The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Saturday, May 18, 2013
 
Pop-Up Museum Offers Flash of English Eccentricity
LONDON (REUTERS).- When you first arrive at the house on Gellatly Road it appears to be an ordinary Victorian home...until the lady with the wig answers the door.

After that prepare to suspend your disbelief as you enter the alternative reality of the Nunhead and District Municipal Museum and Art Gallery, where the "lower catacombs" (a window into the basement under the floorboards) are too dangerous to enter and everyone has a funny name.

The lady in the wig and the blue suit at the door, a Miss Ulricke Furtwangler, is your guide into an absurd world that tells visitors more about English eccentricity than anything revelatory about the faux exhibits on display.

"The Lower Catacombs, hundreds of feet below, are not open - they are too dangerous," Furtwangler explains. "But you can visit the Upper Catacombs."

She offers you a hard hat and opens the door into what would usually be a living room.

The temporary museum in this southeast London suburb boasts a shadowy maze filled with statuary and funeral urns on dusty cardboard shelves and a full-size effigy of the "Nunhead Knight" clutching a sword. Never mind that it's made from painter's overalls, a sofa and a baby's cot.

A silver sarcophagus is a much-prized item that you later learn the museum's trustees want to sell off to raise cash.

A highlight of the visit is the pet cemetery of fictional Victorian singer Dame Sionagh Durrant, who toured the stages of Europe in the 1820s.

The display informs you that Durrant had many famous lovers including politician Benjamin Disraeli, poet Robert Browning and the museum's founder Gellatly. She also had a taste for low-life amours - local bricklayers and night-soil workers (Victorian waste removal men).

But the main love of her life was her guinea pigs. The remains of her beloved pets (in reality children's stuffed toys) are ranged in jars on several shelves.

The museum also comes complete with a shop (the kitchen) selling postcards, t-shirts and tea towels printed with skulls.

Lectures on a variety of topics take place in the "Old Lecture Theater" - a shed at the bottom of the garden.

Subjects include: The Mechanics of Water Pumps in China, The Diseases of Gums and Oral Mucous Membranes in Victorian Times and The Music and Pomp of Emerson, Lake and Palmer.

This year, unlike last year, there were real lectures due to popular demand. These took place at 10-minute intervals throughout the day to a packed garden shed.

David White, the museum's "director" and creator, explains that the idea for the exhibit, which is "mostly fictional," grew out of his love of real museums. "I absolutely love museums and the history of collections and their obscure nature."

He first created the museum last year and it was so popular he did a new version this year, The Catacombs, which took two-and a half months to build and occupy most of the ground floor of the house he shares with his wife and daughters.

White estimated the museum attracted about 500 visitors over the two days that it opened its doors to the public. It is now closed until its next incarnation.

"You can become a friend of the museum," he said. "And there is a newsletter - The Gellatly Gazette - but it never appears."



(Editing by Paul Casciato)

Pop-Up Museum | Ulricke Furtwangler | English Eccentricity |


Last Week News

March 26, 2010

Prado Museum Rediscovers Paintings from Its Collection with Opening of New Galleries

