In honor of the season, we repeat our homage/post to museum "Easter Eggs." Enjoy!
Museum designers often add "Easter Eggs" to their work. But not the
brightly dyed or chocolate-y varieties --- these are more akin to the
hidden "Easter Eggs" that you may stumble across (or deliberately search out) inside video games, crossword puzzles, or DVDs.
For visitors, it's fun to feel like you've found a little "secret"
inside a museum building or exhibition, and for designers it's a little
"trick" to reward visitors for carefully observing and examining things
inside the museum.
"Exhibits as advent calendars" as Dan Spock has observed (to mix religious holiday metaphors a bit!) So here are a few of my favorite museum easter eggs:
• The Hidden Cat: Starting with the picture at the top of this
posting is the "cat" hidden in the atrium of the Science Discovery
Museum in Acton, MA. It's fun to point out to visitors, and it really
reflects the playful nature of the building and exhibits inside.
• Secret Elves at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science: Artist Kent R. Pendleton worked on many of the Museum's
dioramas, but supposedly he wasn't allowed to sign his name to his
work. Instead, Pendleton included little "elfin" figures hidden
throughout many of the displays. There's a great blog posting (with video) about Pendleton's retro easter eggs!
• The Magic House Mouse: The "Magic House"
Children's Museum outside St. Louis has some wonderful exhibits, but
one of my favorite "hidden gems" is the tiny decorated mouse hole near
the baseboards in one of the galleries. If you were just whizzing
around you might not ever see it, but if you're willing to get down on
your hands and knees you might see (as in the photo below) a
"presidential" mouse:
• The "Hidden Tunnel" at Casa Loma: Casa Loma is a gigantic
historic house outside Toronto that is filled with enough crazy details
to keep even little kids interested during the self-guided tours. One
of the things I remember from a family visit (nearly 40 years ago!) was
the cool secret tunnel, nearly 100 feet long, that was hidden behind a
pivoting wall section (just like in all those scary movies --- but this
was real!) that led to the Casa's underground wine cellar:
Of course some museums, like The City Museum, also in St. Louis, or the Museum of Jurassic Technology
in L.A., are practically interlocking collections of "easter eggs" or
in-jokes, but that's certainly one aspect that makes them so popular.
What are some of your most memorable "Museum Easter Eggs"? Let us know in the "Comments Section" below!
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In among a display of taxidermic animals at the Cranbrook Institute of Science I found a small silver knob sticking out of the frame of the display case. Not really thinking about it, I pulled on the knob and out slid a vertical drawer with a careful display case of some llama toe bones. I was absolutely charmed. Ever since then, I've referred to exhibit "easter eggs" as "llama toes"
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