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  <title>Noreascon 4 Exhibits Brainstorming</title>
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  <modified>2004-09-23T00:16:23Z</modified>

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  <entry>
    <title></title>
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    <issued>2004-09-22T20:16:23-04:00</issued>
    <modified>2004-09-23T00:16:23Z</modified>
    <created>2004-09-23T00:16:23Z</created>
    <summary>Now that Noreascon 4 is over, we will not be updating this blog any longer. For current information about Noreascon 4, see our home page or our main news weblog....</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Noreascon 4</name>
    </author>

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<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>Now that Noreascon 4 is over, we will not be updating this blog any longer. For current information about Noreascon 4, see <a href="http://www.noreascon4.org">our home page</a> or our <a href="http://noreascon4.blogs.com">main news weblog</a>.</p></div>
</content>


  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>An Update from Jim Hudson</title>
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    <issued>2004-02-23T19:57:14-05:00</issued>
    <modified>2004-02-24T00:57:14Z</modified>
    <created>2004-02-24T00:57:14Z</created>
    <summary>Last week, I took over the Exhibits Division from Laurie Mann, who&apos;s undergone FAFIA. She&apos;ll still be working for N4 in the Exhibits Division, but has too much pressure from work, etc., to continue as the division head. All these...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Noreascon 4</name>
    </author>

    <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:lang="en-us" xml:base="http://noreascon4.blogs.com/n4_exhibits_brain/">
<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>Last week, I took over the Exhibits Division from Laurie Mann, who's undergone FAFIA. She'll still be working for N4 in the Exhibits Division, but has too much pressure from work, etc., to continue as the division head.</p>

<p>All these ideas on reimagining the exhibits are good ones. We'll continue to try to work them into the plans, and would love more suggestions. </p>

<p>I also want to point out that an exhibit doesn't have to be just a bunch of material in a display case. Consider, for example, something as simple as having each case of Hugo rockets accompanied by a rolling computer display identifying the winners from those years, with pictures.</p>

<p>And the "Exhibit Hall" we've been discussing is actually a lot more -- it's also the main highway between the various parts of the convention, the central bar and lounge, the home of convention Information, the location for Site Selection voting, and a host of other things. It's probably where you'll arrange to see your friends, including the thousands you haven't met yet. So the Exhibits portions -- our museum -- have to mesh with all those other purposes. </p>

<p>Should be fun.</p></div>
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  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>On Reimagining Worldcon Exhibits</title>
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    <issued>2003-11-02T20:20:17-05:00</issued>
    <modified>2003-11-12T13:59:04Z</modified>
    <created>2003-11-03T01:20:17Z</created>
    <summary>From Laurie Mann Exhibits Director, N4 We want to improve Exhibits organization, particularly the fannish exhibits. Since we don&apos;t have much money for displays, we tend to rely upon the cheap, tried and true display methods such as arranging tables...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Laurie Mann</name>
    </author>

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<![CDATA[<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><b>From Laurie Mann<br />
Exhibits Director, N4</b></p>

<p>We want to improve Exhibits organization, particularly <br />
the fannish exhibits. Since we don't have much money <br />
for displays, we tend to rely upon the cheap, tried and <br />
true display methods such as arranging tables and <br />
art show hangings in rectangles by subject.  There <br />
hasn't been a major change to the Exhibit Hall since <br />
Exhibits first started about 30 years ago (with the <br />
exception of the Concourse back in 1989, and the<br />
one-shot golf course in 1992). For next year, <br />
we want to dramatically improve the overall layout <br />
and organization of  the Exhibit Hall. </p>

<p>Worldcon exhibits have generally consisted of <br />
little islands of topic areas (the Worldcon history area, <br />
the fanzine area, the fan history area). We want <br />
to reorganize exhibits in a different fashion.  <br />
Reorganizing them by time is one possibility.  Picture, <br />
if you will, the 1950s exhibit.  This exhibit would include:</p>

<ul>
<li>timeline with highlights of the '50s</li>
<li>photos/personalities from the '50s</li>
<li>Hugo info from the '50s</li>
<li>Worldcon, convention info/materials from the '50s</li>
<li>fanzines from the '50s</li>
<li>SF book/movie/TV info from the '50s</li>
<li>a conversation nook</li>
<li>a reference area - find out more</li>
</ul>

<p>I want to stress that this organization by decade is <br />
a preliminary idea.  We need to spend some time <br />
over the next few weeks discussing the hows and<br />
whats of Exhibit reorganization.  We don't want <br />
to split things up arbitrarily, but we do want <br />
to provide a better context for the material.  <br />
I suppose with my interest in history, <br />
organizing material chronologically<br />
makes the most sense to me, but I'm definitely <br />
open to suggestions.  As with Program, <br />
we believe Exhibits can encourage conversation <br />
among fans, both old and new. </p>

<p>Since we intend to reorganize existing materials, <br />
we need to have a better idea of what's available <br />
for display in the "warehouse" of fannish materials.  <br />
We will start to inventory and label materials currently in<br />
storage in Massachusetts.  We're going to develop <br />
an online inventory of materials.   Over the winter <br />
and spring, we're going to use our inventory <br />
database to determine which materials go into <br />
each decade exhibit. </p>

