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=MOMA is what you make It=
=MOMA is what you make It=
As a game, MOMA is played '''face to face''' at pop-up galleries in public and community spaces and also '''online''' here at ''wikimoma.art'' and in digital video games . Players can play as themselves or as characters they have created - they may play roles such as curators, museum visitors, artists, benefactors, art scholars, bureaucrats, trustees and whatever else takes their fancy.
As a game, MOMA is played '''face to face''' at pop-up galleries in public and community spaces and also '''online''' here at ''wikimoma.art'' and in computer '''video games'''. Players can play as themselves or as characters they have created - they may play roles such as curators, museum visitors, artists, benefactors, art scholars, bureaucrats, trustees and whatever else takes their fancy.


This ''role-play'' can be quite low-key: sometimes random participants visiting the Museum may not even realize that they are part of a game. One way of playing at MOMA is to actually help make the games themselves!
This ''role-play'' can be quite low-key: sometimes random participants visiting the Museum may not even realize that they are part of a game. One way of playing at MOMA is to actually help make the games themselves!

Revision as of 02:56, 13 July 2022

The Museum that comes to You

Karen Runcell restores a damaged painting for the "358" Exhibition.
Karen Runcell restores a damaged painting for the "358" Exhibition.

The Museum of Moving Art is a creative device, an idea and the physical expressions at the centre of a planet-wide non-commercial community art project.

In artspeak, it can be understood to be an evolving composite artwork (a work of art that is made up of other works of art). Originally conceived as "street art with theatrical tendencies", it can be played as a game, or it can be approached more seriously - simply as a rather unique form of arts museum. However, playfulness is the key, for MOMA boldly experiments with the integration of gaming into community arts practice.

More simply, MOMA is made by participants in the wikimoma.art project - it takes many forms, and it can be in more than one place at any given time.

MOMA is what you make It

As a game, MOMA is played face to face at pop-up galleries in public and community spaces and also online here at wikimoma.art and in computer video games. Players can play as themselves or as characters they have created - they may play roles such as curators, museum visitors, artists, benefactors, art scholars, bureaucrats, trustees and whatever else takes their fancy.

This role-play can be quite low-key: sometimes random participants visiting the Museum may not even realize that they are part of a game. One way of playing at MOMA is to actually help make the games themselves!

Inspiration, Conception & Aims

MOMA is inspired by flight simulation, buskers, street art and all of the great public art institutions in the world (but especially the Doncaster Museum & Gallery, Heide, and Buxton Contemporary).

Originally conceived as street art with theatrical tendencies, MOMA has matured into an expansive collaborative community arts project called wikimoma.art. It is interdisciplinary in nature. The main aims of the project are:

  • to explore the intersections between reality, fantasy and the digital world
  • to create a straight-friendly Queer space in the online gaming world and at MOMA live spaces
  • to open up play in the flight simulator space to non-virtual-pilots
  • to represent Queer communities as ethnic groups by highlighting their Queer cultural expressions
  • to represent Queer individuals as fully functional and valued participants in the intersectional context of the broader communities in where they also live
  • to develop & exploit the cinematic and dramatic potential of open-world flight simulator software, particularly in regard to non-liner story telling.
  • to use online digital technologies to bring people together in real life communal spaces that are safe, playful & creative

Foundation

The Museum was founded in the Australian winter of 2021 by David Freedom Rose. Visit MOMA's Story Garden to find out how this beautiful space came to be.

(Please be aware this is a work-in-progress. The website is being developed live.)'