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Museum manners: the sensory life of the early museum.


In The Boy Who Breathed on the Glass in the British Museum British Museum, the national repository in London for treasures in science and art. Located in the Bloomsbury section of the city, it has departments of antiquities, prints and drawings, coins and medals, and ethnography.  H.M. Bateman depicts the story of a boy who is arrested for breathing on one of the display cases in the British Museum. (1) While purely fictional, this picture book highlights the popular notion of the museum as inviolable and untouchable untouchable

Former classification of various low-status persons and those outside the Hindu caste system in Indian society. The term Dalit is now used for such people (in preference to Mohandas K.
, a site of pristine preservation where even a breath might have damaging effects. Many contemporary museums are challenging the traditional 'hands off' ethos of the museum with innovative, interactive exhibitions. (A recent example is the 'Touch Me' exhibit at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.) (2) Yet such exhibitions are still exceptions to the rule of sensory restraint which is generally expected to govern the behavior of museum visitors. Artefacts for the most part are only to be seen, not felt, smelt, sounded and certainly not tasted. How intrinsic, however, is this rule of sensory restraint to the museum? How did visitors to the first museums behave? What were their sensory expectations and experiences? (3)

One of the most difficult subjects for an historian to investigate is that of the corporeal Possessing a physical nature; having an objective, tangible existence; being capable of perception by touch and sight.

Under Common Law, corporeal hereditaments are physical objects encompassed in land, including the land itself and any tangible object on it, that can be
 practices of earlier eras. Ways of walking, eating, smelling and touching, while laden with social significance, are often so taken for granted Adj. 1. taken for granted - evident without proof or argument; "an axiomatic truth"; "we hold these truths to be self-evident"
axiomatic, self-evident

obvious - easily perceived by the senses or grasped by the mind; "obvious errors"
 that they are little commented on by their practitioners. It takes a very thorough observer to record the ordinary bodily motions of daily life. Often it is in the descriptions of travellers, who find local customs foreign and therefore worthy of note, that one comes across the best descriptions of the corporeal customs of past times. Thus from a Frenchman's account of his eighteenth-century visit to England we learn that in the House of Commons House of Commons: see Parliament.  at that time the customary practice was for orators to stand "with their legs straddling strad·dle  
v. strad·dled, strad·dling, strad·dles

v.tr.
1.
a. To stand or sit with a leg on each side of; bestride: straddle a horse.

b.
, one knee somewhat bent, and one arm extended, as if they were going to fence." (4) Another potential source of information is the reminiscences of individuals who have lived long enough to have seen the customs of their youth pass away and therefore make note of them as curiosities. From the recollections of the long-lived Mary Berry, for example, we learn that Horace Walpole walked on tiptoe according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the custom of elegant eighteenth-century gentlemen. Another source of information, and one which was richly mined by Norbert Elias Norbert Elias (June 22, 1897 — August 1, 1990) was a German sociologist of Jewish descent, who later became a British citizen.

His work focused on the relationship between power, behavior, emotion, and knowledge over time.
 in The Civilizing Process, is the etiquette guide. Such guides reveal both contemporary ideals of proper behavior among the classes to which they are addressed and certain common practices which were deemed to require correction. For example, the frequency with which readers of medieval instructions are advised to clean their hands before dipping them into the communal pot indicates that people frequently ate with unwashed hands. (5)

Just as it is often difficult to know what people of past eras did with their bodies, it is difficult to know what they did with the things around them. One cannot assume that the function of an object is evident in its design. For example, a chair is evidently designed for sitting on but this mere fact tells us nothing about the social and symbolic function of chairs or about the other acts people may have performed with them. Simply looking at a nineteenth-century chair, for example, cannot tell us that a dutiful du·ti·ful  
adj.
1. Careful to fulfill obligations.

2. Expressing or filled with a sense of obligation.



du
 daughter in the eighteen-hundreds might curtsy to her father seated in that chair, and even to the empty chair when her father was absent. (6) Similarly, in future centuries, no one would be able to tell by looking at a dinner table from our own era that, rather than being primarily used for dining, it was customarily employed as a place for storage and work. (7)

Scholars of material culture are increasingly investigating the social life of things, such as furniture or clothing, in order to uncover how objects matter to the constitution of the social world. (8) This approach can fruitfully be extended to include the sensory life of things, or the ways in which objects are experienced and imbued with meaning through diverse sensory practices. (9) The objects contained in museums, removed as they are from ordinary social use, may seem to be frozen in time and space. Yet they too have a social and sensory history which merits exploration. It is with this aim in mind that I investigate here the interaction of visitors and curators with collections from the mid-sixteenth hundreds to the end of the eighteenth century. While visual perception often played a dominant role in the sensory experiences of visitors to such collections, I am particularly interested in examining what else museum-goers may have done besides look.

