The first stop was the contemporary art gallery. None of the exhibits attracted me, except that for the life size portraits of Lord this and Duke that from the erstwhile British era. The lighting arrangement was horrible so could not take pics – and actually didn’t see any point of capturing the Lords and Dukes in my camera. I was a little disappointed and thought perhaps paying 200 was a waste.
Next to the contemporary art gallery is a monument which apart from the ornamental work at the entrance does not indicate of any architectural marvel overall. I skipped exploring it at first and headed for the Children Museum.
I must say, this is the best section in the entire museum campus. The exhibits provide a glimpse of the people belonging to the different regions within India and people from other geographies. It also has a collection of models showing different civilizations of the past era. And there's one section which displays many objects that have been, and can be created with paper.
I moved away from there after reading text engraved in two marbles placed on either sides of the entrance. Left side: The stone commemorates the opening of the Victoria Memorial Hall by HE The Hon Sir Arthur Lawley CCIE KCMC on march 23rd 1909. Right side: This foundation stone of the Victoria Memorial Hall was laid on 24th Jan 1906 by His Royal Highness George Frederic Ernest Albert, Prince of Wales PC KG KT KP GCSI GCMG GCIE CCYO
I wish I knew what those acronyms meant for them and the common men like the visitors. I have observed Docs and Army personnel using acronyms with their name – MD, MS or PVC, MVC, MC – two or three at the most – but Mr Albert must have done much more to be bestowed with so many titles!
One technical inaccuracy that I observed was the placement of the two marbles – the announcement of foundation on RHS and the VMH declared open on the LHS. Someone should have swapped their placement. Or I guess, placement of such stones with this kind of info is correct – I used my simple logic – 1906 should be followed by 1909. Whatever!
The museum area also houses the Connemara Library. My colleague Balaji R spoke at length about the library – biggest and best. I did not explore the place beyond 1st floor. I am not sure if it has that big hall kind of area which is generally shown in movies. The library also has an area which exhibits books for people to buy – I think its called Permanent Book Fair. This section has more books for Tamil readers.
The Bronze gallery of the Museum is quite interesting and has a huge collection. I have never seen so many bronze sculptures together in any other museum. If the thousands lights that illuminate the area and the different statues are switched off or strategically placed, one can take better shots of the deities. While the ground floor has collection of lesser known gods [lesser known to me], the first floor has this exclusive collection of Kaali and Natraja. The collection is amazing; worth seeing over and over again. I particularly liked the different forms and poses of Natraja, kaali, and RudraKaali.
I don’t remember the name of the other gallery where I went. Half of it appeared nothing less than a big bio lab – hanging skeletons of various animals; bottled reptiles; large, medium, small tortoise; stuffed animals; interestingly a skeletons of a man and a horse together – seemed the master and his horse died together; and then a skeleton of a whale. The jaw bones of the whale was stuck on either sides of the 7 or 9 feet long door – you can imagine how big would be the whale’s skeleton if the jaw bones are that big.
1 comment:
beautiful pictures and a good commentary :D liked it :))
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