Museum Landscape: What's Open? (Hint: Quite a Few)
Every industry is moving toward reopening at various and disparate paths. Recently, the DC municipal government laid out a path for a near restriction-free reopening of many types of venues in regards to capacity. Museums are included in the new loosening of capacity restrictions, as they are included in the same category with libraries and galleries. As of June 11, museums will no longer be required to impose capacity restrictions. That doesn't mean they aren't able to do so on their own, but the requirement to do so will be shed. Each museum will also open with their own safety procedures in an effort to keep staff and visitors safe. Mask-wearing and distancing guidelines are likely still going to be implemented regardless of the venue type.
A number of Smithsonian museums and a collection of others are opening this Friday (May 14) or next Monday. By June there will be enough museums open to make a full day or two of exploration possible again.
Please check with each individual institution for ticketing options (many will not have walk-up entry), capacity restrictions, open hours & open days, and whether the exhibition you really wanted to see is actually going to be accessible.
Here's the list of DC's major museums and galleries along with their opening status as of today!
Smithsonian Museums
Open now:
Udvar-Hazy Air and Space Center (Virginia location)
Opening very soon:
National Museum of African American History and Culture (May 14)
American Art Museum AND National Portrait Gallery (May 14)
Renwick Gallery (May 14)
National Museum of American History (May 21)
National Museum of the American Indian (May 21)
National Zoo (May 21)
Still closed for now:
National Museum of African Art, National Air and Space Museum (DC location), Anacostia Community Museum, Arts and Industries Building, Hirshhorn Museum, Freer Gallery of Art, National Museum of Natural History, National Postal Museum, Ripley Center, Sackler Gallery, and the Smithsonian Castle.
Non-Smithsonian Museums
Open now:
National Museum of Women in the Arts
National Building Museum
Planet Word
Phillips Collection
International Spy Museum
Opening very soon:
National Gallery or Art; West Building only (May 14)
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (May 17)
Still closed for now:
National Archives Museum
National Geographic Museum
Museum Spotlight: Planet Word!
Planet Word was, in a word, phenomenal. My expectations were fuzzy heading into this museum adventure because 1) the pandemic has altered every facet of public life, including interacting with new institutions, and 2) museums I use on tour rely heavily on the physical artifact to create a narrative, which this museum does not, for the most part.
Planet Word is offering something quite different; a learning experience based on language and demonstrating how we develop, utilize, protect (or sometimes fail to protect), and continually alter language and words.
The first sentence on their website's homepage is “The museum where language comes to life” and that is quite accurate to the experience.
Like a few other DC museums (U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, National Museum of African American History and Culture) you enter on floor one, but start the exhibition experience on another floor --in this case the top floor-- and wind your way down back to floor one. I should also note that at the time of this visit, attendance was restricted and all visitors were given a free-to-take-home touch pen to interact with digital touch screens (which there were many).
The top five exhibition highlights for highlights for me:
Where Do Words Come From?
Imagine a huge wall that talks to you, asks you questions, listens for your answer, and explains the root origin of dozens of English words. And imagine all this happens while it works to keep you visually engaged through moving images and word highlights. Well, it is all that and more. I loved this experience. It’s one of the first you encounter and sets the stage well for the rest of the museum by getting your mind moving, deconstructing the English language and its interconnectedness with the world's other languages.
The Spoken World
It should be acknowledged that English is the language vehicle for this museum. In the Spoken World exhibition, the visitor is presented with a huge globe of the Earth surrounded by individual displays you can approach and interact with. Each individual display features a person who helps you delve into a language that is not English. For my visit, I interacted with speakers of Vietnamese, American Sign Language, Irianian Sign Language, and Russian. Each conversation offers a combination of new vocabulary, syntax, practice with simple sentences, and uncomplicated culture references. I wanted to try every language, but I also wanted to finish seeing the rest of the museum before closing. I could have stayed for hours.
This exhibition gets bonus points for a feature that fills the interactive globe in the middle of the room with images based on your own interactions with the video displays. It’s quite amusing. For those with more interest in the history of language, three large screen displays have interactive videos about topics such as disappearing languages and more; all extremely engaging topics.