The central site for this investigation is the Ashmolean Museum Ashmolean Museum: see under Ashmole, Elias.  of Oxford, founded in 1683. This site is supplemented by other museums and collections in seventeenth and eighteenth century England. (10) For the purpose of this study I have not distinguished between private collections frequented by the public, institutional collections and public collections--a problematic distinction in any case--as one finds similar visitor behaviour in all these sites. (11)

As I have noted, information on bygone corporeal practices is often hard to come by. Yet from the references that do crop up in seventeenth and eighteenth century accounts of museum visits, it is evident that early museums were not exclusively hands-off affairs. Take, for example the following description by Celia Fiennes Celia Fiennes (7 June 1662 - 10 April 1741) was an English traveller. Born in Wiltshire, she was the daughter of a colonel, who was in turn the second son of the William Fiennes, 1st Viscount Saye and Sele. Fiennes died in Hackney in 1741.  of a visit to the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford around 1694:
  [T]here is a picture of a Gentleman that was a great benefactor to it
  being a cavalier, the frame of his picture is all wood carved very
  finely with all sorts of figures leaves birds beasts and flowers, he
  gave them a fine gold Meddals or silver gilt, with two fine great
  Chaines of the same, one was all curious hollow worke which were given
  to him by some prince beyond sea; there is a Cane which looks like a
  solid heavy thing but if you take it in your hands its as light as a
  feather, there is a dwarfe shoe and boote, there are several
  Loadstones and it is pretty to see how the steele clings or follows
  it, hold it on top att some distance the needles stands quite upright
  hold it on either side it moves towards it as it rises and falls. (12)


From this run-on description (which mimics the experience of rushing from one exhibit to another) we learn that at least certain exhibits in the museum were hands on. This is confirmed by a 1710 account of a visit to the Ashmolean by Zacharias Conrad von Uffenbach, a German traveller, who comments on certain tactile properties of the exhibits, finding the hair of a stuffed reindeer "almost as stif as horse-hair" while that of a Turkish goat is "as soft as silk." (13)

Part of the attraction of museums and of the cabinets of curiosities which preceded them, in fact, seemed to be their ability to offer visitors an intimate physical encounter with rare and curious objects. In certain cases the curious character of a museum piece may have resided in a quality imperceptible im·per·cep·ti·ble  
adj.
1. Impossible or difficult to perceive by the mind or senses: an imperceptible drop in temperature.

2.
 to the eye, such as in the case of the cane at the Ashmolean described by Fiennes "which looks like a solid heavy thing but if you take it in your hands its as light as a feather." In these cases the non-visual senses might be seen as providing a necessary adjunct to the sense of sight. However, contemporary accounts indicate that even artefacts with no apparently distinctive non-visual qualities--including paintings--might be touched by visitors. The popular art critic Noun 1. art critic - a critic of paintings
critic - a person who is professionally engaged in the analysis and interpretation of works of art
, Anna Jameson, suggestively wrote in 1840 that everyone could remember the days when gallery-goers strutted about "touching the ornaments--and even the pictures!" (14) While touching museum pieces was apparently once a common phenomenon, Jameson's remark indicates that by the mid-nineteenth-century the practice was eliciting the same disapproval that the time-honoured custom of eating with one's hands had begun to incur among the upper classes a couple of centuries earlier.

With regard to premodern pre·mod·ern  
adj.
Existing or coming before a modern period or time: the feudal system of premodern Japan. 
 customs such as eating with one's hands, Norbert Elias argued that it is insufficent and, indeed, misleading, to characterize the corporeal practices of earlier eras as simply the result of a lack of discipline and education or "bad manners". These practices must rather be explored, in Elias's words, "as something that fitted the needs of these people and that seemed meaningful and necessary to them in exactly this form." (15) In terms of the visitors to early museums, how might their multisensory multisensory /mul·ti·sen·so·ry/ (mul?te-sen´sah-re) capable of responding to more than one kind of sensory input, as certain neurons in the central nervous system.  interactions with artefacts be understood as not simply a matter of "bad" or "childish" behaviour but something which was meaningful and necessary to them within the cultural context of their time?

Museums and galleries have always served a number of purposes other than the evident one of enabling visitors to appreciate their collections of art and artefacts. They are a site for social interaction and for acquiring and conveying an air of cultural authority. They may provide a cool place on a hot day or a quiet retreat. While modern gallery-goers often decry de·cry  
tr.v. de·cried, de·cry·ing, de·cries
1. To condemn openly.