<p>The idea is to focus on interesting material, label it <br />
well so that both fans and  non-fans alike understand <br />
why the material is important to our field.</p>

<p>We also want to present the exhibits in a more appealing <br />
way.  To help us do that, we'll have some "proto-professional" <br />
help from students at the New England School of Design <br />
(<a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/nesad/">http://www.suffolk.edu/nesad/</a>).  We'll go to<br />
Worldcon with a more detailed exihibits layout than Worldcons <br />
have had in the past.  We believe this reorganization plan <br />
has enormous potential to help make Exhibits more interesting.  <br />
Despite the extra work it will undoubtably require, <br />
we're going to wind up with a more<br />
engaging set of exhibits for Noreascon 4. </p>

<hr />

<p><b>From Lauwrence C. Smith<br />
Co-Manager of Dealers Room, N4</b></p>

<p>This is an excellent idea and way overdue.<br />
Exhibits has been an orphan step-child for years--<br />
it's not a glamor position and requires too much real<br />
work to be a popular choice. As Exhibits Div Mgr<br />
for ConJose, this was the hardest position I had<br />
to fill; and the Dept Mgr is critical.</p>

<p>Doing it by decades is intelligent--it's how many of us<br />
relate to our entry/position in the fannish timeline.</p>

<p>&gt; The idea is to focus on interesting material, label it<br />
&gt; well so that both fans and non-fans alike understand<br />
&gt; why the material is important to our field.</p>

<p>And this point goes to the heart of the biggest current problem<br />
I see in fandom--no replacements. Fandom is aging about<br />
as fast as I am; when I got started in the mid 1960s,<br />
there was a new fannish generation about every<br />
three years and now I doubt if we are even getting<br />
one-for-one replacements. Yes, there are lots more<br />
compelling competing alternatives for proto-fan's<br />
time and money which didn't exist when I was 20,<br />
but we should still be able<br />
to make organized fandom appealing.</p>

<hr />

<p><b>From Patrick Molloy<br />
Manager of NASA Exhibits and<br />
Site Selection</b></p>

<p>To attempt to tie together the two areas I'm working...  ;-)<br />
If the exhibits are arranged chronologically, perhaps they <br />
could lead the viewer through to the "future of fandom" <br />
area, which would include the tables for the 2005 & 2006 <br />
Worldcons, the 2007 site selection area, and the future <br />
worldcon bidders tables.</p>

<hr />

<p><b>from Mike Nelson<br />
50 Years of Hugo Exhibit</b></p>

<p>&gt; I suppose with my interest in history, organizing material<br />
&gt; chronologically makes the most sense to me, but I'm <br />
&gt; definitely open to suggestions. </p>

<p>How many decades?  1930s to 1990s plus the 21st Century?</p>

<p>[[from Laurie:  probably]]</p>

<p>If we organize things by decades, I'm tempted to suggest<br />
that we include some real world events/milestones to help<br />
in orienting people to the different time periods.  Some<br />
of these youngsters seem to picture the first moon landing<br />
as science fiction.  ;-)</p>

<p>By fannish Ages or Epoch?</p>

<p>The Reign of the Spirit Master<br />
The Age of the Mimeograph<br />
The Dawn of Xerography<br />
The Digital Frontier</p>

<hr />

<p><b>from Randy Smith<br />
Exhibits Staff</b></p>

<p>First of all, I agree with Laurie that a re-organization <br />
of the exhibits area is long overdue.  I tend to go through <br />
the exhibits pretty quickly, mostly because "I've seen all <br />
that stuff before."  Rearranging the material chronologically <br />
will add interest for us "old-timers" (am I really in that <br />
category now?)</p>

<p>[[from Laurie - you've been an assistant division director -<br />
if you weren't an "old-timer" before, you've surely aged<br />
into the position now!  ;-&gt;]]</p>

<p>Laurie's idea reminds me a bit of Bucky when we did <br />
the Fannish Desks exhibit, also organized by decade.  <br />
This would be much more comprehensive than that was, <br />
and, I would think, should allow for more interesting <br />
conversations  by fans standing amidst the material.  <br />
Having conversation areas in each section is essential, IMHO.</p>

<p>Decade areas would have to include the '30s through <br />
the '00s, at least.  I could also see including a section for the <br />
1920s, even though fandom in that decade was nothing like <br />
it has been since, and it did not consider itself as a<br />
larger organization.  Certainly, it had not gained the status <br />
of being a subculture that it had attained by the late 1930s.  <br />
Nevertheless, there were people doing things that today we <br />
would classify as fanac, even if they themselves would <br />
not have thought of it that way.</p>

<p>I really like the idea of including a Fandom In The 2010s section.</p>

<p>Certain issues will require difficult decisions:</p>

<p>How do we place fans into categories by decades when many<br />
have fannish careers that span several?</p>

<p>Likewise, while some aspects of fannish culture come and <br />
go (When was the last time you "liberated the pool?"), <br />
others span several decades.  Do we put an exhibit about<br />
a particular fannish practice in the decade it began or <br />
the decade when it was the most popular?</p>

