Grant for Brighton museum for a new wildlife display
Participants will help to create a new museum ‘diorama’ – a scene with 3D figures – that will provide scientific information for future generations.
In a series of fun pop-up events around the city the public will be asked what might be put in a modern Brighton diorama.
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Hide AdThey will also be asked about their experience of wildlife in the city in their gardens, parks and streets. Workshops and school activities are also planned.
After the public consultation, the Booth Museum will create the first ‘diorama’ to be built in the museum for over a century.
Hedley Swain, CEO of Royal Pavilion Museums’ Trust, which runs the Booth Museum, said:” We are thrilled to receive this funding from The Esme Fairbairn Collections Fund for such a fascinating and exciting project. It’s an amazing chance to show how the scientific advances made by Edward Booth are still relevant and will be for another 100 years. It’s fantastic that we will be able to talk to the public who we know love the natural world so much and preserve that knowledge for future generations to study. We want to thank the Esme Fairbairn Collections Fund and the Museums Association for all their support.”
The museum showcases stuffed British birds collected by Edward Booth in the nineteenth century and displayed in dioramas he had made, the first known examples of birds displayed in recreations of their observed natural habitat and behaviour.
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Hide AdDioramas have since been used in museums around the world including the Smithsonian Institute in the US. The taxidermy birds and animals will come from existing historical collections or by preserving modern wildlife which died of natural causes or by accident.
The project aims to address the challenge of climate change faced by the natural world in the 21st century, using comparisons to cutting edge innovations in the 19th century study of British birds through the work of Edward Booth.
It will demonstrate that the study of historical natural history collections can help our understanding of preserving natural history in the modern world and show that everyone can play their part in understanding the value of scientific museum collections.
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