2. To depreciate (currency, for example) by official proclamation or by rumor.
 the amount of walking involved in seeing a museum, the first galleries in private houses were employed precisely for walking. Paintings were added to these galleries in order to give people something at which to look as they walked. (16) Although it is the focus of this particular essay, the sensory history of the museum does not solely concern the interactions of visitors and curators with exhibits

Furthermore, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, as today, museum visits were integrated with other actvities. Celia Fiennes, for example, combined her visit to the Ashmolean with a tour of the Oxford Colleges. She found Magdalen College Magdalen College or Magdalene College could be
  • Magdalene College, Cambridge - a constituent college of the University of Cambridge
  • Magdalen College, Oxford - a constituent college of the University of Oxford
 remarkable for its "very fine gravel walk [on which] two or 3 may walke abreast", Corpus Christi Corpus Christi, in Christianity
Corpus Christi [Lat.,=body of Christ], feast of the Western Church, observed on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday (or on the following Sunday).
 Colege is noted for its "very good bread and beare" Trinity College Chapel
:Trinity College Chapel redirects here. For other users, see Trinity College Chapel (Disambiguation)


The Trinity College Chapel in Kandy, Sri Lanka is unique among churches in Sri Lanka.
 is distinguished by its wainscotting in a "fine sweet wood ... like cedar," and St John's offers the "great Curiosity much spoken of": a portrait of Charles I Charles I, duke of Lower Lorraine
Charles I, 953–992?, duke of Lower Lorraine (977–91); younger son of King Louis IV of France. He claimed the French throne when his nephew, Louis V of France, died (987) without issue, but he was set aside in
 in which "the whole lines of face hand and garment ... is all written hand and contains the whole Common prayer." (17) Fiennes full-bodied approach to sight-seeing is especially notable during her visit to Oxford's Physic phys·ic
n.
A medicine or drug, especially a cathartic.



physic

1. the art of medicine and therapeutics.

2. a medicine, especially a cathartic. See also purging ball.
 Garden, which in some ways formed the botanical counterpart to the Ashmolean with its collection of rare and curious plants:
  The Physick Garden afforded great diversion and pleasure, the variety
  of flowers and plants would have entertained one a week, the few
  remarakable things I took notice off was ... the Sensible plant
  [Mimosa], take but a leafe between finger and thumb and squeeze it and
  it immediately curles up together as if pained, and after some tyme
  opens abroad again ... there is also the Humble plant that grows on a
  long slender stalke and do but strike it, it falls flatt on the ground
  stalke and all, and after some tyme revives againe and stands up ...
  there is the Wormwood sage ..., a narrow long leafe full of ribbs, in
  your mouth the flavour is strong of Wormwood to the taste. (18)


From Fiennes' descriptions of these sites we can see that her museological investigations were of a piece with her observations elsewhere. There is no suggestion of the necessity of subduing one's senses within collection settings. The overall impression is of a lively exploration of whatever a particular site has to offer and the more interactive that happens to be the better.

Let us look then at the ways in which the senses might be engaged in the early museum. As regards the sense of touch, one key trait customarily associated with manual license is that of possession. One is free to touch what one owns. One may further extend this privilege to others, as a sign of favour. In the case of a private collection, hence, it was (and is) customary for collectors to handle their pieces and to allow favoured guests the same privilege. As the first museums open to the public had their origins in private collections, it could be expected that many of the customs of the latter would be continued in the former. For example, visitors to early museums were guided through the collection by a curator, just as guests might be guided through a private collection by a host. Alllowing the visitors to touch the artefacts was an expected mark of courtesy on the part of the curator, who played the role of the host. This comes out clearly in an account from 1760 in which the underkeeper of the Ashmolean describes a museum visitor's insistence on manual access:
  She desired me to take the Glass from off several of the Drawers,
  which I was somewhat unwilling to do, lest anything be lost by that
  means; which she perceiving she told me that I was not quite so civil
  as might be; that the last time she had seen the Museum ... she had
  handled and examin'd the Curiosities in the Cabinet as long as she
  pleas'd. (19)


Contemporary notions of civility evidently included being allowed to handle museum pieces, even small items stored away in drawers. The appeal to civility carried enough weight that, in this case, the curator did grant the lady her wish and allowed her "to have some of them in her hand, that she might inspect them more narrowly." (20) The underkeeper further notes that while the lady was inspecting the objects in the drawer he was kept busy handing "Curiosities" to a gentleman visitor.

Handling is often associated with damage, and one wonders how early curators balanced the demands for tactile access with the requirements of conservation. In the public's mind--and in the mind of donors--the museum constituted a safe place for the preservation and display of rare objects. In actual fact, however, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century curators were often not assiduous as·sid·u·ous  
adj.
1. Constant in application or attention; diligent: an assiduous worker who strove for perfection. See Synonyms at busy.

