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Intl Museum Day to be celebrated today

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Islamabad—The International Museum Day will be celebrated across the world on May 18 including Pakistan with the aim of increasing public awareness on the role of museums in a developing society.

Lok Virsa (National Institute of Folk and Traditional Heritage), Ministry of National Heritage and Integration has announced to celebrate World Museum Day with a view to highlight the importance, necessity and role of museums for educating and enlightening of people, specially younger generation about culture, heritage, history, flora and fauna, progress, etc. of a country. The Heritage Museum and Pakistan Monument Museum remain open for public throughout the day and offer 50 percent rebated ticket for Pakistani nationals on the day.  Musical performance featuring folk artists and musicians will also be held throughout the day from 10.00 a.m. to 6.00 p.m. (except break for Friday prayers from 1.00 to 2.30 p.m.) at Heritage Museum.—APP

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New Delay in Opening African Art Museum

Posted in : Art Museums

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New Delay in Opening African Art MuseumFor the fifth time in three years, the Museum for African Art has been forced to delay opening its new home at 110th Street and Fifth Avenue, in East Harlem, as it continues to work to raise the money to finish the project.

Elsie McCabe Thompson, the museum’s president, said the institution needed to raise about $10 million to finish construction on the site, which occupies the bottom floors of a 19-story luxury condominium designed by Robert A. M. Stern.

Ms. Thompson declined to say just when the museum, which had been slated to open later this year, would be ready. It closed the gallery in its temporary quarters in Long Island City, Queens, nearly seven years ago to focus on the new development.

“With some soul-searching, we decided not to open a portion of the building,” she said, or do a cheaper design that would drain “out the very life of the building.” Ms. Thompson, who has worked for 15 years to convert her dream into bricks and mortar — or, in this case, concrete and aluminum — added, “Africa deserves the best that we could give it.”

As of last year, the museum said, it had raised a total of $86.3 million for the project, which includes an education center, a library, a cafe and a gift shop. A June 2011 financial statement showed that it had received more than $20 million from the city and state in the previous 12 months; the federal government has chipped in with tax credits. The more than 70,000-square-foot space cost nearly $44 million, according to the financial statement.

“Elsie dreams big,” said Margarita Aguilar, executive director of El Museo del Barrio, several blocks south on Fifth Avenue. Ms. Aguilar has developed and hosted educational programs with the African art museum and said the museum’s opening should increase traffic to neighboring arts institutions, turning the area into a “cultural hub.”

Both the museum and the 116-unit condominium broke ground in 2007, just months before the financial crisis hit. At the time, the museum projected that its new home would open in late 2009.

Last month the developers of the condominium project, Brickman and Sidney Fetner Associates, began a new marketing campaign and rechristened the building, at 1280 Fifth Avenue, “One Museum Mile.” The idea was to capitalize on the string of museums flanking Central Park’s east side, beginning — or, in the developers’ eyes, ending — with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, at 82nd Street. Units have been on sale since June 2010, and so far 9 have sold, and another 16 are in contract, said Jackie Buddie, a spokeswoman.

El Museo del Barrio averages more than 250,000 visitors a year. The African Art museum has predicted that it will attract more visitors than that, but museum officials have declined to detail how they reached that estimate or to answer questions about their fund-raising.

“It’s a critical moment in the fund-raising campaign,” said Kenita Lloyd, the museum’sdeputy director and chief operating officer. “We’re in the middle of sensitive discussions about naming rights.” Previously, Ms. Thompson had said that naming rights could be worth up to $50 million.

The museum’s struggle to raise cash is a familiar problem at cultural institutions around the country. In addition to construction costs, Ms. Thompson has estimated the museum’s yearly operating costs to be $8 million, about twice what it currently spends when it is not operating a building that is open to the public.

Alan J. Friedman, a museum consultant in New York , said the biggest problem facing museums was building up sufficient operating funds.

“Donors and the government are very finicky about what they want to support,” he said. “They love to support a glamorous exhibition and highly targeted educational programs, which means every museum is desperate to build an endowment or generate revenue to cover the unglamorous stuff,” like wiring, air-conditioning and general operating expenses.

