New job Collections and Curatorial Intern—2021 Getty Marrow Undergraduate Summer Internship in California

Collections and Curatorial Intern—2021 Getty Marrow Undergraduate Summer Internship

Company : Japanese American National Museum
Salary : Details not provided
Location : California

Full Description

EMPLOYMENT TYPE

Full-time

UNIT

Collections Management & Access (CMA)

APPLICATION DEADLINE

05/06/2021

OPEN DATE

04/06/2021

Position Summary:

The Getty MUI Collections and Curatorial intern will shepherd the Miné Okubo Collection (JANM 2007.62) through the various processes inherent to collections, conservation, and curatorial work at JANM and ultimately develop a capstone project that will make this collection relatable and accessible to a broad audience.

See below for more details and criteria.

Dates of Internship: This year’s internship will offer some flexibility to comply with Public Health Officer Orders and allow students to work both on and off-site as needed to comply with city and county orders. 10 consecutive weeks between 6/14/21 thru 8/20/21, Full-Time (40 hours a week). May require some evening & weekend hours.

Intern Stipend: $6,000 gross for Full-Time (40 hours/week),10 consecutive weeks.


Essential Duties and Responsibilities

Miné Okubo (1912–2001), was a classically trained artist from Riverside, CA, who was traveling throughout Europe to hone her craft on the eve of World War II. Upon reuniting with her brother in California, her life was soon turned upside down when she was forcibly removed from her home and community and incarcerated by the US government in one of America’s concentration camps, despite being a US citizen. The Okubo Collection is composed of a variety of materials—predominantly loose sketches and illustrations, sketch books, personal correspondence, press clippings, literary magazines, and manuscripts. The pen and ink, charcoal, and pencil sketches, which number in the hundreds, chronicle artist Miné Okubo’s incarceration during World War II and capture the congressional hearings in the 1980s that resulted in redress. The collection includes the original Citizen 13660 manuscript, which was Okubo’s illustrated memoir and the first of its kind to be published on the wartime incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II.

To process this collection and make it accessible to the public, the collections and curatorial intern will catalog the objects in the TMS collections management database, scan or photograph the objects, rehouse the objects in archival materials, research the historical context around the artifacts, create a finding aid, and develop written content around the objects for inclusion on JANM’s various social media platforms.

The artwork in this collection, along with existing materials in the collection will help to inform a research project into the wartime incarceration of Japanese American families from the West Coast. While the Collections Management and Access and Curatorial departments at JANM are prioritizing work to make more of the permanent collection available through eMuseum, an online platform to display catalog information, other creative ways that highlight the intern’s skillset to share these collections with the public is highly encouraged. The intern can determine what might be an effective way to share information gathered with a broad audience as a final capstone project, which could possibly include: an online exhibition through eMuseum, a zine, a series of blog posts, a short documentary, or another creative form.

Please note: given the ongoing changes due to the pandemic, the descriptions and responsibilities are subject to change.

Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities

Qualification Requirements

Criteria for Intern Candidates: The internship opportunity is intended for members of groups underrepresented in professions related to museums and the visual arts, including but not limited to individuals of African American, Asian, Latino/Hispanic, Native American, and Pacific Islander descent. Intern candidates can be sought from all areas of undergraduate study and are not required to have demonstrated a previous commitment to the visual arts.

In addition, each intern must meet the following eligibility criteria:

  • Currently enrolled undergraduate and have completed at least one semester of college by June 2021
  • Must be a resident or attend college in Los Angeles County
  • Be eligible to be legally employed in the US

Please note that students who have previously served as Getty Marrow Multicultural Undergraduate summer interns at the Japanese American National Museum are not eligible for consideration. Students enrolled in a second BA or BS program are not eligible. Finally, staff members and relatives of staff or board members are not eligible.

Experience/Knowledge

Competency in digitization/digital asset management, including scanning, photography, and editing photographs in Adobe Photoshop is desired. Experience handling, cataloging, and rehousing archival and 3D artifacts is preferred, but not required. Familiarity with TMS or a collections management database is ideal, but not essential. Strong research and written communication skills are critical. Attention to detail and strong organizational skills are also essential.

REPORTING RELATIONSHIPS

Reports To: Kristen Hayashi, Director of Collections Management & Access and Curator

Positions Supervised: None


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