Gallery 360 exhibit returns to kindergarten by Greg St. Martin April 2, 2014 Share Facebook LinkedIn Twitter Gallery 360 is currently filled with wooden blocks, paper snowflakes, and lesson books featuring drawing, sewing, and paper weaving. It looks like your old kindergarten classroom—and that’s the point. Learning by Design, an exhibit curated by architect and collector Norman Brosterman, traces the influence that the kindergarten movement—the revolutionary educational system developed by Friedrich Frobel in Germany in the 1830s—had on culture and the impact it had in laying the grounds for modernist art, architecture, and design. On display through April 19, the exhibit is presented by the Department of Art + Design, Gallery 360, and the Northeastern Center for the Arts. Brosterman first became interested in the history of kindergarten while assembling the world’s finest collection of antique building block and construction toys, later acquired by the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal. “I went from architecture to flea markets,” Brosterman, an antique dealer, recalled at the exhibit’s opening reception last month. “Along the way, I began to collect these building blocks and construction sets. I wondered if I was going to find the Frobel Blocks. It was the beginning of a gigantic search for kindergarten’s history.” Discovering that these famed Froebel Blocks were merely part of a much larger system of elegant, nature-based, pedagogical toys, Brosterman embarked on years of research into the history of this lost world, culminating in the publication in 1997 of his award-winning book, Inventing Kindergarten. MFA graduate student Rania Masri takes a moment to look over the paper weaving display as part of the Gallery 360 exhibit. Photo by Mariah Tauger. Kindergarten’s universal language of geometric form was intended to cultivate childrens’ innate abilities to observe, reason, create, and communicate, and it’s expressed in Brosterman’s exhibit through artistic, educational toys and materials—known as “gifts”—that he’s collected over the years. Brosterman noted that architect and writer Frank Lloyd Wright often lectured about Froebelian geometry, which was integrated into every project he did. Charles-Edouard Jeanneret spent more than seven years in Froebel-based schools in Switzerland before growing up to become Le Corbusier—one of the 20th century’s most influential architects. Nathan Felde, chair of the Department of Art + Design, dubbed Brosterman “the custodian steward of the legacy of kindergarten,” and noted that the creativity of his work aligns with the College of Arts, Media and Design’s efforts to sustain the creative impulses of its faculty and students. Norman Brosterman, curator of the new Gallery 360 exhibit Learning by Design, speaks to students, faculty, and staff during the opening reception last month. Photo by Mariah Tauger.