The museum’s president is not the only Thompson looking for donations. Ms. Thompson’s husband, William C. Thompson Jr., is running for mayor next year. A former comptroller who was the Democratic nominee in 2009, Mr. Thompson last week resigned from the chairmanship of the Battery Park City Authority to focus more intensively on his campaign.

Without a permanent home, museum staff members have been focusing on education and training programs and have helped organize traveling exhibitions. So if you want to see shows that the museum has developed this year, you might try Houston, for a glimpse of the South African artist Jane Alexander’s sculptures, or Raleigh, N.C., for a retrospective of the work of the Ghanian artist El Anatsui. Still farther away, the museum has put together a show of art by the painter Ibrahim El-Salahi that is on display in the United Arab Emirates.

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Four museums make Art Fund Prize shortlist

Posted in : Art Museums, News

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Four attractions have been shortlisted for the 10th annual Art Fund Prize. They include the £35m Hepworth Wakefield, which opened last May, and the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, which has had a £17.6m redevelopment. Exeter's Royal Albert Memorial Museum and Art Gallery and the Watts Gallery in Surrey are also in the running.

Four museums make Art Fund Prize shortlist

The four were picked from a longlist of 10. But three major new institutions - the Turner Contemporary in Margate, Glasgow's Riverside Museum and Bristol's M Shed - missed the cut. Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes, the Holburne Museum in Bath and the National Museum of Scotland also missed out.

The winner, to be announced on 19 June, will pick up £100,000. Lord Smith of Finsbury, chair of the judging panel, said: "Whittling 10 really strong nominees down to a list of four was a supremely difficult process, and I've no doubt that deciding on a 'museum of the year' from this list will prove equally tough."

Of the final four, the Hepworth Wakefield, named after sculptor Barbara Hepworth, has won acclaim for its design by architect David Chipperfield. The Watts Gallery, dedicated to Victorian painter George Frederic Watts, recently underwent a £10m restoration, while the Scottish National Portrait Gallery reopened in December after the first refurbishment in its 120-year history. The Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter's main city museum, also reopened in December after being given its first major redevelopment since opening 140 years ago.

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Chicago museum visits one NATO casualty

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The Art Institute’s three-day closure is to be matched by those of the Shedd Aquarium and the Adler Planetarium. The Field Museum of Natural History, which shares the lakefront Museum Campus with the aquarium and planetarium, has said it will be open Saturday and Monday, May 19 and 21, but will be closed Sunday, May 20. The Museum Campus is effectively adjacent to the McCormick Place convention center at which most summit events are to take place.

“Few cities can match our array of cultural options,” wrote Mayor Rahm Emanuel in his welcome message to attendees, “but it is the openness of our communities that makes Chicago the most American of all America’s cities.”

While mass transit is to operate at full capacity, several major Chicago thoroughfares will be closed to the public. Special parking restrictions are to be put in place. Many schools and other institutions were advised to close on the Friday and Monday surrounding the summit, while Loop office buildings have adopted extraordinary security policies and recommended that nonessential employees work remotely or be given time off. A further suggestion that downtown office workers dress down so as not to stand out from the thousands of anticipated protesters has met with much eye rolling. The Emanuel administration, meanwhile, has faced criticism over the restrictions placed on public demonstrations.

Representatives of a nurses group gathered Wednesday outside City Hall to contest the amendment of a permit for a May 18 demonstration at Daley Plaza in the Loop, the only protest event around the NATO dates, according to the Chicago Tribune, to have received city approval for a weekday event in the central business district. It has been relocated to Grant Park on the Loop’s perimeter. The city cited an escalation toward a figure of 5,000 in the estimated number of rally participants.

Chicago is the first U.S. city other than Washington to host a NATO summit. The event’s host committee has estimated the summit will inject $128.2 million into the local economy, drawing more than 21,200 visitors, translating into 49,300 hotel-stay nights. Close to 2,200 temporary jobs are also envisioned. See full economic-impact study at World Business Chicago website (PDF) .

