All Roads Lead to Cranbrook: A Fellow Says Goodbye

I began writing this blog post weeks ago but had to set it aside—because I became too sentimental to continue, but also because I was pulled into a discussion about an issue around 19th century chairs, Eliel Saarinen, and Cranbrook House (the exact details escape me). This, to me, is the perfect encapsulation of what the last two years have been: a whirlwind of emotional investment, intellectual engagement, and a work pace that proceeds at a quick clip as projects emerge from questions as diverse as “is this sandbox at Brookside a historic one?” (the answer is, “no”) to “how did those Cranbrook School chairs get all the way out to California, and what do we do with them now?” (the answer is, “we don’t know” and “return them into circulation after ensuring their condition and documentation”).

As the first full-term, resident Collections Fellow at the Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research, I have worked with an amazing staff of individuals to field these questions and countless more (the less said about the discussion regarding spray-painted vandalism on the posterior of a sculpture on campus, the better). I have also had the chance to both figuratively and literally reach across the aisle to collaborate with the staff of Cranbrook Art Museum and Cranbrook Institute of Science, as well as the amazing volunteers at Cranbrook House. For two years I have watched the seasons turn from my desk in the lower level of the art museum. I have made a place for myself in CAM’s gleaming new Collections Wing as well as the less glamorous (but perhaps more curious and mysterious) storage spaces that fill attics and basements across Cranbrook’s sprawling campus. I have learned this storied site’s history, engaging with its past through three exhibitions and countless house tours, lectures, and public programming. And now, unfortunately, it is time for me to say goodbye.

Here I am hard at work in the Cranbrook House attic, cataloging and photographing historic costume. This job was always a surprise! May 2014.

Here I am hard at work in the Cranbrook House attic, cataloging and photographing historic costumes. This job is always a surprise! May 2014.

A two year fellowship, my term here has seemed to go by much faster than that. I think that’s what happens when you work with colleagues who surprise you anew every day with their enthusiasm, dedication, and brilliance. It is also what happens when you’re surrounded by art and history. Like any job, the day-to-day activities of museum work can become pedestrian or humdrum. Underneath each task, however, lies the chance to make new connections or uncover old ones, to flesh out our understanding of art, culture, and history in a way that brings color and complexity to our lives. And so, for my last post as a founding editor and contributor to this blog, I’d like to say thank you to all the people, places, and objects that have helped make each day of this fellowship an adventure in discovery. And finally, my sincerest gratitude to you, the readers of the Cranbrook Kitchen Sink! Your passion for and engagement with what we do here have been an inspiration to me, and I know you will continue to inspire future Fellows and blog contributors. Thank you for everything!

Shoshana Resnikoff, Collections Fellow


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2 thoughts on “All Roads Lead to Cranbrook: A Fellow Says Goodbye

  1. Best wishes to you in your next chapter. I have thoroughly enjoyed your blog, the interesting stories and photographs from the archives!!

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