Difference between revisions of "Main Page"
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<blockquote>“It is only due to organizations such as yours that the important works of our Country are brought to the attention of the public.” <br/>—Marie Reilly, Museum of Bad Art, Dedham, 1998. [[Testimonials|''learn less...!'']]</blockquote> | <blockquote>“It is only due to organizations such as yours that the important works of our Country are brought to the attention of the public.” <br/>—Marie Reilly, Museum of Bad Art, Dedham, 1998. [[Testimonials|''learn less...!'']]</blockquote> | ||
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| + | <blockquote>"The Main Street Museum forces one to contemplate the nature of museums and curating. Why do we save what we save? How do we decide what to discard, what to display, what to hide away, and what to destroy.” '''—Joe Citro,''' ''Weird New England,'' 2004</blockquote> | ||
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[[Image:Flockeddog.jpg|thumb|300px| What is he thinking about, right now?]] | [[Image:Flockeddog.jpg|thumb|300px| What is he thinking about, right now?]] | ||
Revision as of 09:29, 21 November 2008
Contents
- 1 Catawiki
- 2 What's Goin On?!
- 3 Marrionette Shows—"The Christmas Story"
- 4 Publicity and Press Clippings
- 5 The (Virtual) Restroom
- 6 Material Culture Studies, Including The Electric Organ
- 7 Shoppe with Us! The Museum Gifte Shoppe
- 8 Main Street Rummage; The Thrift Store!
- 9 Places we Like; Links/Lynx on the "World Wide Web"
Catawiki
The Main Street Museum's Catawiki is a unique digital initiative in material culture studies utilizing open-source code to describe the artifacts in our collections and to create a completely fluid, adaptive taxonomic structure for their interpretation. The Catawiki uses the same "wiki" code utilized by "Wikipedia" and is able to be modified by users from any internet access point. The categoies currently acting as a organizational foundation for these structures are:
- Objects as Evidence of Human Culture, for instance: Pet Toys; Geographically or Historically Significant Items (Relics); Manuscripts; Art; Military History; Textiles and Clothing; Shoes; and "Things, or Fragments of Things Once Owned by, or Associated with, Notable People—Particularly Notable Vermonters".
- Biology: Living, or Apparently Once Living, Objects, including
- Flora: "The Invasive and Native Species of Windsor County" for instance, or "Dried roses from Robert Todd Lincolns House in Manchester, Vermont" and "Roses from the Varina Davis Memorial in Vicksburg, Mississippi".
- Fauna includes: Homo-sapiens; White-tailed Deer and Other Mammalia; Reptiles; Birds; Entomology (Insects); Corals; Flocked Pets; Other, or Unidentified Species; etc.
- Inanimate, or Apparently Inanimate Objects, including Minerals, Man-made Minerals, Silt from the 1927 Flood, Round and/or Rusted Things.
- And, of course, Miscellaneous or Other Things.
- Vinculum (or Overlapping) Categories can be accessed from the sidebar to the left and include: Carbon; Color as a Hysterical Reaction; Cute Things; Flocking; Objects Chewed by Pets; Teeth, More Teeth, Things with Nail-holes; "Things Made from Animals or Parts of Animals" and Tramps and Hobos.
What's Goin On?!
“White River Junction—a beauty spot in the midst of a valley of beauty and cheer.” —Gateway to Vermont, 1903
Marrionette Shows—"The Christmas Story"
marionette artistry of ria blaas and gabriel q. the greatest story ever told
Performances
- friday, 19 december: 7pm
- saturday, 20 december: the christmas story. again. at 4, 7 pm and at a special show at 10 pm (see how the "X" got in "Xmas"!)
- sunday, 21 december: the christmas story. yet again, for your convenience at 4 pm
- note: museum closed for holidays, monday, 22 december, 2008 through friday, 2 january, 2009
ps: the museum again must apologize for a local man bob. he wears a baseball style cap, is followed closely by his partner elizabeth. they like to tell people where to park. we recommend ignoring them. the museum takes no responsibility for their actions. (you can park by the Museum riverside or on the street, Railroad Row works!...everything's fine!)