The G-8 had also been scheduled to convene May 18 and 19 in President Obama’s hometown, overlapping with the NATO summit, until the White House decided in early March to move that gathering to Camp David, in Maryland, citing the latter location’s “informal and intimate setting.”

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Famous Museum in Mumbai

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(added 12 days ago)

Famous Museum in MumbaiIf you are interested in the culture and history of India, then a below is the some information on famous museums in Mumbai for you. A visit to Mumbai is incomplete without its share of museums which recount the history of this fascinating city.

From the Prince of Wales Museum to the small Mani Bhavan Museum at Gamdevi, the whole information is given below. Each museum is distinct from the other in terms of structure, architecture and the artifacts on display. It will takes you back in time to witness the vast history and culture of India many centuries ago. All Museums mentioned are tourist attraction places in Mumbai.

1 )Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Museum91A, Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Road
In the heart of the city are the Victoria Gardens, now renamed as the Rani Jijamata Udyan (Rani Bagh). This garden was laid out in 1861. The Bombay Zoo is also on the premises of the garden. Located in the Victoria Gardens is the Victoria and Albert Museum, now renamed Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Museum. The museum has articles that relate mainly industrial and agricultural interest. On display are the archaeological finds, maps and photographs connected with the history of Mumbai. On the east hand side of the gardens that surrounds the museum, is a huge statute of an elephant that was brought from Elephanta Caves. What is ironically about the present name of the museum is that Dr. Bhau Daji Lad, after whom it is presently named, was the person who suggested the original name "Victoria and Albert Museum". Dr. Lad devoted his life to this museum and it is in his honor that the museum bears his name. The museum is open to the public on all days expect some important public holidays from 10.30 am to 4.30 pm.

2)Nehru Museum
This Cylindrical shaped building, includes a planetarium, art gallery, restaurant, library, cultural center and a 14-gallery exhibit called Discovery of India. There are antique exhibits like a railway engine, tramcar, supersonic airplane and steam lorry. It is also a venue of numerous international trade fairs and local exhibitions. The discovery of India expo is open daily except Monday from 10.30am to 5pm.

3)BEST Transport Museum
The BEST Transport Museum is located at Wadala's Anik Bus depot. It features amateur mini models of BEST buses and the ancient trams. The museum fascinating as it has been badly kept. "We try to maintain it by cleaning it regularly, but the underdeveloped surrounding makes it dusty all over again. It is a very old museum and we have always got a positive response from the visitors," explains the BEST public relations officer. Few know of its existence. Even the city's well-traveled bus conductors have never heard of the museum.

4)Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya
The Prince of Wales Museum now known as the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya in Mumbai, was set up in the beginning of the 20th century, by some important citizens of Bombay with the help of the government, to honour the visit of King George V's to India, while he was still the Prince of Wales. The museum is located in the middle of South Mumbai close to the Gateway of India. The Museum building is considered one of the finest examples of Victorian architecture in Mumbai. There was an open competition to design the building of the museum. George Wittet was hired to design the building in 1909. The design used is the Indo-Saracenic style and has an imposing dome in the 15th -16th century western Indian style. The other buildings in Mumbai built by George Wittet include the General Post Office, which he built along with John Begg, the Court of Small Causes and the splendid Gateway of India. There is no doubt that this museum in Mumbai is one of the best museums in India. It has three main sections: Art, Archaeology and Natural History. The museum has an excellent collection of rare and ancient exhibits of Indian history and many interesting artifacts from foreign countries. It also has artifacts from the Indus Valley Civilization and relics from the Gupta and Maurya periods. The museum is known for its collection of miniature paintings. The Museum is open to the public from Tuesday to Sunday between 10.30 am and 6 pm.

5)Mani Bhavan
This is a memorial dedicated to Mahatma Gandhi, the Father of the Nation. Gandhi stayed in this simple house between 1917 and 1934 every time he visited Mumbai. The room in which Gandhi stayed, his belongings including his books are on display. Today the building contains a picture gallery, a 20,000-volume research library and a film and recording archive. Mani Bhavan is on Laburnam Road, close to the August Kranti Maidan where the 'Quit India' Movement was started. This museum is open on all days between 9.30 am to 6 pm.

