Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label museum. Show all posts

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Scary Looking Mummy of the World (14 Photos)

Scary Looking Mummy of the World
Scary Looking The Mummies of the World: The Franklin Institute from Philadelphia invites visitors to an unusual exhibition called “Mummies of the world.” Every exhibit in this exhibition is unique. Here you can see the dog who’s remains were buried in peat bogs in Germany about five hundred years, and embalmed child, who lived 6420 years ago in Peru.

The exhibition features forty-five mummies and ninety-five items related to mummification and embalming. The exhibition “Mummies of the World” was prepared with the participation of experts from fifteen European institutions under the auspices of the German Museum Reiss Engelhorn-Mannheim. The exhibition has visited many major U.S. cities.

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Scary Looking Mummy of the World

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Museum Harley Davidson

Museum Harley Davidson in USA





Harley Davidson Museum is a North American museum located in downtown, Milwaukee, Wisconsin and is celebrating more than 100 years of Harley Davidson motorcycles history. It is a 130,000-square foot three building complex on 20 acres of land along Menomonee River bank that comprises thousands of artifacts from Harley Davidson Company and its motorcycles. The total number of visitors attracted by this museum is 300,000. It was opened to the public in the year 2008 in Menomonee Valley and was created on historical industrial area of Milwaukee. It was initially used by Morton Salt, Milwaukee department of Public Works and Lakeshore Sand Company. The designs for museum were revealed in the year 2006 which was created by James Biber, partner at Pentagram Architects. In June 2006, the construction work of this museum started with groundbreaking ceremony. The site comprises of 500 spaces for cars and 1000 for motorcycles along with 17-foot tall steel Harley Davidson sign.

The complex of Harley Davidson Museum also includes restaurant, special event spaces, café and retail shops. On the display there some historic items that tell Harley Davidson’s history and story such as interactive exhibits including 10 bikes, photographs, video footage of contemporary motorcycling and vintage, posters, trophies, advertisements and clothes. On the upper level of museum, there some motorcycles displayed at the center of hall with galleries on other side. The second floor of the museum starts with engine room. There is a knucklehead engine displayed into various pieces and the room comprises of interactive touch screen elements that show Shovelhead and Panhead motors work and Harley motors. The competition and clubs gallery consists of information and display about the racing history of Harley Davidson. There is a tank gallery as well that comprises of 100 most memorable tank graphics of Harley Davidson.

The custom culture gallery of Harley Davidson Museum covers the impact of company on global and American culture. The centerpiece of custom culture gallery is King Kong, 13-foot long dual-engine Harley Davidson motorcycle designed by Felix Predko. The corporate archives of Harley Davidson Motor Company are housed as well on museum’s ground.




















Source: harleydavidsonmuseum.com

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Top Ten Scary Museums You Must Know

10. House on the Rock

Originally designed to house a collection of basically anything, the House on the Rock in Deer Shelter Rock, Wisconsin first opened in 1959. The house contains fascinating exhibits such as a re-creation of an early twentieth century American Town and a 200 foot model of a sea monster. Now this doesn’t sound too scary but only because I forgot to mention that the entire collection is basically left to rot in dark, dusty rooms. Now imagine such a room room filled with the stench of rot in which you can just make out a scattering of decayed mannequins sawing at old broken musical instruments – playing what sounds like a symphony written in hell! Having seen it, I can assure you that the real thing is far worse than the description!

8. New Haven Ventriloquist Museum

In New Haven connecticut there is a museum that contains nothing but row upon row of old ventriloquist’s dummies. Every seat in the theatre has a dummy in it – in fact, when you visit you have to stand on the stage because there is no room anywhere else. Now most people don’t suffer from Autonomatonophobia (the fear of artificial humanoid figures – yes it’s real) but even the staunchest of the staunch will be horrified by this awful display. Just think “Chuckie” times one thousand.

6. London Dungeon

The London dungeon is really famous. So you may wonder why it isn’t in the top five of this list. Mainly because it is scary in a different way from the rest of the items here. It is scary in the sense that no one wants a random stranger dressed as the grim reaper to jump at them while screaming. That aside, the dungeon does present a great selection of macabre torture devices from the middle ages. Mind you, your local army base probably has an equally terrifying array of torture devices from the last decade! If you go to the Dungeon take your heart medication with you – those actors can certain put the frights up you. Oh – and be prepared to queue for a long time – it is a popular attraction. The only place you will have seen queues longer is at a bakery in Soviet Russia.