2.
 conservers of their collections, even according to the primitive conservation practices of the day. It was noted of the Ashmolean in 1753, for example, that the founding collection was "much the worse for wear, and even worse if possible by the conduct of some Keepers and their understrappers." In 1780 a report proclaimed that: "Nothing can equal the negligence with which the Ashmolean Museum was kept." (21)

Despite an often irreverent attitude towards the objects under their care, curators were not so unconcerned about the preservation of their collections that they had no reservations regarding the interaction of visitors with exhibits. Breakage was a major concern for collection keepers. The great seventeenth-century collector Cardinal Mazerin attempted to keep his collection intact without making it untouchable by delicately reminding guests that "these pieces break if they fall." (22) Undoubtedly museum visitors would have required many reminders of this sort as well, and even in early museums fragile objects would usually have been safeguarded in glass cases. Theft constituted another major concern. In order to minimize the risk of theft the first statutes of the Ashmolean required that only one group of visitors be admitted at a time and that the doors be closed behind them. (23) The displacement of (more or less) carefully arranged objects by visitors, in turn, was a constant annoyance for curators.

Significantly, the eighteenth-century Ashmolean underkeeper who was accused of being uncivil for hesitating to allow a visitor manual access to the contents of a cabinet was not motivated by a concern over potential damage but by a fear that something might "be lost by that means". In fact, the underkeeper's report of the incident was written to explain the loss of an (unidentified) gem which he suspected was pocketed by the eager visitor.
  After she had left the Museum I went immediately to adjust the Drawers
  in which many Things had been displaced by her, but could not find the
  Gem. (24)


Though the gem in this case was returned to the museum, one might think that incidents such as this would have put a quick end to hands-on museum tours. Yet as late as 1827 the Ashmolean regulations allowed visitors to handle artefacts with the curator's permission. (25) Apparently tactile access was considered of sufficient importance that it outweighed the risks to the integrity to the collection which it entailed.

It is impossible to know exactly how much early collections were handled by visitors. Museum goers frequently lamented not having enough time to appreciate the collection properly and time constraints would certainly have limited the amount of tactile engagement possible. However, the indications are that touching was commonplace, so commonplace as to customarily escape mention. In his tour of English museums and collections, Von Uffenbach makes note of one place where his sense of touch was restricted rather than those where it was not. That place was the Chapel of St. Edward the Confessor Noun 1. St. Edward the Confessor - son of Ethelred the Unready; King of England from 1042 to 1066; he founded Westminster Abbey where he was eventually buried (1003-1066)
Edward the Confessor, Saint Edward the Confessor
 in Westminster Abbey Westminster Abbey, originally the abbey church of a Benedictine monastery (closed in 1539) in London. One of England's most important Gothic structures, it is also a national shrine. The first church on the site is believed to date from early in the 7th cent. , where various historical and legendary artefacts were kept--coronation chairs and "the famous stone of the Patriarch Jacob" among others. Von Uffenbach wrote that he "should much have liked to scrape off a little" of this famous stone with his knife but "dared not, for one is liable to punishment for even sitting on one of these chairs." (26) A hint of modern museum policy is suggested here, except that the restrictions apparently did not go so far as to forbid all forms of touch for Von Uffenbach records the heaviness of a sword kept in the same chapel. (27)

Exhibits in museums and collections which were placed out in the open--hanging on walls or arranged on tables--were particularly likely to be touched--but even exhibits in drawers and cases might be taken out and handled. Von Uffenbach describes "a calculus as big as a hen's egg" in the collection of St John's College which was considered precious enough to merit "a carefully designed gold casket with a crystal lid", yet which was taken out of its case for the benefit of visitors. (28) The mere fact of an artefact See artifact.  being placed under glass hence did not necessarily signify untouchability. Nor can it be assumed that when visitors to museums recorded "seeing" a collection that "seeing" was all they did. "Then, as now, "to see" could be used in a general sense to mean to encounter or to perceive and could well include various sensory modalities Modalities
The factors and circumstances that cause a patient's symptoms to improve or worsen, including weather, time of day, effects of food, and similar factors.
. In a description of a visit to the Tower of London Tower of London, ancient fortress in London, England, just east of the City and on the north bank of the Thames, covering about 13 acres (5.3 hectares). Now used mainly as a museum, it was a royal residence in the Middle Ages.  in 1710 Von Uffenbach notes that an attempted robbery had resulted in the crown jewels crown jewels