6)RBI Monetary Museum
The first of its kind in India, the monetary museum is located on the floor of the RBI. The museum hopes for the sake of posterity to document and preserve the monetary heritage of the Country. It has three galleries on the concepts, ideas and curiosities related to money.

7)Bombay Natural History Society
The Bombay Natural History Society was founded in 1883, in order to discuss observations on natural history and for exhibiting interesting specimens. Today the BNHS is the biggest non-governmental organization in India undertaking conservation of nature and natural resources, education and research in natural history. The BNHS has more than 30 member countries. The Society's leading principle has been conservation based on scientific research. The Society is adjacent to the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya. Nature lovers have been donating their prized specimens for more than a century now. The Society has a good collection of beetles, butterflies and embalmed reptiles. If you are interested you can become a temporary member of the Society for the duration of your stay in Mumbai. The membership will allow you access to the library of the Society and allow you to attend the various lectures and slide shows that are held weekly.

8)FD Alpaiwalla Museum
The only community museum in the city, the FD Alpaiwala museum, named after a Parsi merchant, is run by the Parsi Panchayat of Bombay. "The museum was open for public in 1954. But it had to be restored in 1984, which was done by the Panchayat, "says Nivedita Mehta, the curator. A silver clock belonging to Sir Jamshedjee Jejeebhoy is one of the star displays. There is an archaic chest belonging to Dadabhai Nowroji.

Above mentioned museums are eye candy for all the tourist visiting Mumbai. You can contact Namaste City Tour if you want any of the museum to be included in your city tour.

You can contact Namaste City tour for for all your Mumbai sightseeing requirements. It also arranges Customized Tour apart from regular city tour.

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Billionaire Koch gives $35 million to dinosaur museum

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The gift was the largest single donation in the Washington-based museum and research institution's 112-year history, the Smithsonian Institution said. "I've had a love affair with dinosaurs since I was a boy," Koch, who turned 72 on Thursday, told Reuters in a telephone interview from New York, where he lives.

Billionaire Koch gives $35 million to dinosaur museum

"I realized that the exhibit at the Smithsonian was very out of date. Some of it goes back 100 years, and we were in desperate need of renovation," said Koch, who is on the museum's board of directors. The current display on dinosaurs and paleontology has gone mostly unchanged for 30 years, and the Koch donation will cover most of the planned $45 million renovation, said Randall Kremer, a spokesman for the museum.

"This would not happen if not for the gift from Mr. Koch," Kremer said. "This is just a great day for the museum and the country." The new hall will showcase part of the museum's 46 million-piece fossil collection and feature new displays on how dinosaurs and other creatures lived.

The Smithsonian Board of Regents agreed to name the updated 25,000-square-foot exhibition space after Koch. The museum already has the David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins, which opened in 2010. Koch has donated to the Lincoln Center, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 2006, he gave $20 million to the American Museum of Natural History in New York to support its dinosaur exhibit.

David and his brother Charles Koch are also among the largest contributors to Republican causes and candidates. Koch said on Thursday he has given "by far" more money to philanthropic, charitable and other non-profit groups than he has to political concerns.

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Museum of Contemporary Art honors Annie Leibovitz

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BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. — Annie Leibovitz has photographed practically every celebrity, rock star and politician over the past four decades, but when she was honored by the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, she showed a photograph of Niagara Falls.

Leibovitz on Tuesday received the 7th MOCA Award to Distinguished Women in the Arts at a private luncheon at the Regent Beverly Wilshire hotel in Beverly Hills. She showed the Niagara Falls image and told a story about a recent trip there with her children featured in her new book, “Pilgrimage.” She said the MOCA honor “means a lot to me.”

“This award has been given to a great group of women, very distinguished company,” she said, noting that artist Barbara Kruger was among the guests Tuesday. “And here I am in California. This is where I learned to be a photographer.”

