Museums of Something Else

Looking for Van Gogh
in a Roomful of Clicks

You’re about to fulfill a lifelong dream: getting up close with your favorite masterpiece. This painting’s haunted your memories for years, and it’s now about to make living in this city all the worthier. But when you’re finally ready for its close up, your reverie suffers a low blow.
Between you and the frame, a phone-picture-taking crowd is busy, turning your dream into a blurry background to their selfies. Miffed, you swear never to come back again. Which brings us to today’s offering: museums are important, but don’t have to suck. Here’s why.
As depositories of humanity’s cultural and artistic achievements, museums have been incomparable. Often the sole local well of knowledge, they anchor communities around a shared past. No wonder they’re also useful for tyrants to stake a claim into the future.
Besides displaying disturbing mementos of our brutal heritage, and the vanquished civilizations we’ve helped destroy, these warehouses of memory and fractured narratives also face crushing competition of the present day’s increasing obsession with accessibility.
Round-the-clock knowledge at one’s fingertips is rendering irrelevant the need for an actual physical place to house art and the past. But the Internet has potential to turn voyeurism into something intimate and personal, in ways that museums seem to be faltering at.
We’re not ready to give up on them just yet, though; just pointing to alternatives that may enhance their mission. Read and click on the illustrations to open up new possibilities. It may sooth your soul and give you a healthy reason to skip that rude crowd this weekend.

THE MOURNING ART COLLECTION
For a place displaying death-inspiring art objects in its galleries, and housed next to a cemetery, the possibility of sudden demise should be never too far. But since its 1990 inception, the Museum of Mourning Art has thrived, even if it had to auction some of its artifacts to survive.
It sits next to Arlington Cemetery (no, not that Arlington), Philadelphia, and it did have to close briefly, while it sold some items. But unlike its neighbors, it’s bound to come back to life, and in line with Americans’ peculiar taste for anything related to the departed.
Its art focus is distinct from similarly lugubrious institutions such as New Orleans’ Museum of Death, Houston-based National Museum of Funeral History, and New York’s Morbid Anatomy Museum. Step into these places for a glance of what’s literally coming next.

POP-UP FEELINGS & BROKEN HEARTS
For an unfortunately brief time, New York had its throbbing pulse measured by art. The pop up Museum of Feelings mixed ‘social media and real-time data from local news, weather reports, flight delays’ and even the Stock Exchange, and translated them into colors.
It was the kind of tactile, refreshing experience traditional museums have to avoid these days, lest not give ideas to deranged minds. It’s now limited by the Web, but it still suggests an alternate reality (more)
_______
Read Also:
* Scary Night
* Broken Hearts

where emotion-themed shows are as common as public displays of grief.
Speaking of which, Zagreb’s Museum of Broken Relationships is now a traveling exhibit, dragging around the world its odd array of leftovers of failed romance. As its collection grows, it also shows that parading your bleeding heart for all to see may be the best revenge, after all.

THE DISCARDED & THE SWALLOWED
Not many sanitation departments have their own Trash Museum, with over 50,000 objects collected from the streets of a mega city. But NYC has one for 30 years, and what the place lacks in high-end art, it has in character, and don’t dare say otherwise in front of the staff.
It opens a few days a year (what? do you have a problem with that?) to a discriminating public, thirsty for its oversized share of the kitsch and the mundane. Not socks but you may even find that long lost, supposedly Andy Warhol-owned, cracked cookie jar you’ve left behind years ago in an East Village studio. Got five bucks?
Now, for a bit more er organic experience, nothing beats the Mütter Museum’s Chevalier Jackson Collection, in PA. It consists of 2,374 inhaled or swallowed foreign bodies, extracted from humans just like yourself. No wonder: Dr. Jackson was an otolaryngologist (look it up!).

A FEW BRICK WALLS WITH FRAMES
No laughing matter either. Hundreds of buttons, nuts, coins, bones, screws, and small toys on display may be hard to take in. But they do tickle someone’s imagination: what exactly happened for those dentures to suddenly slide down someone’s digestive chute? Quite an exercise, and we take it back: it’s actually funny.
But if you’re into foot fetishes, then Dug Gaines and his collection of used socks is your guy. Nothing wrong with that, but here’s where museums depart from mere collecting, or habit-forming obsessions, which tend to be more akin to psychological deviation than meditative introspection. Visited any hoarders lately?
This abbreviated trip, and the interactive links behind the illustrations, are but a few roadmaps to what may be in store for restless minds. As for the selfie-takers, they don’t own the Met yet, or the MoMA, or that corner of art and history that makes you love your city so much.
Just make a point to periodically visit these places. Do it for the sake of our spirit and for those whose only access to museums is via Internet. Lucky you, we’re not quite there yet.

(*) Originally published on Feb. 10, 2016.

11 thoughts on “Museums of Something Else

  1. unclerave says:

    In writing one of my posts this week – don’t ask which one – I was doing a Google search for an image. For whatever reason, I saw a portion of a panel from The Garden of Early Delights! It wasn’t applicable to my post, so I didn’t use it, but it got me to search specifically for the painting! I’m familiar with the work, but I had forgotten how far ahead of his time Bosch was. I think if he had painted this in a Catholic country they may have burned him at the stake! But, I think the fact that you used this in this post is a very strange coincidence!

    — YUR

    Liked by 1 person

    • Colltales says:

      Indeed, it feels like some kind of synchronicity. I’d published this sometime ago, and did it again so to have a breathing break. You’re right, both Bosch and Bruegel were able to express their demons by living in one of the only nations that was not at some religious war. It was no paradise at that time but it did attract many free thinkers of the time, Descartes and Spinoza to name two. Soon enough, the Dutch were landing on our shores and the rest is, well, Manhattan. Cheers

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Nil says:

    Wow! What a variety! 🙂 Thanks for enlightening us 😉

    Liked by 1 person

  3. I have lately had the opportunity to visit on Lanzarote museums integrated into nature and it was just extraordinary!! I opened you link to the trash museum and I very strongly felt that one should be there on the spot to look at those objects closer. Of course, sometimes the internet helps to get at least an idea of the topic, but the emotions can’t be compared, according to me! Thank you for your interesting post.

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.