I recently ventured out of Somerset to go up to London for a day - quite the adventure for me! All those people... The lure was a meeting-up with old friends, one from Essex and one from Brighton. One of us has problems with mobility, and can't walk or stand for too long - so we decided to opt for a sit-down experience: namely, the David Attenborough immersive exhibition at the Natural History Museum. It's called Our Story.
I don't know if you've been to one of these immersive exhibitions. I had, to the Van Gogh one, so I knew roughly what to expect. A large space is lined with boards/screens, on which are projected a series of moving images. The audience sits in the middle, while the 'story' plays out all around them. There's also, importantly, a soundscape - so you are, indeed, immersed in the experience. I would dearly love to know how these things are put together, how they work: I have no idea, so to me it all seems quite magical.
I've been to the Natural History Museum many times before. But it really struck me this time what an extraordinary building it is. It's huge, for one thing. But - the detail of it! It's composed of differently coloured bricks, inside and out. This is practical as well as ornate - you don't have to repaint every few years. But the thought that must have gone into designing the patterns and the shapes - the arches, the cornices, the windows - everything - and the references to the purpose of the building: the carvings of animals, birds, everything to do with the natural world. And now it's all set off by planting which references the botanical history of life on earth - so clever!
The museum was last year the most popular visitor attraction in Britain, with over seven million visitors. It's certainly buzzing, and busy. But the Attenborough exhibition is a welcome haven of peace and quietness - only a few people are allowed in at a time. It starts with darkness. Then gradually things start to happen. Points of light expand and coalesce: stars and planets are born. Then, tiny at first, something new appears: a blue planet, wreathed in trails of white cloud, serene and beautiful. And there we are. The whole thing only lasts for about 45 minutes, so of necessity it's a rather hasty gallop through the history of the planet. But it's enough to showcase the extraordinariness, the sheer improbability of what we have - and what, at the moment, we seem hell-bent on destroying: some of us, of course, more than others. I was particularly drawn to an image of the handprints found in caves in France and Spain: I have seen some of these for real, and as I gazed at them in a cave in the south-west of France, I felt a tangible sense of connection - quite spine-tingling - with the individuals who were moved to make these marks, to leave these messages, thousands and thousands of years ago. ( Back to the exhibition - one thing surprised me: the dinosaurs didn't appear. Something stirred in a primeval forest, and we all watched with bated breath - but it was a gorilla, not a diplodocus. I couldn't help but feel that this was a missed opportunity: children, in particular, are fascinated by dinosaurs.)
At the end, Sir David appeared, and spoke, quietly but clearly, of the threats facing Earth. This was well done. He didn't sugarcoat the dangers. But he ended with a message of hope - that we are the ones who've messed up, but we are also the ones with capacity to put the brakes on and find solutions. We can only hope he's right.
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| Sorry - this is not a very good picture of the outside of the museum, but it's the only one I took. |
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| The red planet |
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| Home |
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| Handprints - greetings across the ages |
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| The human race marches on. |

























