Internet auctions lead to less objects donated to museums and other stuff in the news
I'm not well and yet I'm still blogging. How committed does that make me? ;)
Anyway, while I suffer from woolly brain and other such ailments, here's a few news items to get you all thinking:
BBC NEWS Wales South West Wales Web auctions hit heritage museum
Louvre staff strike over stress
Coin shows Cleopatra's ugly truth
Aboriginal remains tests halted
Go on! Discuss!
Anyway, while I suffer from woolly brain and other such ailments, here's a few news items to get you all thinking:
BBC NEWS Wales South West Wales Web auctions hit heritage museum
Louvre staff strike over stress
Coin shows Cleopatra's ugly truth
Aboriginal remains tests halted
Go on! Discuss!
Comments
1. People are starting to recognise the value of their possessions and selling them - presumably to collectors - on Internet auction sites. Collectors will go to enormous lengths to catalogue and preserve their collections. So, doesn't this all mean that more objects will survive into the future to illustrate everyday life in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries? Which has got to be a good thing, hasn't it?
2. So what if Cleopatra didn't conform to our perception of beauty. Perhaps what attracted Marc Anthony (apparently not much of a looker himself!) in the first place was her mind (and the power she wielded)? Aren't we always being told that beauty is in the mind of the beholder?!
I see what you mean about the Goths Amy, in my experience the most unkind visitors were the middle class parents who got upset when things were not working properly and decided they would exercise their frustration on the person nearest to them, which was always us enablers who had the least control over putting it right. So I don't blame museum assistants for being grumpy at all, at least in a shop there are things to tidy etc but once you have been round the exhibits with a duster and baby oil (yes we used baby oil on the stainless steel!) what else is there to do? Still I loved the job for many reasons not least I got to play with a walkie talkie and demonstrate on a real working forge!