Members of the community enjoy the Telling Tales exhibit at the McNay Art Museum
Six 性爱天堂 Student Writers Master Six Words
McNay Art Museum exhibit features poems of English professor鈥檚 students to describe photos

奥丑别苍听聽was curating an exhibit of photographs that tell a story, organizers asked Jenny Browne, associate professor of English at 性爱天堂 and聽Poet Laureate聽for the city of San Antonio, to provide words for the images.

In turn, Browne invited students in one of her creative writing classes to bring to life the commission from the McNay by writing six-word stories about the works of 17 photographers whose works appear in聽聽at the museum through Jan. 15, 2017.

The result is red-inked six-word stories liberally placed next to photographs in the special exhibit. The six-word stories include the names and class years of each of the six 性爱天堂 students who contributed to the project. In some cases, the six words explain or enhance the images. In others, the six words are whimsical.

Browne聽said the museum shared a catalog of the photographs before the exhibit opened. She urged the students to examine the photographed relationships between people and between objects. 鈥淚 told them, 鈥榊ou can鈥檛 write about the whole thing, so pick out some aspect of the photo,鈥欌 Browne said, adding with emphasis, 鈥淏ecause you only have six words.鈥

The creative project also meshes with one of her goals as Poet Laureate 鈥 and that is to engage the public in literature, she said.

The engagement had a profound effect on one of the students, Briauna Barrera 鈥17, a San Antonio student double majoring in urban studies and environmental studies, with a minor in creative writing.

鈥淭he first time I came in here and saw my words on a wall in a museum, it was like an out of body experience,鈥 Barrera said. 鈥淧eople have been making crafts for years and years and years 鈥 or they are even dead 鈥 and they are in a museum. To be a college student and have my words on a museum wall is a humbling, incredible experience.鈥

Narrative photography is used to tell a story, and in some of the McNay photographs, the events being depicted were staged with actors. Some express social commentary. And others beg for explanation.

On the surface, one photograph is a day in the life of an Asian restaurant. The accompanying six-word story by Derek Hudson 鈥19, is 鈥淓gg drop soup. Bombs drop too.鈥

Kate Carey, director of education at the McNay, said she wanted the six-word stories to function as a 鈥渏umping off point鈥 for interpreting the photographic artwork. 鈥淚f a story read as a caption, we didn鈥檛 choose it,鈥 she said.

In addition to Barrera and Hudson, the other student writers are: Megan Allen 鈥19, Brianna Azua 鈥19, Julia Camp 鈥18, and Michael Garcia 鈥19.

In her description of the project that is posted at the beginning of the exhibit, Browne noted that the stories are a form of聽ekphrasis, a Greek word for 鈥渕arking art about art.鈥 She discussed the photographs in terms of their cause and effect, tone and time, and irony and surprise. When anyone got stuck, Browne drew from the metaphor of what important items would you grab to take with you if your house were on fire. She said, 鈥淚f you can only take one line with you, what will it be?鈥

Susie P. Gonzalez helped tell 性爱天堂's story as part of the University communications team.

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