Lombrosp’s Museum of Criminal Anthropology

Cesare Lombroso founded the Italian school of criminology. It is no wonder then that this museum – filled with objects from his work is a terrifying place indeed. Combined with the macabre collectibles are images of crimes, weapons used to slaughter humans, and even Lombroso’s own head perfectly preserved in a bottle of formaldehyde. If you are interested in crime – or just want to spend a day gazing at skulls, human remains, and other horrifying objects, this is the place to go.

3. Museum of Anatomy

Honoré Fragonard was a professor of anatomy – at least he was until he got canned for showing the symptoms of insanity! Twenty years later he began the work that would be his life’s crowning achievement. In 1794 he began gathering dead bodies for what would become his museum of anatomy. His museum was designed to house a gigantic collection of corpses that he personally stripped of their skin and embalmed with a secret recipe – a recipe that remains a mystery to this day. The collection contains the preserved flayed bodies of animals, children, and executed criminals as well as a collection of skulls from asylums for the mentally disturbed. This museum in Paris is so horrifying that entry is available by appointment only.


2. Mutter Museum

The Mutter Museum is best known for its large collection of skulls and anatomical specimens including a wax model of a woman with a human horn growing out of her forehead, the tallest skeleton on display in North America, a 5 foot-long human colon (pictured above) that contained over 40 pounds of poop, and the petrified body of the mysterious Soap Lady whose entire corpse was turned into soap after she died. The museum also houses a malignant tumor removed from President Grover Cleveland’s hard palate, the conjoined liver from the famous Siamese twins Chang and Eng Bunker, and a growth removed from President Abraham Lincoln’s assassin, John Wilkes Booth. It may not terrify you – but I guarantee that it will end up haunting your dreams.


1. The Purgatory Museum

According to Catholic doctrine, a person who dies with only slight sins on their soul goes to purgatory to be cleansed by fire before floating off to heaven. At the Church of the Sacred Heart in the Prati district of Rome, there is a small museum tucked away behind a side altar. It is the Purgatory museum. This truly scary place has exhibits which document cases of souls in purgatory coming back to earth to haunt the living. Some of the items on display are a table with scorch marks and lines carved out of it by an otherworldly hand, as well as burnt fingerprints on clothing and bedlinen. But perhaps the scariest item of all is a book with an entire human handprint scorched deeply into the pages – the handprint of a long dead monk suffering in the fires for some unknown sin.

9. Glore Psychiatric Museum

Who wouldn’t want to check out a museum dedicated to the history of such wonderful things as electroshock treatment and lobotomies? Well – most people probably. But for those who have a taste for the downright shocking, the Glore Psychiatric museum is for you.

And if you find the horrifying parts of the museum too much to cope with, you can relax in the “awful things people have swallowed” exhibition. Don’t forget to check out the ancient treatments area where you can see instruments for bleeding patients and the fascinating dioramas taking you step by step through a psychosurgical operation.


4. Madame Tussauds

This is probably the most famous entry on the list. Madame Tussauds in London is best known for its enormous collection of wax figures – mostly of famous people. But the museum had a more grisly start. Madame Tussaud herself started the collection during the French revolution. She would run up to the guillotine after people had been executed and make wax imprints of their severed heads. The most famous is probably that of the last King of France. These heads are all on display at the museum along with a horrifying collection of monstrous historical displays in the chamber of horrors. When you see the life-sized reproduction of one of Jack the Ripper’s victims, you will never be quite the same again. Oh – and to make matters worse, the chamber of horrors now employs actors to jump out and terrify visitors. Take along a change of underwear.

7. Catacombs of Palermo


Not intending to be a museum, that is exactly what the Catacombs of Palermo have become – a museum of death. Deep in the bowels of the Capuchin monastery you can view hundreds of corpses – both monks and local members of the community. The bodies are lined up along the walls in the clothes in which they were buried. Bodies were put in the catacombs from the end of the 16th century to the last interment – little Rosalia Lombardo in the 1920s. The cool air and dry environment mean that the bodies are extremely well preserved – so well preserved in fact that some look like they are just sleeping. But most look like hideous corpses ready to wake up at any moment to attack the visitors. A must see holiday spot.

source: listverse.com

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

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