Leibovitz, 62, started shooting for Rolling Stone magazine in 1970 while still a student at the San Francisco Art Institute. She went on to work for Vanity Fair and Vogue and has released several books of her photographs. Her “Pilgrimage” collection is on view at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Some of her most iconic images include a naked John Lennon curled around clothed Yoko Ono and Demi Moore nude and pregnant on the cover of Vanity Fair. Ever humble, Leibovitz snapped photos, Facebook-style, with fans’ pocket cameras before accepting her award from her friend Maria Shriver.

In one of her rare public appearances since filing for divorce from Arnold Schwarzenegger last summer, Shriver described Leibovitz as a living legend and “a woman of brilliance.”

“I’m here out of friendship for her, but really out of respect for the way she has lived her extraordinary life,” Shriver said. “You have chosen (to recognize) a woman who has had an incredible effect not just on the arts, not just on fashion, not just on photography, not just on women, but on all of us.”

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Dallas Museum Simmers in a Neighbor’s Glare

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DALLAS — Two things were supposed to happen when the Nasher Sculpture Center opened here in 2003. Famous works like Rodin’s “Age of Bronze” and Matisse’s “Madeleine I” were to be bathed in copious sunlight streaming through a glass roof. And new vigor was to come to the surrounding neighborhood.

Dallas Museum Simmers in a Neighbor’s Glare

The results exceeded expectations. And Dallas has a mess on its hands. The center, designed by Renzo Piano and Peter Walker, was considered so appealing that a 42-story condominium called Museum Tower sprouted across the street. But the glass skin of the condo tower, still under construction, now reflects so much light that it is threatening artworks in the galleries, burning the plants in the center’s garden and blinding visitors with its glare.

No one quite knows what to do. The condo developer and museum officials are at loggerheads. Fingers are being pointed. Mr. Piano is furious. The developer’s architect is aggrieved. The mayor is involved. A former official in the George W. Bush administration has been asked to mediate.

The situation has been characterized by some here as a David-and-Goliath battle between a beloved nonprofit and commercial interests. But the dispute has also raised the broader question of what can happen when, as is currently the rage, cultural institutions are cast as engines of economic development.

The Nasher was seen as an important spur to the renaissance of downtown Dallas, much the way Lincoln Center was viewed as something of a cure for urban blight on the West Side of Manhattan. But the forces unleashed in these situations can prompt a distinctly uneasy relationship between cultural organizations and the neighborhood changes they attract.

“These things start to bump into each other,” said the mayor of Dallas, Mike Rawlings. “How we as a civic society power through this is an important moment for us. You’ve got a high-growth engine that is trying to do right by Giacometti.”

Dallas’s interest in raising its cultural profile is palpable here: the city has been building its arts district over the last 20 years; Saturday Cowboys Stadium hosted a simulcast of Mozart’s “Magic Flute” by the Dallas Opera. The Nasher problem has the whole city concerned and watching.

“Typically, neighborhood disputes are not this dramatic — an offending sign or a barking dog,” said Veletta Forsythe Lill, the executive director of the Dallas Arts District. “This is a cultural, civic and commercial tragedy. The Nasher is a kind of a masterpiece, and the building and the garden were perfectly designed.”

Mr. Piano said he designed the Nasher with natural light in mind. The museum has an arched glass roof with a perforated aluminum screen in an egg-crate pattern that directs the sun into the galleries, which were laid out in anticipation of the sun’s daily arc from southeast to southwest.

Now, sun, magnified by reflection, shines into the galleries from the north and raises the temperature in the sculpture garden — designed by Mr. Walker — to levels that jeopardize the specially planted live oak trees and grass.

“By doing this, they destroy completely the logic of the building,” Mr. Piano said in an interview. For the museumgoer, the sculptures in the galleries and the garden can be obscured or distorted by distracting light patterns or glare. The museum was forced to install light-blocking panels inside the roof for a recent exhibition of works by Elliott Hundley because the reflections from the tower exceeded the acceptable light levels for the art.

Scott Johnson, the Los Angeles architect who designed Museum Tower, said he was willing to consider remedies but that the Nasher also had to be open-minded. “My responsibility is to fully vet solutions vis-à-vis Museum Tower — that’s my building,” he said. “But I can’t say sitting here now that the Nasher may not need to do something on their end.”Museum Tower’s owners said in a statement, “All parties desire resolution to these issues as quickly as possible.”

