Connections: Doors

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Themes: Objects

Exhibition designer Dan Kershaw talks about doors and the unexpected juxtapositions they create in the Museum.

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00:00:00:0000 I'm Daniel Kershaw, and my work in the Museum is designing exhibits and permanent galleries.

00:17:40:700 Doors, to me, are the key between so many different areas in the museum that normally may be oddly

00:16:50:230 disjunctive and not linked. And those abrupt transitions, I think, are part of the fun of the Met.

00:32:20:800 It's a confrontation between different kinds of art. It doesn't go down easy all the time.

00:34:40:700 I think that's part of the charm of it. One of my favorite doors

00:26:00:0000 that I've chopped into the building is an odd connection between

00:29:00:0000 the galleries for Oceania

00:34:10:130 and the Roman galleries. In one direction

00:38:00:180 is the solid, stone architectural ornaments of ancient

00:42:10:190 Rome, and through that doorway you see a featherweight

00:45:10:190 Kwoma ceiling made out of bark painted tiles, massive in its scale. Who knew? I didn't expect that

00:51:10:190 connection to evolve that way and it just worked out fantastically, as odd as that juxtaposition is.

00:57:10:190 Another door that I've cut into the building which I'm really enthusiastic about

01:02:30:270 is this door in the Byzantine galleries. Years ago when they moved a seven-hundred-

01:06:30:270 pound display case out of the way, what I did was to open that door up and to

01:11:30:270 reveal a space underneath it that was never meant to be seen before. It contains

01:15:30:270 grotty-looking brick and the rough underside of the Great Hall stairs. And it's a perfect spot to

01:31:40:700 show early Christian art from northern Egypt. Most of it was burial-related, and so the fact that

01:36:40:700 this crypt of a space has evolved into a gallery for crypt-based art is just perfectly wonderful.

01:41:40:700 I've always been passionate, ever since I was a little boy, with

01:34:00:0000 the entrance into Perneb's tomb. One of the passageways ends in

01:37:00:0000 what appears to be a standard-issue Egyptian doorway, and yet it's

01:43:00:120 solid stone, it's a fake doorway. I think only the gods were meant to

01:47:00:120 have opened that doorway, but it's a jarring end to that passageway.

01:51:00:120 To me the most interesting doors in the Museum are those that whet your appetite. I love

01:56:00:120 that monochromatic Charles Sheeler painting showing nothing, just an open door, but the

02:02:00:120 door itself is so fabulously, meticulously detailed, that space beyond is beckoning you.

02:07:00:120 Some doors just impress me by their scale, and this great photograph by Gustave

02:15:00:300 Le Gray, it's a grand-looking door in a religious structure meant to look even more

02:21:00:300 significant by arch over arch over arch. In a way that's not too dissimilar from

02:26:00:300 this beautiful Telefolip Door Board. It's about as tall as a tall person is. Hidden in the bottom

02:30:20:200 of it is a round opening symbolizing a bellybutton. And I like the idea of a doorway which is so

02:36:20:200 small that you actually have to slide horizontally through it to get into the big chamber behind it.

02:41:20:200 I think that in doors there's both the forbidding and the inviting.

02:50:20:500 Between those two instinctive reactions you get from a door

02:55:20:500 there's endless variations. I've always felt that the

03:05:00:900 most wonderful transitions that doors provide are

03:08:00:900 those which give you an element of surprise. That what's on one side of

03:01:50:290 the door is so vastly different from what's on the other side of the door.

03:04:50:290 I like the idea of completely being shocked and bewildered by what's in that transition.

03:08:00:120 The shape, the form of the doorway itself can also tell you a great deal or mislead you greatly

03:14:10:130 and those are fun games to play with, as a designer I love

03:28:20:800 to play with that. And we're in an art museum, after all.

03:31:20:800 It's wonderful where the door isn't just something that

03:23:30:150 leads you between places, but is something unto itself.

03:26:30:150 I think the transportation is really what the Met's all about.

03:30:10:190 I think that's what great art does, it serves as a doorway to something else.