Ornaments used at the coronation of a monarch and the formal ensigns of monarchy worn or carried on state occasions, as well as collections of personal jewelry consolidated by European sovereigns as valuable assets of their royal houses and the offices they
 kept there being less accessible to visitors. The jewels were now displayed behind a "trellis 1. Trellis - An object-oriented language from the University of Karlsruhe(?) with static type-checking and encapsulation.
2. Trellis - An object-oriented application development system from DEC, based on the Trellis language. (Formerly named Owl).
 work of strong iron ... through which strangers can view the things." He adds, however, that it is still possible "to get one's hand through and pick up the articles to feel their weight, so that everything can still be seen tolerably...." (29) (This was apparently the opinion of other visitors as well. William Hutton
''For the poet and historian of Birmingham, England, see William Hutton (Birmingham historian)
William Hutton is the pseudonym of the editor and owner of Hutton Commentaries.
, who visited the Tower later in the century, describes putting his hands through the grate and picking up the crown jewels. (30) Even the caged animals in the Tower's famous menagerie were not out of hand's reach. The lions kept there, indeed, were said to be "so tame that you can touch them with perfect safety." (31) For Von Uffenbach and for others, evidently, a satisfactory viewing involved handling.

Certain objects displayed in museums and collections were interactive by nature. Examples of this noted by Von Uffenbach were the sword kept in the Bodleian Library Bodleian Library (bŏd`lēən, bŏdlē`ən), at Oxford Univ. The original library, destroyed in the reign of Edward VI, was replaced in 1602, chiefly through the efforts of Sir Thomas Bodley, who gave it valuable collections of  collection which had "a large knob of crystal, which can be unscrewed and in which is painted a golden hourglass hourglass, glass instrument for measuring time, usually consisting of two bulbs united by a narrow neck. One bulb is filled with fine sand that runs through the neck into the other bulb in an hour's time. " and a block of wood with a movable brass ring brass ring
n. Slang
An opportunity to achieve wealth or success; a prize or reward: "missed the brass ring of American success" Lewis H. Lapham.

Noun 1.
 displayed in the collection of the Anatomy School in Oxford: "not only can it be turned completely round, but it shows no sign of the place where it has been soldered." (32) Other objects were enlivened en·liv·en  
tr.v. en·liv·ened, en·liv·en·ing, en·liv·ens
To make lively or spirited; animate.



en·liven·er n.
 by mechanical devices. One such was the statue of Henry VII which impressed many eighteenth-century visitors to the Tower of London. A visiting Frenchman coyly notes: "If you press a spot on the floor with your feet, you will see something surprising with regard to this figure, but I will say no more...." (33) The "something surprising" may have been related to the figure's codpiece cod·piece  
n.
A pouch at the crotch of the tight-fitting breeches worn by men in the 15th and 16th centuries.



[Middle English codpece : cod, bag, scrotum (from Old English
, described below.

Generally, the most evident role played by the sense of touch in collection settings was that of supplementing vision. A visual impression of the smoothness of a sculpture, for example, could be complemented by a tactile impression of its smoothness. Smaller objects might be handled in order to enable them to be better seen--turned around or held up to the light. When visiting Hans Sloane's collection in London Von Uffenbach describes holding a shell up to the light so that he could see "the concham lying concealed within it." (34)

Touch had an advantage over sight in that it was understood to be the sense of certainty, an association symbolically grounded in the biblical tale of Thomas, who needed to touch the risen Christ to believe in his reality. As Robert Mandrou pointed out in his history of early modern France For the administrative and social structures of early modern France, see .
Early Modern France is that portion of French history that falls in the early modern period from the end of the 15th century to the end of the 18th century (or from the French Renaissance to the eve of
:
  Until the eighteenth century at least, touch remained one of the
  master senses. It checked and confirmed what sight could only bring
  to one's notice. It verified perception, giving solidity to the
  impressions provided by the other senses, which were not as
  reliable. (35)


Even in the eye-minded eighteenth-century, when vision was widely lauded as the basis of all intellectual cognition, there were still many who considered touch "to have the best and final access to the world that sense reveals." (36) Such assertions are borne out by the use of touch by visitors to early museums. For example, the most remarkable item in the Bodleian collection according to Von Uffenbach was a framed image of a lizard in white marble set in a black marble. He wrote that although this looked like a work of nature the eye might be deceived by skilful artifice ar·ti·fice  
n.
1. An artful or crafty expedient; a stratagem. See Synonyms at wile.

2. Subtle but base deception; trickery.

3. Cleverness or skill; ingenuity.
. Touch, however, provided reliable evidence of the natural origin of the image: "a blind man even though he could not see could yet feel that this is a natural vein (palpando experiri potest)." (37)

The sense of touch not only verfied sight, it also provided information not accessible to the eye. Visitors to collections, for example, often lifted objects to ascertain their weight. When describing the collection in the Tower of London Von Uffenbach stressed the importance of being able to pick up the crown jewels and feel their weight. When visiting the Ashmolean Fiennes tested the weight of a cane. In 1646 John Evelyn John Evelyn (October 311620 – February 27 1706) was an English writer, gardener and diarist.

