In this interview with Onmanorama, museum planner and futurist Dr George Jacob reflects on why museums continue to matter, ...
NEW YORK — Museums are always looking for ways to make their exhibitions more exciting. Now, new technologies are making that easier. From 3D scanning and 3D printing, to virtual reality and special ...
The Story & Clark organ on display at the Museum of Jurassic Technology in Culver City. When asked to define what the Museum of Jurassic Technology is all about, employees offer answers almost as ...
This article originally appeared on Jan. 15, 2019. For a technology that’s relatively new, there’s no shortage of museums devoted to computers and computing technology. In the U.S. alone there are ...
The first thing to know when you get to the Museum of Jurassic Technology is that you can’t, under any circumstances, use your cell phone. Not to take photos, not to text, not to google the ...
An interactive exhibit offering new and reimagined experiences highlighting the engineering design process is beckoning ...
Very soon, every visitor to the Cooper Hewitt, the Smithsonian’s recently reopened design museum, will receive a giant pen. This pen is not really a pen. On the table, it looks like a gray plastic ...
A divination table from the exhibit, “The World is Bound with Secret Knots – The Life and Works of Athanasius Kircher, 1602 – 1680.” Museum of Jurassic Technology Palms is a small but densely ...
The Mimms Museum of Technology and Art (formerly called the Computer Museum of America) is one of the world’s largest collections of computers, technology, and artifacts from the Digital Revolution.
Ancient sculptures at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts are getting a new look. After years of reimagining how to present the great Greek, Roman and Byzantine art, the museum has found ways to draw ...
The two Aaron Elsters spoke last week about the importance of remembering the stories of Holocaust survivors who will not always be around to share them firsthand. On Thursday, Elster stood directly ...
At the Cleveland Museum of Art, art isn’t merely viewed—it’s also experienced. Once inside of the museum, patrons are quickly introduced to an ArtLens Wall, a five feet by 40 feet MicroTile wall—the ...