posted on Nov. 23: Museum looks forward to new shows, programs
                    
                [img_inline align=”right” src=”http://padnws01.mcmaster.ca/images/cameraman.jpg” caption=”Cameraman films new exhibit in Museum”]The large billboard at Longwood and Aberdeen streets in 
Hamilton tells the story. McMaster's Museum of Art is “refreshed, 
renewed, restyled and reopened.”
After being closed for six months, the Museum doors were 
opened to patrons on Sunday, Nov. 18. 
At an afternoon reception to mark the occasion, Gillian Cooper, 
chair of the Museum's Administrative Board, gave a brief 
summary of the improvements made to the facility while it was 
closed. 
“Our environmental system has been enhanced with the latest 
technological advancements, renovations have been made to 
the galleries — the walls in the galleries and support spaces 
have been resurfaced and painted — carpets have been cleaned, 
and permanent collection exhibitions have been redesigned and 
reinstalled,” she said. 
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She also provided an overview of the work that's been carried out 
by staff during this period. “They have worked diligently to 
preserve and research the collection. They have researched and 
scheduled special educational programming, they have 
developed exhibitions for the 2002-03 program year and they 
have implement a renewed public awareness plan for the 
Museum.”  (The awareness plan includes the installation of the 
advertising billboard mentioned above and new banners with 
images from the collection.)
Cooper commended Museum staff for their dedication and 
commitment to maintaining the integrity of the collection under 
difficult circumstances. She also thanked Karen Belaire, 
vice-president administration, for her role in ensuring the 
completion of the maintenance and renewal project.
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University President Peter George, present for the reopening, 
described the collection as one of the most significant university 
art collections not just in the country but in North America. “The 
Museum is extremely important to the teaching function of 
McMaster and its students but it also serves as a cultural and 
educational resource for the entire University community,” he 
added.
The event also marked the launch of a special exhibit of the 
Ontario Crafts Council titled Looking Forward: New Views of 
the Craft Object. 
Rosalyn Morrison, executive director of the Ontario Crafts 
Council, described the 50-piece exhibit as one that explores the 
richness and diversity of the craft field and demonstrates the 
“value of the handmade object now in the high-tech era.”  The 
show was on view at the One of A Kind Show in Toronto last 
year.
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In developing the exhibit, a call for submissions yielded works 
from 150 national artists.  From this, 50 works were selected. 
Morrison described the show as cosmopolitan, sophisticated 
and one “that indicates that Canadian craft continues to be a 
force on the international scene.”
Photos(top to bottom):Cameraman films exhibit; Cox 
Table, 1999 by Robert Akroyd and dinnerware set by Allison 
Skinner; Sasa Bug, 1999 by Jennifer Angus;Bird, 2000 by Tanya 
Zaryski.