by Marianna Sorensen
Spring 2017 Intern
Who hasn’t been back to the same
museums innumerable times? Museums are great sources of information, with not
only incredible research behind everything they share, but also interactive and
engaging methods of informing visitors. You can learn everything you want to
know in a totally different way than reading about it. 2017 is going to welcome
several new museums across the country—three of which I’m especially excited
about.
The first is the American Writers Museum (AWM) in
Chicago, which opened in May. Its aim is to celebrate the lives and works of
American writers and their influence on history and culture. It has some awesome
permanent exhibits.
One is Writers Hall, which includes
an interactive activity that lets you find authors who lived where you do. They
also have the Word Waterfall, where projected
words float down from the ceiling to floor, forming stanzas and paragraphs. Then
there is the Mind of a Writer exhibit
where AWM staff provide a prompt every day for visitors to contribute to each
day’s story, and an exhibit called Word
Play with an interactive tabletop that has games for visitors to experiment
with words. Other areas of the museum will show artifacts on loan from historic
writers’ homes to tell the behind-the-scenes stories of those writers.
In Philadelphia, the Museum of the American Revolution opened
on April 19, purposefully chosen as it is the anniversary of the Battle of Lexington
and Concord. The museum’s exhibits are
organized by time span, the first of which is The Road to Independence, which involves a giant interactive map
about various groups of people, a reproduction of the Boston Liberty Tree
(under which the first ideas of the American Revolution were discussed) and original
versions of the first state constitutions. The Darkest Hour exhibit has an object theater with weapons used in the
war and a panoramic battlefield theater where visitors feel as if they are in
the charge of the Battle of Brandywine. The museum also has a replica of a revolutionary-era
ship that visitors can climb aboard, as well as a collection of artifacts from that
era bearing symbols of the emerging republic.
The third museum of 2017 I’m
excited about is the Institute of
Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (previously the Santa Monica Museum of Art,
and now at a new location). It has no permanent collection, and will instead constantly
show new exhibits made of loaned and donated works. It will open this fall with
a café and space for public programs. Its goal is to support the community and
make contemporary art accessible for everyone.
Each of these new museums sounds
amazing—looks like I have some trips to start planning!
The oldest museum in the Unites States is the Charleston
Museum in South Carolina, which was founded in 1773, although it didn’t
open to the public until 1824. The Peabody Essex Museum in
Massachusetts is the country’s oldest continuously operating museum, which
opened in 1799.
No comments:
Post a Comment