<p>There is some value to categorizing displays by category <br />
rather than time.  Are there some exhibits we might want <br />
to keep together, despite the fact that they span significant <br />
lengths of time?</p>

<p>Would it be possible to include computer terminals with <br />
fanhistory information on them so that people can learn <br />
more while being in the midst of the exhibit?</p>

<p>[[from Laurie:  The Fanhistory Exhibit has at least 2<br />
laptops.  And, if everything works out, we may wind up<br />
with a wireless access area in Hall C (depending on<br />
costs and the like).]]</p>

<p>On another note:  I like the idea of including real-world <br />
events in the exhibit as points of orientation.  This can <br />
work well if it is a well-planned exhibit.  My only problem <br />
with it is that it reminds me a bit of the Noreascon 3<br />
board that had clippings of current events "outside the <br />
convention" so that we could follow the news of the <br />
"real world."  As I recall, most of the clippings<br />
were local news write-ups of the con or daily updates <br />
of the then-ongoing trials of Zsa Zsa Gabor and Jimmy <br />
Bakker.  Granted, we will have the perspective of time <br />
to look at past decades to decide what was <b>really</b> <br />
important, but we still need to think carefully about it.</p>

<p>&gt; Mike Nelson wrote:<br />
&gt; By fannish Ages or Epoch?<br />
&gt; <br />
&gt; The Reign of the Spirit Master<br />
&gt; The Age of the Mimeograph<br />
&gt; The Dawn of Xerography<br />
&gt; The Digital Frontier</p>

<p>While I like this idea a lot and it does make more <br />
sense than organization strictly by decades, this particular <br />
time-division seems to put just a bit too much emphasis <br />
in fanzines.</p>

<p>What are some similar divisions by epoch that would be<br />
more general in nature?</p>

<hr />

<p><br />
<b>From Chaz Baden<br />
Fan Photo Gallery Exhibit</b></p>

<p>Almost every single photo in the Fan Gallery is less than <br />
7 years old...   If we're agreed that trying to split up a <br />
photo gallery exhibit into decades is a bit problematical, <br />
then here's an idea I had for the Fan Gallery.</p>

<p>Suppose we made the exhibit something you walked <br />
through,  and perhaps lingered in?   Instead of something <br />
you walk around.  Suppose we had more  art show hangings, <br />
we set them up  facing inward instead of outward, and we <br />
had a bench for people to linger on?</p>

<p>[[From Laurie:  Yep, that's definitely the idea.  In fact, Mike<br />
Nelson's initial 50 Years of Hugo design was very much<br />
in this spirit.]]</p>

<p>I've made a diagram of how the Fan Gallery was laid out <br />
at Torcon 3, and a diagram of an idea for displaying the <br />
same number of photos at  Noreascon.   </p>

<p><b>Torcon Layout</b><br />
<img src="http://scifiinc.net/scifiinc/gallery/report/gif/2003_torcon3.gif" width="250" height="140" alt="Fan Gallery at Torcon 3"/>
</p>

<p><b>A Proposed N4 Layout</b><br />
<img src="http://scifiinc.net/scifiinc/gallery/report/gif/2004_n4_v1.gif" width="320" height="180" alt="A Proposed N4 Layout">
</p>

<p>[[from Laurie:  Yes!]]</p>

<p>At Torcon, the "footprint" of the exhibit was approximately <br />
24 ft by 8 ft. The idea I've proposed above would use more <br />
artshow fixtures, and would be  approximately 32 ft by 18 ft.    <br />
(More space would be handy, natch; we're  still adding photos <br />
to the exhibit.)</p>

<p>[[from Laurie:  Though if you had photos on both the inside <b>and</b><br />
outside, you could add more photos and still have a conversation<br />
area.  Note that most exhibits will probably wind up with less <br />
space, because Hall C is smaller than many recent Worldcon<br />
Exhibit Halls.  And some exhibits/fan tables will probably wind<br />
up in hallways.]]</p>

<p>Any chance of getting a big piece of carpet for the exhibit <br />
to rest on, to help visually separate it from the aisles and <br />
the rest of the hall?</p>

<p>(If we did that for all the exhibits, we could color code the <br />
carpets...)</p>

<p>[[from Laurie:  An interesting idea.  Please put carpeting in<br />
your "budget" if you want it and maybe it's something we<br />
can add to contingency.]]</p>

<p>I'm thinking that the outside walls would have something <br />
visually interesting hung on them - like patterned fabric, <br />
or some sort of mural or other large art, or something. </p>

<p>One idea I had was to put a big sheet of butcher paper <br />
on a table in the  middle of the exhibit with a box of <br />
crayons, and then at the end of the  day hang the sheet <br />
on the outside and put a fresh sheet down.  But that <br />
doesn't really relate to the Fan Gallery concept, so it's just a <br />
free-floating idea that might fit somewhere else in the hall...</p>

<p>[[from Laurie:  Ahh, the return of the Grafitti Board...]]</p></div>]]>
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