 

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A Museum Teaches Tolerance Through Jim Crow

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A Museum Teaches Tolerance Through Jim CrowThe ugliness of racism is at the heart of a new museum in Michigan. The Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia at Ferris State University in Big Rapids features thousands of troubling artifacts and sometimes horrifying images. There are slave whips and chains; signs that once dictated where African-Americans could sit, walk or get a drink of water; and teddy bears turned into messengers of hate.

Andy Karafa, the museum's director, describes that last item: "It's this white little fluffy thing with a cute little red bow and this white T-shirt, and it reads 'I love niggers that are dead.' "The items on display at the museum show a full range of American racial stereotypes and derogatory caricatures from the time. There are images of "mammies," "picaninnies," "sambos" and an entire section dedicated to the portrayal of black children as "alligator bait."

'We're Not A Shrine To Racism'
David Pilgrim, the museum's curator and founder, says the intention is not to traumatize, but to teach. "If you hear about the museum, then you form opinions in the abstract, and that's very different from what happens with people that actually visit the facility," he says. "They really get it. They understand what it is. ... We're not a shrine to racism, any more so than a hospital is a shrine to disease."

In the middle of the museum sits the toughest exhibit of all. It's on the violence of Jim Crow, and when you step inside, you're confronted with a replica of a lynching tree. There's a display of Ku Klux Klan robes — they had special robes for the women — and just to the left there's a video montage of African-Americans being beaten, hanged and burned.

Karafa explains why there's so much violence in the exhibit: "Jim Crow as a system wouldn't have worked without it — either actual violence or the threat of violence."Visitors leaving the exhibit are visibly shaken. Rowena Hamel chokes up as she explains that she lived through the Jim Crow era in an all-white community in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. "I can't believe that I'm 84 years old and didn't realize," she says. "I've learned so much today. How could I have not seen this? I must have just been blind to it."

A Way To Talk About Race
Pilgrim's goal in founding the museum has been to open people's eyes, hearts and minds to the reality of Jim Crow. It took eight years and more than $1 million to create a permanent home for his collection, a memorial of hate aimed at teaching tolerance.

"We are a resource that does the thing that many Americans don't want to do, and that is to talk about race in a direct way," Pilgrim says. He continues to collect new items, many of them now aimed at President Obama, including posters that show the president being lynched.

"Unfortunately, it appears that there will always be new caricatures created and new caricature objects created," he says. "For us, they just become opportunities to teach."Pilgrim says he was 12 or 13 years old when he bought his first racist object. He doesn't remember what it was, but he does remember that he hated it — he threw it on the ground and smashed it. Today, 9,000 hateful items later, he's seeking those ugly artifacts out for a bigger purpose.

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Turkish Writer Opens Museum Based on Novel

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ISTANBUL — The first thing you see are the cigarette butts. There are thousands of them — 4,213 to be exact — mounted behind plexiglass on the ground floor of the Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk’s new museum, named for and based on his 2008 novel, “The Museum of Innocence.”

Turkish Writer Opens Museum Based on Novel

It’s a fittingly strange beginning to a tour of this quirky museum, tucked away in a 19th-century house on a quiet street in the Cukurcuma neighborhood, among junk shops that sell old brass, worn rugs and other bric-a-brac.

But it is also, like everything else on the museum’s four floors, a specific reference to the novel — each cigarette has supposedly been touched by Fusun, the object of the narrator’s obsessive love — and, by extension, an evocation of the bygone world in which the book is set.

“The Museum of Innocence” is about Istanbul’s upper class beginning in the 1970s, a time when Mr. Pamuk was growing up in the elite Nisantasi district. He describes the novel as a love story set in the melancholic back streets of that neighborhood and other parts of the European side of the city. But more broadly it is a chronicle of the efforts of haute-bourgeois Istanbulis to define themselves by Western values, a pursuit that continues today as Turkey as a whole takes a more Islamic turn. Although Mr. Pamuk said the book explores the “pretensions” of upper-class Turks, who “in spite of their pro-Western attitudes are highly conservative,” it is hard not to the see the bricks-and-mortar Museum of Innocence as largely an act of nostalgic appreciation.