Publicity and Press Clippings
Read what we write about ourselves. Read what others write about us.
Testimonials
“The Main Street Museum—White River Junction’s answer to the Library of Congress.”
—Peter Welch, U. S. House of Representatives, 2007.
“It is only due to organizations such as yours that the important works of our Country are brought to the attention of the public.”
—Marie Reilly, Museum of Bad Art, Dedham, 1998. learn less...!
"The Main Street Museum forces one to contemplate the nature of museums and curating. Why do we save what we save? How do we decide what to discard, what to display, what to hide away, and what to destroy.” —Joe Citro, Weird New England, 2004
The (Virtual) Restroom
The Virtual Restroom of the Main Street Museum was begun in the mid-1990's as an interactive digital resource for the creation and storage of online grafitti. Now that we have our own, actual, restroom in the fire station building, the restroom of the Museum has a both virtual and physical presence. Please feel free to add to both. Please remember however, that only one blackboard coated wall in the actual museum is suitable for writing (in chalk only please) and that general standards of civic-mindedness, and decency should guide your musings and observations. —The Management. Recent excerpts:<blockquote:> "Jazz is Sex with instruments out with instruments"
"jazz is listening to each other and to ourselves!"
"what is easy listening?"
"easy"
"McCain"
Material Culture Studies, Including The Electric Organ
Read what we've written about objects. Read what the experts have said as well. This is just a starting point. We have only just begun to really think about things, and our relationships to things.
Our fully functioning blog features discursions on material culture studies, miscellanea and much more! Museumology Blog continues the heartfelt commentary of the previous blog of the Main Street Museum at Blogspot. You can read the latest entries, musing about roadtrips, history, collections and collective insanity, and post your own responses here.
A German critic, W. Bürger, writes "Our Museums...are veritable graveyard-yards in which have been heaped up, with a tumulour-like promiscuousness, the remains which have been carried thither...all are hung pell-mell upon the walls of some noncommittal gallery—a kind of posthumous asylum, where a people, no longer capable of producing...come to admire this magnificent gallery of débris.”
- —G. Brown Goode, Museums of the Future, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., 1891: p. 427
"History is false. It has to be." —Jules David Prown
Shoppe with Us! The Museum Gifte Shoppe
The Museum Gifte Shoppe features souvenirs, a wide variety of books on museums and museum-y things, our own booklets with hand-stitched bindings, and wonky gifts that no one in their right mind would purchase!
Main Street Rummage; The Thrift Store!
What's concentrated at our Rummage? Chic-ness... Hip-ness... New ideas and concepts—created from recycled things... Nowadays—its Thrift Stores! They just make sense! And think about it. Dont you need shirts, Pants, Suits, Blouses, Shoes, Jackets, A small assortment of housewares and books Clean, cut and bagged rags at affordable prices (use them over and over—theyre cheaper then paper towels!) and selected items from the Main Street Museum’s unusual Museum Gift Shoppe: Latte mugs, White River Junction t-shirts, “Post-Modernism is Killing Us!” caps, Genuine silt specimens from the 1927 flood, the super-cute, Japanese “Humping Dog” (must be seen to be believed)
Clothes, Great Gifts! O My! Where will you ever see anything like it? This is true locally-controlled, resourceful retail. We are wide awake. You won’t find us napping. And we promise you will get your money’s worth at our stores—the best looking Thrift Stores youll ever see! All proceeds help the Museum succeed in the 21st century; but best of all, its a Fun Place to Shop! learn less...!
Places we Like; Links/Lynx on the "World Wide Web"
Places around world that we like, Cyber and Real. Links to Old and New. Above click there—or here...!
- "As in totemism, we participate in each other as we participate in the object." —Sartre, Les jeux sont faits, 1943, and Norman O. Brown, Love's Body, 1966.
The Main Street Museum, 58 Bridge Street, White River Junction, Vermont, 05001-1909, info@mainstreetmuseum.org, 802.356.2776