing program, which nearly all undergraduate students pass through at MSU. A goal of the program is for students to think of writing in terms of inquiry, discovery and communication. To do this, students move through a five-project sequence that centers their own experiences.
“Some people are going to be engineers, some are going to be scientists, some are going to be art historians,” Kent says. “So, we really focus on the writing process.” One of her course’s assignments asks students to inquire into the writing and communication practices of a desired profession.
After learning about The CORE, Kent saw it as a perfect companion to another of her course’s writing assignments: Students are asked to write about an object in use in a culture they participate in. It could be something as simple as MSU culture and writing about the Rock. Kent brought her classes to The CORE to show them how examining something deeply might help, as Kent says, “discover something new about a group that they are inside of.” Kent says one of the activities led by Kristin McCool, an educator for student engagement and access at the museum — to sketch a sculpture or object — showed students the vast number of details in any one object and how reflection on these details could prompt questions and discovery.
“The idea with this first-year writing course is to equip students with the tools and knowledge to ask the right questions. This way, students will develop self-efficacy to find the answers they’ll need as they go on to engage with a whole range of writing situations,” says Kent.
For Li, who hopes to bring different viewpoints to his classrooms, the experience at The CORE was eye-opening. “It took me to a whole new world,” he says.
Li is an associate professor in the Department of Teacher Education, outreach coordinator for the Asian Studies Center and director of the Online Chinese Program in the College of Education. He collaborates with the education team at the MSU Broad Art Museum as part of the Global DEI Teaching Fellowship. A collaboration between the Asian Studies Center, African Studies Center, and the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies under the U.S. Department of Education Title VI funding, the fellowship is a program for K-12 teachers to build skills and strategies that broaden students’ understandings of global diversity, equity and inclusion. As a professor in the teacher education department, where he focuses on training world language teachers, his work with the MSU Broad Art Museum has been an asset.
Li leads one of the sections of a course on teaching multilingual learners. Each section of that class, including Li’s, went to The CORE last fall to look at objects that the students could use in the development of a course project. To Li, art is the perfect tool to explore and discuss cultures, encouraging a better understanding of global diversity, equity and inclusion.
“Art is very personal,” Li says. “There’s no right or wrong. You can understand from different perspectives, from different angles and you can bring your own experiences and background, as well. I think it’s very unique to the field of education for us to have The CORE and this space that encourages us to look at something from as many angles as possible.”
Like in Li’s research, those personal perspectives and experiences are a desired outcome at The CORE. Sometimes, those personal perspectives can touch even closer to home.
In November, Dominic Hateka was touring The CORE as part of a teacher development workshop with the Global DEI Teaching Fellowship when he noticed a pair of sculptures that looked familiar.
Hateka is a first-year doctoral student in the College of Education studying curriculum, instruction and teacher education. Growing up in Ghana, Hateka’s grandmother always carried a small sculpture with her. His grandmother gave birth to twins, a boy and a girl, but the sister died at a young age. The sculpture — Hateka describes the object as a doll — represented the deceased twin and, as is customary for many Ghanaians, the family treated it as a member of the family, giving it a name (Atsufe) and clothes and a seat at the table for family gatherings.
“She has everything a human being would have growing up,” Hateka says, noting he and his siblings would play with the doll. So, when he saw a sculpture that resembled Atsufe at The CORE, it was a surprise.
The “Ere ibeji” on display in The CORE comes from Nigeria, and like the sculpture did for Hateka’s family, it memorializes deceased twins. Hateka shared his connection to the piece with his classmates and went on with the tour, but that is not the end of the story. “The personal experience I have with it has kept me thinking,” Hateka says.
Drawing from the more than 10,000 works spanning over 5,000 years of history in MSU’s art collection, the selected pieces in The CORE bring together different cultures, time periods and geographies to spark conversation.
As he’s continued his studies in East Lansing, Hateka has spoken with his mother back home in Ghana about Atsufe and asked questions in hopes of learning more about his family’s tradition.
He’s also spoken with people at the museum about the work and shared some of his perspectives, which, according to Word, the education director, is exactly the purpose of The CORE and the museum.
“We’re hoping to provide a lot more voices other than just a museum voice,” Word says. “We had a graduate student fellow who wrote labels for us. We invited faculty and graduate students to talk about works of art from their perspective. We are making more voices and interpretations visible in the space. We need to be thinking about how there are many stories, many voices, many things that are true. By bringing in different artists and different voices, we have the ability to question why things are the way they are, and why we tell histories the way we tell them.”
As conversations around art change, so, too, will The CORE. Just as MSU has made higher education more accessible, the arts — and the academic and research opportunities available thanks to places like the MSU Broad Art Museum — will continue to offer transformational experiences to Spartans and visitors.
By Liam Boylan-Pett, Greg Kohuth, Jacob Templin-Fulton, Nick Schrader and Kelsie Lane, originally published by MSU Today