Evelyn's diaries are largely contemporaneous with those of the other noted diarist of the time, Samuel Pepys, and cast considerable light on the art, culture and politics of
 recorded lifting an antler antler: see horn.  in a Swiss collection to test its weight ("one branch of them was as much as I could well lift"). (38) Nor were only inanimate showpieces subjected to this treatment. When Samuel Pepys went to see two oversized o·ver·size  
n.
1. A size that is larger than usual.

2. An oversize article or object.

adj. o·ver·size also o·ver·sized
Larger in size than usual or necessary.
 children on display at Charing Cross Char·ing Cross  

A district of London, England, where Edward I erected (c. 1290) the last of a series of crosses in memory of his wife, Eleanor of Castile.
 in 1667 he "tried to weigh them in [his] arms." (39)

The weight of an object might be taken as an indication of the material of its composition, of its value, or of the strength required to wield it. Attempting to ascertain the weight of something by lifting it, however, was not just a matter of data gathering, such as might otherwise and with better accuracy have been accomplished with scales, but of bodily knowledge. A hands-on approach to exhibits enabled visitors to acquire an embodied understanding of the nature of the display.

While anything in a museum might be the subject of a visitor's touch, sculpture in particular seems to have elicited a tactile response. As a French courtier noted in the mid-seventeenth century, people began looking at sculptures by touching them. (40) In the case of sculpture the sense of touch gave notice that the representations of humans and animals that looked so real were in fact made of hard stone--a sensory contradiction that never lost its power to fascinate. (41) At the same time it allowed people to vicariously vi·car·i·ous  
adj.
1. Felt or undergone as if one were taking part in the experience or feelings of another: read about mountain climbing and experienced vicarious thrills.

2.
 handle what they would rarely, if ever, have been able to actually touch--emperors and goddesses and lions. Certainly sculptures, with their life-like forms, might also elicit a sensuous desire for tactile intimacy, as depicted, for example, in the ancient myth of Pygmalion and Galatea Galatea, in Greek mythology
Galatea (gălətē`ə), in Greek mythology.

1 Sea nymph, daughter of Nereus and Doris.
. One prominent seventeenth-century collector in Rome, Hippolito Vitellesco, was reputed to embrace and kiss the statues in his collection. (42) Far from being exceptional, it is likely that many statues were handled this way in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. (43)

Some critics found such tactile interaction with sculpture too coarsely sensuous. The sixteenth-century art theorist Vicenzio Borghini, for example, denounced the practice of touching and kissing statues as vulgar. (44) In the eighteenth-century Friedrich Schiller “Schiller” redirects here. For other uses, see Schiller (disambiguation).
Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller (Marbach am Neckar, November 10, 1759 – May 9, 1805 in Weimar) was a German poet, philosopher, historian, and dramatist.
 claimed that the use of touch for aesthetic appreciation was a mark of savagery. (45) Others, however, held that sculptures might best be comprehended by the hands. Benedetto Varchi Benedetto Varchi (1502 or 1503 - 1565) was an Italian historian and poet.

He fought in the defense of has native city, Florence, during the siege by the Mediceans and imperialists in 1530, and was exiled after the surrender of the city.
 suggested that touch alone could appreciate the artifice involved in a sculpted sculpt  
v. sculpt·ed, sculpt·ing, sculpts

v.tr.
1. To sculpture (an object).

2. To shape, mold, or fashion especially with artistry or precision:
 work. (46) Referring to a famous ancient statue known as the Hermaphrodite hermaphrodite (hərmăf`rədīt'), animal or plant that normally possesses both male and female reproductive systems, producing both eggs and sperm. , Lorenzo Ghiberti Lorenzo Ghiberti (born Lorenzo di Bartolo) (1378 – December 1, 1455) was an Italian artist of the early Renaissance best known for works in sculpture and metalworking.

Ghiberti was born in Florence.
 commented that "there was the greatest refinement, which the eye would not have discovered, had not the hand sought it out." (47) In the late eighteenth century Goethe poeticlly declared that by caressing flesh one comes to understand the tactile value of sculpture: to "see with a feeling eye, feel with a seeing hand." (48) The importance of touch for the aesthetic appreciation of sculpture was most notably upheld by the German philosopher Johann Gottfried Herder Johann Gottfried von Herder (August 25, 1744 in Mohrungen (Morąg), Kingdom of Prussia - December 18, 1803 in Weimar) was a German philosopher, poet, and literary critic. He is associated with the periods of Enlightenment, Storm and Stress, and Weimar Classicism. . Herder, in fact, considered sculpture to be the highest form of art precisely because it was perceptible to the sense of touch. According to the philosopher, touch afforded a more profound appreciation of beauty than sight. (49) While most museum patrons probably did not attempt to justify their caresses of sculptures by reference to philosophies of aesthetics, their practices could nonetheless be encompassed by contemporary theories of art. (50)