Unlock the Music
The first exhibition I plan to rush back to after we’re free and clear of covid restrictions will be this one. Unlock the Music dives right into how musicians transform language into art; or rather, conveys exactly what it is that makes a collection of words into a song we can relate to, remember, and enjoy. All of the songs featured should be popular enough for some recognition by the average visitor. Along with the breakdown of syntax and techniques like alliteration, rhyming, and assonance, visitors get to model these techniques by… performing karaoke with the featured popular songs. While the karaoke and stage setting was fantastic, we’ll have to wait until after the pandemic to safely belt out songs in a room full of strangers without masks.
Words Matter
Reflecting on any museum visit is highly recommended. Museum experiences are dense; usually full of content, information, and new concepts. The Words Matter section is located near the end of the Planet Word experience. This space gives you a chance to reflect by completing writing prompts about how language has played a part in your own life. There are nooks at which you can take a seat and hear answers to those same questions from other people in pre-recorded talks. These videos are very personal, moving, and most importantly, relatable.
And my favorite space in the museum: The Library
In what felt like a private reading room with thousands of books floor to ceiling surrounding a reading table in the center, this was an exhibition all about the written word as literature. Books, books, books: fiction, non-fiction, graphic novels, classics, and newly released. This exhibition is truly a celebration of books. Speaking a classic line from a classic book opens up (literally opens up) dioramas with classic scenes from selected books. The long reading table features an interactive element in which you can place a book down --any book you find in the room-- and see moving image narratives about that particular book, its origins, the author, or the impact & legacy of the work itself. They’re graceful visuals and I wanted to explore every book in the room, even books I’ve already read and know inside out.
The verdict
Overall, Planet Word surprised me, in all the good ways. The Language Arts don’t belie the other disciplines. On the contrary, language makes advancement in any other discipline possible. Communication, messaging, entertainment, study, reflection; all conveyed through words.
Of all the post-pandemic museum glow ups I’m anticipating, Planet Word probably tops the list. In a world where we can’t sing aloud in groups, project when we speak, or even be near other people, it’s just harder to convey words we know, practice words we don’t, or interact with words in the ways we’re asked to at Planet Word. But now seeing what the museum actually is, I feel they have made themselves as accessible as possible considering the various (and 100% necessary) precautions in place. Whenever this pandemic ends in the U.S., I hope to revisit Planet Word to experience every feature and exhibition as they were intended. Highly recommended!
Planet Word is located at 925 13th Street NW. Admission is free, with a suggested donation of $15.
As of November 23, the museum is temporarily closed due to the pandemic. Visit the museum website for updates on opening hours and advanced reservations when they are next available.
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Patreon Preview: National Native American Veterans Memorial
One characteristic of the National Mall I really appreciate is that there are dozens of smaller spots among the museums and large memorials that end up being excellent stages for more intimate spaces. Whether that space is used as a farmers market like the one hosted next to the USDA or a public garden like Haupt Garden at the Smithsonian Castle, there are pockets of land available for new additions to the living, civic work of art that is the National Mall.
The newly opened National Native American Veterans Memorial is in one of those spaces… (con’t)
Read more on our Patreon page including more than a dozen images: patreon.com/attucskadams.
Exhibition Spotlight: Americans
Americans is a new, long term exhibition at the National Museum of the American Indian. I was floored by this exhibition. In a good way! It's on my must-see list for Washington, DC museum-goers for this summer.
Americans features 300 objects, still images, moving image clips, and historical artifacts across a 9,000 square foot gallery. There are interactive digital touch tables and a reflection room with excellent questions to get you thinking and writing. In addition to the images and objects, three mini-galleries trace the long lasting impacts of the legacy of Pocahontas, our changing memories regarding Battle of Little Bighorn, and the implementation of Indian Removal Act.
The exhibition highlights the ways in which American Indians, and specifically Indian imagery have been part of our national identity from 1600s until the present. Some of the images are difficult to look at, some complex, some took me by surprise, and some were very familiar.
From vehicle names, to fashion, to machines of war, to sports, we've co-opted American Indian imagery for commercial, political, and propagandic purposes. Often times we have done this in prejudicial, careless, and harmful ways. Other images were seemingly benign or sought to honor or pay homage. Seeing it all presented here in mostly a matter-of-fact manner was affecting and educational. I was moved and reflective after the experience.
Americans is located on the 3rd floor of the National Museum of the American Indian (4th St and Independence Ave SW). It will be on display until the year 2022.
Learn more:
Americans exhibition interactive website (FYI - has sound).
National Museum of the American Indian official website.
The Invention of Thanksgiving short film/video (featured in the exhibition).
Exhibition review by the Washington Post.