Travel Insider
History with special effects: Is it museum or haunted mansion?
Artifacts are almost secondary at new sites that aim to give visitors an 'experience' to remember.
WHAT'S shaking at museums these days?
Just about everything.
At the Lincoln museum in Springfield, Ill., the floor trembles and cannons belch smoke in the theater while in the library wispy holographic ghosts haunt the artifacts.
At the Pirate Soul museum in Key West, Fla., visitors experience the sounds and tumult of a high-seas battle after being menaced by an animatronic Blackbeard.
At the "Cosmic Collisions" show scheduled to have opened Saturday at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, guests feel the simulated jolt of a meteorite hitting Earth 65 million years ago.
The biggest kaboom you hear in these places isn't from artillery or space rocks. It's from the wall falling down between museums and theme parks.
Once devoted to displaying what detractors call "dead stuff in glass boxes," museums are adding bells and whistles to connect with young people.
The process started decades ago. Among the pioneers was Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry, which opened in 1933 with, among other exhibits, a reproduction of a coal mine that sent visitors 50 feet down to a mine shaft.
Interactive experiences and gadgets were followed by sophisticated graphics, movies and multimedia.
Now comes a more radical transformation: the "experience museum," which borrows heavily from amusement parks, Hollywood and Broadway. More visual than verbal, more emotional than intellectual and unabashedly cinematic, the experience museum focuses on storytelling.
The highest-profile example — and a harbinger of what's to come, its backers say — may be the $90-million Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum complex, which has drawn more than 530,000 people since opening in April. (Scholars do research in the presidential library.)
Besides the museum's special-effects theater and haunted library, visitors encounter TV spots touting issues from the 1860 presidential campaign; a Whispering Gallery echoing with comments from Lincoln's detractors; a dramatized slave auction; and a play area for small children.
Throughout the displays, the president and his family appear as life-size figures in various poses, including in the box at Ford's Theatre, as assassin John Wilkes Booth lurks.
And yes, there are artifacts: the president's handwritten Gettysburg Address, the Emancipation Proclamation, his shaving mirror and other personal effects. But the Treasures Gallery is only one room — and not the first one.
The idea is first to engage visitors emotionally, which "really energizes the object," said Bob Rogers, founder and chief executive of BRC Imagination Arts, which designed the displays.
"What you're trying to do," he said in an interview at the company's Burbank offices, "is to get guests to fall permanently in love with the subject."
Forget about telling them everything there is to know about Lincoln in reams of static text.
"We're not going to give them a PhD in two hours," said Rogers. But he hopes they're inspired to learn more.
Indeed, the slogan for Rogers' company is "Showmanship meets scholarship."
But does it?
Just about everything.
At the Lincoln museum in Springfield, Ill., the floor trembles and cannons belch smoke in the theater while in the library wispy holographic ghosts haunt the artifacts.
At the Pirate Soul museum in Key West, Fla., visitors experience the sounds and tumult of a high-seas battle after being menaced by an animatronic Blackbeard.
At the "Cosmic Collisions" show scheduled to have opened Saturday at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, guests feel the simulated jolt of a meteorite hitting Earth 65 million years ago.
The biggest kaboom you hear in these places isn't from artillery or space rocks. It's from the wall falling down between museums and theme parks.
Once devoted to displaying what detractors call "dead stuff in glass boxes," museums are adding bells and whistles to connect with young people.
The process started decades ago. Among the pioneers was Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry, which opened in 1933 with, among other exhibits, a reproduction of a coal mine that sent visitors 50 feet down to a mine shaft.
Interactive experiences and gadgets were followed by sophisticated graphics, movies and multimedia.
Now comes a more radical transformation: the "experience museum," which borrows heavily from amusement parks, Hollywood and Broadway. More visual than verbal, more emotional than intellectual and unabashedly cinematic, the experience museum focuses on storytelling.
The highest-profile example — and a harbinger of what's to come, its backers say — may be the $90-million Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum complex, which has drawn more than 530,000 people since opening in April. (Scholars do research in the presidential library.)
Besides the museum's special-effects theater and haunted library, visitors encounter TV spots touting issues from the 1860 presidential campaign; a Whispering Gallery echoing with comments from Lincoln's detractors; a dramatized slave auction; and a play area for small children.
Throughout the displays, the president and his family appear as life-size figures in various poses, including in the box at Ford's Theatre, as assassin John Wilkes Booth lurks.
And yes, there are artifacts: the president's handwritten Gettysburg Address, the Emancipation Proclamation, his shaving mirror and other personal effects. But the Treasures Gallery is only one room — and not the first one.
The idea is first to engage visitors emotionally, which "really energizes the object," said Bob Rogers, founder and chief executive of BRC Imagination Arts, which designed the displays.
"What you're trying to do," he said in an interview at the company's Burbank offices, "is to get guests to fall permanently in love with the subject."
Forget about telling them everything there is to know about Lincoln in reams of static text.
"We're not going to give them a PhD in two hours," said Rogers. But he hopes they're inspired to learn more.
Indeed, the slogan for Rogers' company is "Showmanship meets scholarship."
But does it?
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