United Kingdom Arts Institutions to Government: Don't Ax Funds

Nolan's Ned Kelly Masterpiece Breaks Australia's Auction Record

Commission Unveils Design Concept for National Eisenhower Memorial

Sotheby's to Sell Newly Discovered Ottoman Ivory and Turquoise-Inlaid Box

South African Art Sale Exceeds Expectations at Bonhams

Discursive Painting from Albers to Zobernig at MUMOK

Guggenheim Exhibition Explores Memory, Trauma and Return to the Past

High Museum Explores Salvador Dalí's Late Work in August 2010

Ian Johnson's 'TimeScale' on View at Gooden Gallery in London

VMFA Appoints Geza von Habsburg as Guest Curator of Faberge Collection

Major Retrospective Exhibition of the Work of Rupert Bunny Opens in Melbourne

Ballet Dancer Dame Margot Fonteyn's Dress for Sale at Bonhams

Discover America's Roots In First-Ever Charles Deas Retrospective

Modigliani Drawing Brings $84,000 at Swann Galleries' Auction

MoMA's 2010 Party in the Garden to Honor Ronald and Jo Carole Lauder

National Gallery of Canada Realigns Its Organization

Chinesca Culture Offering Found in Tepic

Stolen Henry Moore Sculpture Found in Toronto

London Art Event Seeks to Help Asian Elephants

March 25, 2010

Painting by Paul Klee Stolen from NYC in 1989 is Found by Montreal Gallery Owner

Christie's to Offer Valuable Collection of Illuminated Manuscripts

Henry Moore's Butterfly Moved to a Factory for Restoration

Qatar Museums Authority Unveils Jean Nouvel Design for New Museum

Major Works by Maxfield Parrish to Highlight Christie's Sale

First Major Exhibition in the U.S. for Tatiana Trouvé at Gagosian

Christian Boltanski to Create Monumental Installation at Park Avenue Armory

Thomas P. Campbell Welcomed to AFA Board of Trustees

Dallas Museum Announces Results of Groundbreaking Visitor Study

New Exhibition Gives an Insight into the Collection Frieder Burda

Monumental Commission for MoMA on View at the 53rd Street Entrance

Spectacular Sale of Photographs from Various Owners at Christie's

Max Mara Art Prize for Women 2010 Winner Announced

Weston's Nautilus Shell Leads Sotheby's Spring Photographs Auction

City Organizations Partner with AGO and No.9 to Bring Contemporary Art to Inner-City Students

Barbara Thumm Gallery Announces Representation of Anna Oppermann's Estate

Raskols and Sing-Sing by Stephen Dupont at Jack Bell Gallery

London Science Museum Goes Climate Science Neutral

New York Dealer Offers "Schindler's List" for Sale

Rock Photographer Jim Marshall Dies at 74

March 24, 2010

Cy Twombly: Third Contemporary Artist Invited to Install a Permanent Work at the Louvre

Museum of Modern Art Adds @ Symbol to Design Collection

Cornell University Study Super-Sizes the "Last Supper"

Christie's Presents Selections from the Baio Collection of Photographs this Spring

Jean Nouvel Commissioned to Design 10th Serpentine Gallery Pavilion

Sotheby's Sets Record for Classical Chinese Painting Sold in the US

Renaissance Rivals Brought Together for Rare Art Exhibition in Gothenburg

Abu Dhabi Launches Tender Competition for Louvre Museum

Awe-Inspiring Staffordshire Hoard Saved for the Nation

Signed Copy of Wind in the Willows Triumphs at Bonhams

First Museum Display Dedicated to Philip de Laszlo in Over 70 Years

Exhibition Dedicated to the Works of Women Artists Opens at The Chrysler

St. Louis Historical Museum to Host Vatican Collection

Solo Exhibition of New Paintings by Valerie Jaudon at Von Lintel Gallery

Americas Society Showing Work by Argentine Artist Marta Minujín

New Multichannel Video Installation by Alfredo Jaar on View at University of Connecticut

The Frick Collection Announces 75th Anniversary Celebrations

Nevada Museum of Art Garners National Funding Awards

National Endowment for the Arts Presents Live Webcast of its 169th National Council on the Arts Meeting

Gibbes Museum of Art Announces Short List of Finalists for the 2010 Elizabeth and Mallory Factor Prize

March 23, 2010

Johann Sebastian Bach Archive Center in Leipzig Reopens After Two Years of Renovation

