Volunteer

volunteer

Thank you for your interest in volunteering with the Wharton Esherick Museum! Our primary volunteer need is for individuals to join our museum docent team.

The WEM Docent Program is integral to the Museum community of staff, volunteers, neighbors, supporters, and enthusiasts. Docents are volunteer tour guides who lead small groups through the Esherick Studio, connecting visitors with Wharton Esherickโ€™s expansive creative vision. In preparing to give tours, docents undergo specialized training that involves independent reading, shadowing tours, and one-on-one time with museum staff. Docents enjoy unique access to WEM collections and programs, community gatherings and field trips, store discounts, and membership in the Greater Philadelphia Area Docent Consortium.

There are no prerequisites for becoming a WEM docent. We welcome inquiries from anyone with a willingness to learn and a passion for sharing art and ideas with people of all backgrounds. Prior experience with teaching and/or public speaking may be helpful. New docents make a two-year commitment to the Museum. During this time, they undergo a 12 to 16-week training program and are prepared to give approximately two tours per month during the Museumโ€™s tour season, March through December. Applicants must be over 18.

Wharton Esherick Museum - Five people stand outside on a gravel road near rustic buildings under a partly cloudy, sunny sky.

Questions?

If you have questions or would like to learn more, please contact Holly Gore, WEM’s Director of Interpretation and Associate Curator, at [email protected]

Interested in becoming a docent?

APPLY HERE
Wharton Esherick Museum - Sunlit wooden interior with spiral stairs, bar stools, sculptures, and people gathered near a window.

Welcome to our testimonials section, where our dedicated and passionate Wharton Esherick Museum docents – our invaluable volunteers – share their heartfelt reviews and experiences.

Discover the impact of their commitment and enthusiasm as they recount their time spent enriching visitors’ understanding of Esherick’s extraordinary legacy. Read on to explore the personal stories and reflections that make our museum truly special.

  • Why I love volunteering at WEM!

    Being a docent at the WEM has been very positive. Most importantly, I love the museum. Being inside the studio is a very special experience. Learning about Wharton and walking among his treasures is a never-ending joy. Visitors are amazed at what they see, so that alone is a gratifying experience. The staff is an important part of the positive experience. From the day I started as a docent, Iโ€™ve been treated with respect, and never taken for granted. No staff member has ever been too busy to help me find answers to whatever questions come up. The resources for information are readily available to all the docents. I was a volunteer docent at the Philadelphia Museum of Art for 22 years, and this small museum and itโ€™s staff are as professional as any Iโ€™ve had the pleasure of working with.

  • I was so impressed with my first visit to the Studio, arranged by Larry Stauffer (electrician for the museum) that I bought a picture of the spiral staircase and made a โ€œlive edgeโ€ frame for it. I returned and signed up for the newsletter. When I learned that docents were needed, I appliedโ€ฆ and then followed 8 different docent tours.

    The energy and knowledge imparted by the docents and the enjoyment displayed on the faces of the attendees made it easy to share the Studio with my own tours.

    I was fortunate to be able to spend a half hour with Bob Bascom and to visit the Dannenbergs. I usually combine some of their stories into my tours.

    It is so much fun to watch the amazement of new visitors as they listen to the life, history. and work of WE. I thoroughly enjoy giving tours to the various guests and they never fail to show their appreciation.

    It never gets tiring!

  • I first arrived to WEM in 2014, as a volunteer docent with a passion for the arts and historyโ€ฆand a crippling fear of public speaking. I was relieved to be welcomed into a vibrant and warm community unlike any I had ever known. Before long, I was accumulating fascinating stories about this fascinating man who led such a rich and compelling life.

    My fear of public speaking melted away and I delighted in sharing this local treasure that never ceases to inspire visitors from around the world. Working at WEM has been truly life changing and I cannot recommend joining this incredible community enough!

  • I enjoy sharing the Esherick Studio and Esherickโ€™s story because of how visitors react. The tour is beyond entertaining or informative; people are deeply touched by the experience. In thirty plus years of conducting tours, I truly know I have witnessed life-changing moments.

  • When I retired I thought I could finally put my college degree in art history to good use by volunteering as a tour guide at an art museum. I live near the Wharton Esherick Museum so I thought I should volunteer as a docent. I was welcomed with great enthusiasm. Little did I know then that I would become so dedicated to Whartonโ€™s home and studio. I have been able to lead guests through Whartonโ€™s creation by telling stories about Wharton and how he created this unique self-portrait, not just by reciting dates. The WEM staff encouraged me to tell the story my way; I didnโ€™t have to follow a strict script. That freed me to connect the man to his creation in a more personal way. It is so thrilling to watch someone as they view the studio for the first time. Just the look on their faces tells me they will be amazed. They so often ask questions and make comments that help me to view Whartonโ€™s creation in a new way. The WEM staff continues to provide additional insights. And, they bring docents together so we can keep our tours fresh and engaging. This has been an even better experience than I thought possible!

  • As a brand new docent of WEM, Iโ€™d be happy to share with you my experience. I am very happy to have found an amazing community of kind, energetic, and dedicated people to work with. I strongly believe in giving back to our community through volunteering and service, so when an opportunity arose to volunteer as a docent for WEM, I made the decision to get involved. WEM has given me the opportunity to meet with many visitors, all of whom have been super interesting. I feel like Iโ€™ve learned more from them than they from me. WEM is one of those rare, magical places. I am loving my experience here!

  • Serving as a docent at the Wharton Esherick Museum has been one of my most personally and intellectually enriching experiences. I love hearing the awestruck gasps of visitors as they enter the studio, sharing my love of Whartonโ€™s work with the public, and learning about the familyโ€™s legacy more deeply from our incredibly knowledgeable and caring staff. My time with the Esherick Museum has been most rewarding, and I can hardly think of a place I would rather spend my time.

  • I toured the Wharton Esherick Museum for the first time with my family several years ago and simply fell in love with Wharton and his genius. My dad, who has passed away, was a carpenter and woodworker. Being in the studio, experiencing Wharton, somehow made me feel close to my dad. I knew immediately after that first tour ended, I had to become a docent and help others to find or feel the magic of the studio and experience its transcending capabilities. I love sharing Wharton with my tour groups and watch their faces show amazement as they learn of the wonder that is him.

  • The pleasure and privilege of sharing the unique and innovative physical environment that Esherick carefully built with new and returning visitors and hopefully enhancing their understanding of his creative significant and influence.

  • Since discovering WEM sometime late โ€˜70s, and taking every out-of-town guest for a tour there ever since (no questions asked), Iโ€™d long thought I should get meaningfully engaged. In post-retirement 2019 I did, becoming a docent. Leading weekly tours, I play off each group, discover what brought them here, and, as best I can, marry them to the wizardly man, his sublime body of work and this magical locale. Among my varied volunteering โ€œjobs,โ€ this one, born of passion, never gets stale or old. As every visitor who puts up with me quickly learns, how could it!?!

Wharton Esherick Museum - Man in sunglasses and a cap gestures while speaking outside near a rustic house on a sunny day.