Friday 21 November 2014

'Museum, in thy thoughts be all my visits remembered'

Recently unearthed in the Museum of Unreason archive is this original letter of reflection on museum visiting from a young Billy Shakespeare dated 1588.  It is believed he changed it and used it again for one of his minor plays, I forget which.

To visit, or not to visit--that is the question:
Whether your wallet can suffer 
The entrance fee of outrageous fortune 
Or qualify for a bewildering sea of discounts 
And by choosing enter. To visit, to sleep-- 
No more--and by a sleep to say we're bored 
The headache, and the thousand interpretation panels 
That eyes are witness to. 'Tis then a cup of tea 
Devoutly to be wished. But to visit, not to sleep-- 
To wake--perchance to enjoy: ay, there's the rub, 
For in that interactivity what fun may come 
When we have shuffled off our duffle coats, 
Must give us pause. There's that desire 
That makes bearable so long a visit. 
For who would bear the whips and scorns of museum visits, 
Th' receptionist's wrong, the room steward's contumely 
The pangs of despised stairs, the lift's delay, 
The insolence of staff, and the spurns 
That patient merit of th' visitor takes, 
When he himself might his quietus make 
With a guide book? Who would rubbish buy, 
To grunt and sweat under a weary audio, 
But that the dread of something in the shop, 
The undiscovered marmalade, from whose taste 
No traveller recovers from, puzzles the will, 
And makes us rather bear Tesco's own brand 
Than fly to jam that we know not of? 
Thus a museum does make cowards of us all, 
And thus the prospect of repeat visiting 
Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought, 
About scones of great depth and hardness 
With this regard their currants turn awry 
And lose the name of edible. -- Soft you now, 
Fair cream tea! -- Museum, in thy thoughts 
Be all my visits remembered.

Friday 14 November 2014

Mixer Taps: the end of the world as we know it?

Having to call in the plumber to fix a leaking tap in the Museum of Unreason staff toilet resulted in a swarthy ruffian presenting himself at the museum door yesterday. As expected he originated from somewhere east of Essex. Although my Polish isn't very strong (I'm reasonably fluent with "Nie rozumiem"*, and "ile?!?"** ), his English was far better. However his constant references to 'force it' had me worried until he then referred to the toilet as the restroom the penny/cent/grosz• (delete as applicable) dropped. It was obvious the Queen had not taught him his English or English sanitary ware culture.  He was a Yankee Poledle Dandy. It was then that the knotty problem of mixer taps reared it's ugly head. He had the temerity to suggest a single mixer tap (mikser cran) would be a positive change for the museum. When I suggested that a mixer tap would be the opposite of positive, he looked confused, so I sat him down and explained the error of his ways.

Now, I am a great admirer of both the USA (cowboy hats and musical theatre) as well as Polish plumbers (prompt and cheap). BUT North American society took a fatally wrong turn in 1880 when a certain Thomas Campbell thought it would be a good idea to invent the mixer tap. Now I realise Campbell was a Canadian so the USA is not entirely to blame, but in the same way that the Scots did not invent the bagpipes*** (bagpipes: the ultimate warning of what may happen when you have too many sheep and a lot of time on your hands) they impose them upon delicate eardrums at every conceivable opportunity; the USA is similarly guilty of the callous mixing of the world's tap water.

The separation of hot and cold water is as essential to a coherent thriving society as it is to separate church and state for good governance. I realise that the Queen of England is the head of the Anglican Church but comfortingly neither represent any significant influence in British political or spiritual affairs as the last census confirmed that we are now a Jedi worshiping country under Stephen Fry.

As a product of the English public school system I am no stranger to sting of cold water on the face at 5am in the morning followed by the cold sting of the birch on the behind. As a result I am the sort of well balanced individual that makes Britain 22nd out of 24 wealthier nations for literacy and numeracy according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Where would we be if I turned the tap on and with a quick flick of the wrist warm water came out!?! 122nd probably.