The most damaging form of touch manifested by visitors to collections was that motivated by the desire to possess the object on display, or some part of it, as when Von Uffenbach wished to scrape off a little of "the famous stone of the patriarch Jacob" in Westminster. While this desire no doubt was customarily thwarted by collection owners and curators, it was also the case that items or fragments of items not deemed to be particularly valuable might be given away to visitors as souvenirs or tokens of esteem. The original statutes of the Ashmolean decreed that the Keeper might make presents of redundant museum items "to some Person of extraordinary quality." (51) When Von Uffenbach visited the collection of historical records in Wakefield Tower in London he asked for and received a torn piece of a letter "of particular antiquity." (He noted the "fibrous and tough" quality of the paper.) (52)

If they could not actually possess the objects on exhibit, visitors did often use their senses to attain an intimate engagement with them. We have seen how sculptures often elicited a desire for tactile intimacy, the same might also occur with a wide range of artefacts. The best description of this comes from an account the German traveller Sophie de la Roche La Roche may refer to:
  • Hoffmann-La Roche
  • La Roche College
Places
  • Belgium
  • La Roche-en-Ardenne, a small town in the Ardennes
  • Switzerland
 wrote of her 1786 visit to the British Museum (established in 1753):
  With what sensations one handles a Carthaginian helmet excavated near
  Capua, household utensils from Herculaneum ... There are mirrors too,
  belonging to Roman matrons ... with one of these mirrors in my hand I
  looked amongst the urns, thinking meanwhile, 'Maybe chance has
  preserved amongst these remains some part of the dust from the fine
  eyes of a Greek or Roman lady, who so many centuries ago surveyed
  herself in this mirror ...' Nor could I restrain my desire to touch
  the ashes of an urn on which a female figure was being mourned. I felt
  it gently, with great feeling ... I pressed the grain of dust between
  my fingers tenderly, just as her best friend might once have grasped
  her hand ... (53)


It was over a hundred years since the Ashmolean first opened its doors when this experience was recorded at the British Museum but the indication is that touch still had an important place in museum visits. Of course, many social and sensory developments had occurred during those years of which a more in-depth study of visitor behaviour in early museums would have to take account. Certainly Sophie de la Roche's romantic sensibility would have been foreign to the more scientifically-minded Von Uffenbach. Yet, when a collection contained ancient and exotic artefacts. many seventeenth- and eighteenth-century visitors besides La Roche must have felt a thrill at holding in their hands what long-ago and faraway people had held in their hands. In her visit to the British Museum Sophie de la Roche even imaginatively ressurected a former owner of the artefacts on display in order to establish direct contact with her through her bodily remains. The seeming ability of touch to annihilate an·ni·hi·late  
v. an·ni·hi·lat·ed, an·ni·hi·lat·ing, an·ni·hi·lates

v.tr.
1.
a. To destroy completely: The naval force was annihilated during the attack.
 time and space gave it a particularly vital role in the museum where so many of the exhibits were from long ago and far away. Touch helped bring the museum to life.

As an intimate sensory contact, however, touch did more than create physical and emotional connections with other peoples and places. It was a way of acquiring social prestige, of touching with one's own hands artefacts and artworks which had passed through a succession of distinguished hands in the past. It was also a means of transferring power. A number of the objects displayed in early museums and collections had religious, royal or mythological associations and seemed to many to be imbued with sacred or magical qualities. The counterpart to the cult of the museum object could be found in the cult of the religious relic, in which devotees frequently touched and kissed relics and icons both as a sign of reverence and as a mode of receiving an influx of sacrality. (54) Even in Protestant England where the religious veneration of images and relics had been suppressed, the belief that extraordinary objects or persons could be sources of vital energy lived on in popular culture and in some cases in official practice. During the seventeenth and early eighteenth-century, for example, monarchs still practiced healing by touch in England. (55) Thus when Hans Sloane This article is about the physician and collector. For the Member of Parliament, see Hans Sloane (MP).
Sir Hans Sloane, Bart. (April 16, 1660 – January 11, 1753) was an Ulster-Scot physician and collector, notable for bequeathing his collection to the British nation
 is depicted in an eighteenth-century poem as impressing visitors to his collection with "a sacred pin, that touched the ruff that touched Queen Bess's chin," (56) the intended satire must be understood within a cultural context in which the touch of a monarch, or of something which had been touched by a monarch, could have transformative effects. In fact, in the eighteenth century the velvet lining of Henry VIII's codpiece, kept in the collection of the Tower of London, was stuck full of pins which were given away to visitors as fertility charms. (57)

Even if no wonder-working effects were expected, coming into close contact with royalty exercised a powerful attraction for collection visitors. When Samuel Pepys toured Westminster Abbey in 1669, he was allowed to touch the corpse of Queen Katherine, wife of Henry V, which was kept in a chest. "[I] had the upper part of her body in my hands. And I did kiss her mouth, reflecting upon it that I did kiss a Queen and that this was my birthday." (58) It was obviously a meaningful moment for Pepys.

