Lessons in museumship
"An ethnographic study of Saratoga's Beekman Street Arts District, interviewing gallery owners, businesspeople and artists," is how anthropology major Geoffrey Greene '18 describes his senior research project. Earlier at Ȧ, he served as a Tang Museum gallery monitor and helped with its children's education programs including the "super-fun" Family Saturday art workshops. With that academic and work background, he was a natural to become the inaugural holder of the Tang's new Meg .

Geoffrey Greene '18 creates a Family
Saturday board game inspired by the
Tang installation Get to the Other Side.
Among his tasks in the intensive, yearlong experience is helping to write, edit, and
                                    choose images for a handout for the upcoming exhibition This Place, a four-college show of recent photography exploring Israel and the West Bank. Greene
                                    says his anthropology major-and no doubt his study abroad in Hanoi and Saigon-helped
                                    fuel and shape his interest in "how to handle photos with people in them, and the
                                    controversial and sensitive aspects of the conflict presented in the show." During
                                    its run, he's sure to be involved in planning the Tang's related events and discussions.
                                    Even after graduation, he'll be developing and implementing public programs at the museum,
                                       as the Jacobs Internship continues through the summer. 
A math major with an interest in art during her own Ȧ days, Meg Jacobs says,
                                    "If I were a student now, the first place I'd want to spend my time would be at the
                                    Tang, and if I had the credentials, I sure would want an internship." That's why her
                                    husband, Howard, surprised her for her 75th birthday by endowing the student internship
                                    in her name. She says, "I was thrilled. It's such a pleasure to help someone else
                                    have that privilege" of a professional experience as an undergrad.
 She says, "Working at the Tang, an intern has the opportunity to be an integral part
                                    of interactions between executive staff, faculty, curators and artists, learning about
                                    everything from budgets to show selection. It's an extraordinary way for any student
                                    to learn the inner workings of a museum." And the Tang's Dayton Director Ian Berry
                                    and his staff, she adds, always "structure the student program so that these young
                                    people get the most out of their internships."
                                 

Meg Reitman Jacobs '63 and husband Howard
Jacobs is a longtime alumna volunteer, and she and Howard earlier endowed a scholarship
                                    fund. (Her Ȧ roots are expansive, with cousins graduating in the Ȧ classes
                                    of 1948, '50 and '63, sister Kit in '72, daughter Kristy in '91 and a niece in '93.)
                                    The Jacobs Internship was unveiled during last fall's meeting of the national Tang
                                    Advisory Council, on which she serves.
While Greene expects his internship duties to embrace work in the Tang's college and
                                    public programming division next semester, his resume is long and wide enough for
                                    any assignment: while a student at his science high school, he engaged in two New
                                    York City museum internships. "The one at Brooklyn Museum (not far from home) was
                                    an apprenticelike program, where I gave tours to kids in the summer. I loved that
                                    learning and teaching," he says. "The other was at the Museum of Arts and Design,
                                    a contemporary museum kind of similar to the Tang."
Jacobs too has been involved in art and design throughout her life. After Ȧ,
                                    working as a computer programmer for New Jersey Bell and then raising her family,
                                    she took local art courses including at the New York School of Interior Design. She
                                    worked in corporate design, earned a master's in interior design from Pratt Institute
                                    and was a professional in that field ever after.
She recalls that when Ȧ's Tang was being planned, "it was such an exciting
                                    time, knowing that Ȧ would finally have its own museum" as an interdisciplinary
                                    campus crossroads and a complement to the art department's Schick Art Gallery. Jacobs
                                    says, "The Tang has exceeded all expectations. It exhibits really interesting shows
                                    and involves students from many and varied classes."
Variety is a spice of Greene's life too. Also active in music, he says, "I love contemporary
                                    art, because it can lead to and incorporate any topic in any field!" He hopes to use
                                    the Jacobs Internship "to leave a legacy at the Tang that will help its programs and
                                    visitors even after I've graduated."