Mr. Pamuk, 59, is Turkey’s best-known writer, albeit a divisive one thanks to his Western orientation. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2006, around the time he was being tried and acquitted for making “un-Turkish” pronouncements about the Armenian genocide. In person he gives off an aura of the kind of elitism that can come with a privileged upbringing and a successful literary career.

As the museum was preparing to open late last week, with workmen hauling around ladders and a staff member stocking the gift-shop shelves with Mr. Pamuk’s books, the author himself was going full tilt, giving orders and making last-minute tweaks as he walked a reporter through the displays.

He said the museum cost him about what he received for the Nobel — roughly $1.5 million — including what he paid for the house 12 years ago, when he had the idea for the project. Then there is the amount of time he has devoted to it on and off over the past dozen years: by his estimate about half a book’s worth, a lot considering that his novels tend to run to 500 pages or more.

The museum’s displays are organized according to the story line of “The Museum of Innocence,” which opens as a wealthy, self-centered young man is making love with Fusun, a distant relative and store clerk he has met while shopping for his soon-to-be fiancée.

“And as I softly bit her ear, her earring must have come free and, for all we knew, hovered in midair before falling of its own accord,” an opening line reads. Mr. Pamuk paused in front of the first of 83 display cases — there is one for each chapter of the book — and pointed to a single earring. Then he moved along to other vitrines, talking about how items were chosen and how a few displays were still works in progress even after all these years of preparation.

“As far as I know this is the first museum based on a novel,” he said. “But it’s not that I wrote a novel that turned out to be successful and then I thought of a museum. No, I conceived the novel and the museum together.”

While writing the book he collected more than a thousand artifacts that reflect the story, from a tricycle to dozens of ceramic dogs, from lottery tickets to news clippings of women with black lines drawn across their eyes (once standard in Turkish newspaper coverage of women connected to scandal).

Mr. Pamuk’s protagonist and narrator, Kemal Basmaci, becomes more and more obsessed with Fusun as other aspects of his life fall apart, and eventually he begins collecting things — and stealing them from Fusun’s home — in what will ultimately become his life’s work: the building of a museum in tribute to his onetime lover. For a time Mr. Pamuk became Kemal, looking for pieces that reflected each chapter as he wrote it, searching the junk shops of Istanbul and other parts of the world. The collection he assembled reflected not only the plot of “The Museum of Innocence,” but also Istanbul during Turkey’s halting movement into the modern era.

“We remembered how the Istanbul bourgeoisie had trampled over one another to be the first to own a electric shaver, a can opener, a carving knife, and any number of strange and frightening inventions, lacerating their hands and faces as they struggled to learn how to use them,” Kemal says in the book.

Such items too are in the museum, along with old clocks, film clips, soda bottles and clothes of the era.

At the top of the house Mr. Pamuk sat down on a bench in front of the bed where Kemal is meant to have slept in the last years of his life as he assembled the museum. It was lonely-looking piece of furniture.

The Museum of Innocence opened to a small crowd on Saturday morning, after a packed news conference on Friday at one of Istanbul’s fanciest restaurants. Most of the visitors seemed to be fans of the book who wanted to match their vision with Mr. Pamuk’s. There was Latife Koker, who had traveled an hour and a half by bus that morning; Renata Lapanja, who lives in Slovenia; and Erdogan Solmaz, who, like Mr. Pamuk in his youth, is an architecture student at a university in Istanbul. He said Mr. Pamuk’s efforts had made this collection starkly different from others in the city, which has some of the finest museums in the world.

“This one is about people,” Mr. Solmaz said. “This is much more personal and dramatic.”Personal, yes, but only to a point, Mr. Pamuk said. “This is not Orhan Pamuk’s museum,” he said. “Very little of me is here, and if it is, it’s hidden. It’s like fiction.” In his view both the book and the museum are largely about sadness, and in particular the “melancholy of the period.”

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