Be inspired to see the art in your daily life.

The Museum Gaze with Marina Gross-Hoy explores how looking at ordinary life with the same embodied gaze we use with art in a museum can open us up to wonder, compassion, and empowerment.

This idea—to look at life like art—was born out of a need to nourish myself in the midst of a challenging season.

When museums closed at the beginning of the pandemic, I became curious about what it would mean to look at my daily life with the same attention I used when looking at an artwork. As a Museum Studies PhD candidate, I've spent a lot of time learning about the benefits of encountering art, and I wondered if that experience could be translated to ordinary life. Playing with new ways of paying attention is a powerful (and fun) practice, and I'm excited to explore it with you here.

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How people describe Marina’s writing

“Engaging, full, and juicy”

“Insightful, hopeful, clear-eyed, empowering”

“Full of surprises. Luscious.”

“Like a warm hug”

About Marina

Marina Gross-Hoy (she/her/elle) is a writer, Museum Studies PhD candidate, and mother. She takes playing in museums very seriously.

Originally from Michigan, Marina moved to museum-saturated Paris to complete a master's in muséologie at the École du Louvre and work in the education department of a Parisian museum. She moved back to North America for a PhD program in Museum Studies at the Université de Québec à Montréal, focusing on how museums develop digital projects to create engaging experiences for visitors.

Marina currently lives in the Eastern Townships of Québec with her husband and preschooler.

Connect with Marina on her website and Instagram.

Subscribe to The Museum Gaze with Marina Gross-Hoy

A newsletter that explores what looking at artwork can teach us about seeing the art of our ordinary lives // from Marina Gross-Hoy, writer and Museum Studies PhD candidate

People

Marina Gross-Hoy is a storyteller and Museum Studies PhD candidate. She writes about playing with new ways of paying attention to embodied experience, by exploring what looking at artwork can teach us about seeing the art of our ordinary lives.