As you grow up how do you find out who you are? You experiment, you make mistakes, you get burned. If you survive, you find balance. The twin-tapped bathroom sink is the moist expression of personal growth and development. The increasing infantilism of society can be traced from the late nineteenth century - I would go further and say it can be precisely traced from 1880 (viz. Mr. Chapman). However that is not the main reason for separate taps.

The Eastern philosophical symbol of balance is the Yin and Yang. It tells us that opposites are complimentary. It is how the world is meant to be. We are either male or female with all the fun and misunderstandings that entails. Dark and light are separate for a reason. Would we really want to live in a hermaphroditic world of twilight? Some might - but they would also probably appreciate mixer taps as well. 

So here is the point of both the Yin and Yang and separate hot and cold water taps; one opposite can transform into another, but it is not a random event, it happens only when the time is right. A sex change operation is not a random event, but an event when the individual finds out who they really are. Does anyone choose to be a hermaphrodite? Night doesn't happen randomly, it happens only when the time is right. Cold water and hot water should only transform when the time is right. Human internal peace and existential satisfaction can only be achieved when you get the transformation right. Warm water in the sink without the effort is destroying the ongoing growth and development of the human race, unbalancing the earth. Darwin's theory of continual evolution is in jeopardy. Many of the measures of human improvement are declining in the Western world; literacy and numeracy rates are down, life expectancy is, at best, on a plateau, poverty rates are increasing as are TV reality shows. Let's face it we have begun the long march back towards homo erectus. The Gaia hypothesis of the earth as a self regulating system is undermined by mixer taps, by the concept they embody of humanity artificially removing opposites and messing with nature's delicate timing of transformation. Think about a world without summer or winter but with some sort of 'sunter' or 'wimmer'. Night and day transformed into 'dight' or 'nay'. Men and women transformed into Graham Norton. 

So learn to relish opposites and appreciate that balanced transformation is a right to be earned, explore the varying methods of transformation that your twin-tapped sink offers you (I prefer the short cold burst followed by a long hot one) and know that in the process you are helping to save the world and humanity's place within it.

The one down side is I now need to find a new plumber.


Notes

* I don't understand

** How much?!?


*** probably the Hittites in 1000BC

Tuesday 4 November 2014

What You Need Is: Another museum music playlist

Yet more museum music for your delectation, delight and delirium with an eclectic mix of the obvious (Night at the Museum soundtrack), show tunes (Barnum), Dr. Who and Pokemon music (Murray Gold and Tristan Perez) as well as hipster grooves (Muse, Paul Weller) for all your artifactual aural requirements. Some great ideas here for museums (Broken Hearts and Relationships) and a brilliant definition of a museum (Cathedral Amongst Hovels).

Search and enjoy, hear and deploy, share and annoy.

Matthew Ryan – Your Museum
Daniel Johnston – Museum of Love
Muse – Muscle Museum
Alan Parker – Science Museum
Emmy The Great – On The Museum Island
Murray Gold – Into The Museum
Cate le Bon – Mug Museum
Paul Weller – The Strange Museum
Combination Head – The Curator
Damien Jurado – Museum of Flight
Michael Crawford/The Original London Cast Of 'Barnum' – Museum Song
Tiny Ruins – Me At The Museum, You In The Wintergardens
Alan Silvestri – Night At The Museum
Idiot Pilot – Red Museum
Tristan D. Perez – Oceanic Museum
Liquid Mind – Thought Museum
Tortoise – Glass Museum
Perfume – Mirai No Museum
A Static Lullaby – Life in a Museum
Veruca Salt – The Museum of Broken Relationships
Ken Nordine – The Sound Museum
Chuck Prophet – Museum Of Broken Hearts
Museum of Bellas Artes – Cathedral Amongst Hovels



Let me know your favourites and I will do a museum top 10 Spotify playlist, but if anyone has any good suggestions they would be more than welcome to add it to the canon of museoaudiofricative.