Photographs by Robert Mapplethorpe Donated to Italian Museums

Major 20th-Century Works Enter Cantor Arts Center Collection

Mark S. Siegel Elected to Succeed Louise Bryson as Chair of Getty Board

Claremont Rug Company to Exhibit "Awe-Inspiring" Collection

Installation of Spiders Weaving Stars by Tomas Saraceno in Italy

New York City's Newest Art Space Opens With Rauzier 'Hyperphotos' Exhibition

Ship Bell from Lord Louis Mountbatten's HMS Kelly for Sale at Bonhams

New Works on Paper by Marine Hugonnier Inaugurate Max Wigram Gallery

SFMOMA to Offer a Fresh Look at Seminal 1975 Photography Exhibition

Documents Concerning Auschwitz Guards Found at a Nearby House

Romanesque Sculptures by Tacita Dean at Museo Reina Sofia

Design and the Art of Reduction at the Vitra Design Museum

Bonhams New York Presents An Important Private Maritime Collection This Spring

PAFA's Board of Trustees Approves Design Concepts for Lenfest Plaza

Curious George Saves the Day at the Jewish Museum

Field Museum Archaeologists Amend the Written History of China's First Emperor

Daniel Sheehy Named Director of Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage

Endowment for the Arts Announces Research on Informal Arts Participation in Rural and Urban Areas

March 22, 2010

Architect Frank Gehry Likes What He Sees with New Las Vegas Building

National Gallery in London Opens First Exhibition of Paintings by Christen Kobke

Ludwig Museum Opens PowerGames - An Exhibition by Danish Artists

The Emanuel Schlesinger Collection of Indian Art at Sotheby's

MOCA Presents Original Photographs and Film of the Las Vegas Strip

Dubai's Four-Day Contemporary Art Show Upbeat Despite City's Debt Woes

Prints and Studies by Anni Albers at Alan Cristea Gallery

Second Solo Exhibition with Jacqueline Humphries at Stuart Shave/Modern Art

Rare Exhibition of Maria Callas' Costumes, Jewelry, Photos and Memorabilia

Zhao Bo's Second Solo Exhibition in New York at Eli Klein Fine Art

Abstract Portraits and Clowns by Jim Torok on View at Pierogi

Polaroids as Chinese Ink Painting by Caroline Chiu at the Snite Museum of Art

Marcus Levine Makes Art with Hammer and Nails at Gallery 27

Controversial Portraits of American Soldiers Now in Washington D.C.

Cheekwood Botanical Garden & Museum of Art Opens Four New Exhibitions

Art of the Chicano Movement Opens at the Museo del Barrio

The 32nd Annual Museum Mile Festival Announced for June 8

A Roma Journey: Europeana Supports New Web Exhibition from The European Library

Local Landscapes by Community Photographers on Display at the Massey

Museum Takes New Look at Air, Water, Land and Life

March 21, 2010

Exhibit at the Art Institute of Chicago Looks at an Enigmatic Phase in Henri Matisse's Art

Ai Weiwei's Barely Something Exhibition Opens at the DKM

Exhibition of Loans by Oberlin College to Open at the Cleveland Museum of Art

Sixteen Large-Format Works by Mario Nigro Featured at A arte Studio Invernizzi

Sotheby's Spring 2010 Sales of Russian Art to be Held in April

MOCA Award to Distinguished Women in the Arts Honors Artist Jenny Holzer

Victoria & Albert Museum Opens First Major Exhibition of Quilts

Photographer Rex Dupain Exhibits at Galerie Lucie Weill & Seligmann

Industry Series by Studio Job at Carpenters Workshop Gallery

Solo Exhibition of Gerhard Mantz with New Virtual Landscapes in Black and White

Sotheby's to Sell American Indian, African, Oceanic and Other Works of Art

Artists Sell Work Direct to the Public at One of London's Best Loved Art Fairs

Works by Phyllis Bramson & Judith Geichman at Carrie Secrist Gallery

Design of the Century: Property from L.A. Philanthropist Nancy M. Daly to Highlight Sale

Exhibition to Show How Artists have Depicted Wealth over the Last Ten Years

Not Sure if Something is Art? There's an App for That

Musée de l'Elysée Celebrates Polaroid with Exhibition from Its Collection

Steve McQueen's Queen and Country Makes Its Last Stop at the National Portrait Gallery

National Gallery of Modern Art Showcases Paintings by Celebrated Russian Artist Nicholas Roerich

A New Installation by Carsten Nicolai at Siobhan Davies Studios

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site