[personal profile] rm
Another one of those things from my childhood:
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/15/nyregion/15whal.html

Date: 2003-06-21 03:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sykii.livejournal.com
It's unlikely to surprise you to hear that as a small child I was convinced that I'd be standing under that whale when it inevitably fell. Yeah, well. I always loved the giant squid in that hall the best.

Date: 2003-06-21 03:23 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
That actually does surprise me, because you are so Miss Junior Animal Planet 1986.

Date: 2003-06-21 03:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sykii.livejournal.com
Yes, but I also had a pathological fear of things that were that much bigger than I was.

Date: 2003-06-21 03:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
I always forget about that, and it's like the greatest most interesting fear to me.

Date: 2003-06-21 03:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sykii.livejournal.com
Always glad to entertain you with my neuroses, my dear ;-p

Date: 2003-06-22 01:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] heron61.livejournal.com
There was a similar hall in the Smithsonian natural history museum, where I spent much time as a child. I know the feeling about looking at the whale that the author describes quite vividly (and I also liked the giant squid there best). I eventually followed my love of ancient and lost peoples more than my love of ancient and lost animals, but both were a surprisingly important part of my life growing up.

I've also visited the NY natural history museum several times and dearly love it - once I went there with Aaron which is even better than going to a museum alone. I remember (I think it was in this museum) an exhibit with a cave bear skeleton standing upright with raised paws in the middle of the room. I stood before it looking up and for a brief instant touched a feeling of what it must have been like millennia ago to walk into very much the wrong cave.

That museum also contains what I regard as one of the most perfect objects in the entire world - a armor vest made by some Pacific Northwest tribe (perhaps the Kwakiutl [which I shockingly spelled correctly on my first try]) made of Chinese copper cash (the coins with the square holes in them) that the maker got from Russian traders, the coins were sewn onto mountain goat leather.

I love the cross-cultural mixing and just seeing it made me imagine a different history where admiral Zheng He's early 15th century fleet expanded and eventually traveled West to create a new Chinese PNW culture that I would some day love to write about.

Museums are sacred and while I can see some virtues in the better modern museums (the one's with as few electronics as possible), too many gadgets and gimmicks defile their wonder.

Date: 2003-06-22 08:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
The one in DC was always less run down and emotionally strange than the one in NYC, but also figures prominently in a weird little book called Winterlong that you should read.

Date: 2003-06-22 09:22 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sykii.livejournal.com
Yes, you really, really should.

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