Maintaining Alexander Girard’s mania for multitudes
Visitors enjoy seeing the work in progress—once they get over the initial surprise of seeing a person, like Drew Miller, inside the set. “I have to relax myself before entering a village,” says Miller, “so that I can carefully tiptoe through the fragile landscape like a gentle giant.”
BY LAURA ADDISON / PHOTOGRAPHS BY KITTY LEAKEN
For thirty-seven years, Multiple Visions: A Common Bond has drawn international visitors and attention to the Museum of International Folk Art. This unique installation of some 10,000 toys and folk art objects from Alexander Girard’s own collection, designed and installed by Girard himself, was a labor of love and a testament to this modern-design master’s attention to the global handmade. Yet from the beginning, it was never clear just how long the exhibition would grace the wing. Museum lore tells us that, depending on whom you asked, the exhibition was meant to be on display somewhere between six months and forever.
Along with the tremendous gift of Alexander and Susan Girard’s collection comes tremendous responsibility, especially in light of its longevity. While museum staff clean and maintain as needed, the Girard Wing requires periodic refreshing. For the third time since Multiple Visions opened in 1982, museum staff have reevaluated the wing to address matters small and large: from facility issues such as HVAC, lighting, and painting, to the cleaning, documentation, and conservation of individual objects and the displays they inhabit.
During this third round, Multiple Visions has remained open to the public as a team of five people worked three days a week, one scene at a time. Photographer Kitty Leaken has documented each and every object and each scene once cleaning was completed, while also photographing the process. Since January 2019, the team has completed the Chinese Opera, the Circus, the Mexican Town of Acatlán, the Nineteenth-Century American Town, the Harbor Scene, the Pueblo Feast Day, the Italian villa, and the Moroccan street scene. This ongoing process should take three to five years.
Visitors enjoy seeing the work in progress—once they get over the initial surprise of seeing a person, like Drew Miller, inside the set. “I have to relax myself before entering a village,” says Miller, “so that I can carefully tiptoe through the fragile landscape like a gentle giant.”