The quasi-magical nature of certain collections was due not only to the extraordinary objects they contained--royal relics, Egyptian mummies, unicorns' horns--but also to their role as microcosms, bringing together and ordering a world of natural and artificial objects. The seventeenth-century Tradescant collection of curiosities, which would form the nucleus of the Ashmolean collection, was memorialized on the Tradescant tombstone Tombstone, city (1990 pop. 1,220), Cochise co., SE Ariz.; inc. 1881. With its pleasant climate and legendary past, Tombstone is a well-known tourist attraction. The city became a national historic landmark in 1962.  as "a world of wonders This article is about the 1975 novel. For other Wonders of the World, see Wonders of the World (disambiguation).

World of Wonders is the third novel in Robertson Davies' Deptford Trilogy.
 in one closet shut." It was also known as the Ark in reference to Noah's Ark Noah’s Ark

preserves Noah’s family and animals from flood. [O.T.: Genesis 6:7–9]

See : Refuge
 which preserved the world in miniature during the Biblical flood. (59) Surveying and manipulating the objects in this microcosm, either as owner, curator or visitor, made one god-like, a master of the universe with the world in one's hands In one's possession or keeping.
At one's risk, or peril; as, I took my life in my hand s>.

See also: Hand Hand
.

I have thus far concentrated on the role of touch in seventeenth and eighteenth-century collections because, after sight, it is to this sense that one finds the most references in contemporary accounts. (60) Yet the other senses were by no means left behind at the museum door. In terms of hearing, this sense's most important role was that of attending to the accounts given by collection owners and guides. Indeed, whether visitors found the patter pat·ter 1  
v. pat·tered, pat·ter·ing, pat·ters

v.intr.
1. To make a quick succession of light soft tapping sounds: Rain pattered steadily against the glass.
 of their guides informative or tedious, it was a virtually unavoidable accompaniment to collection visits during this period. Hearing was also used to listen to those exhibits that made sounds, which could include natural objects, such as the petrified pet·ri·fy  
v. pet·ri·fied, pet·ri·fy·ing, pet·ri·fies

v.tr.
1. To convert (wood or other organic matter) into a stony replica by petrifaction.

2.
 egg with a rattling yolk yolk (yok) the stored nutrient of an oocyte or ovum.

yolk
n.
The portion of the egg of an animal that consists of protein and fat from which the early embryo gets its main nourishment and of
 which John Evelyn describes, (61) or artefacts, such as automata automata - automaton  which played music or talked. (62) Musical instruments in particular required sounding out to be fully appreciated. When visiting the large collection of Claudius de Puy Pu´y

n. 1. See Poy.
 in London Von Uffenbach describes the "most agreeable sound" produced by "an elegant Indian organ." (63) Indeed the notion of a collection of musical instruments which were never heard--a common enough situation in modern museums--would probably have seemed bizarre in Von Uffenbach's day.

The sense of smell is usually mentioned by collection visitors with regard to scented woods or strong-smelling animals on exhibit. (64) Even when not recorded by visitors, the odours of artefacts would often have been perceived when the pieces were handled. Ambient odours also played a role in the collection experience. Coal smoke and soot were a characteristic feature of early English Early English
Noun

a style of architecture used in England in the 12th and 13th centuries, characterized by narrow pointed arches and ornamental intersecting stonework in windows
 collections due to the pervasive burning of coal for heating. A musty odour of decay must also have been common in many museums, such as the Ashmolean, which included many disintegrating animal remains. (65)

Generally, smell had more powerful symbolic associations and a larger ritual role in early modernity than it would have in later times. (66) Anthony Wood Anthony Wood or Anthony à Wood (December 17, 1632 - November 28, 1695) was an English antiquary.

He was the fourth son of Thomas Wood (1580-1643), B.C.L. of Oxford, where Anthony was born.
 records, for example, that during the entry of James II James II, king of Aragón and count of Barcelona
James II, c.1260–1327, king of Aragón and count of Barcelona (1291–1327), king of Sicily (1285–95).
 into Oxford in 1687, eight women clad in white strewed fragrant herbs before the king's retinue "which made a verie great smell in all the street, continuing so all that night till the raine came ..." (67) Odour was understood to be a sign of an object's or person's intrinsic "virtues" or traits. As shall be described below, this gave smell a chemical, as well as a symbolic importance.

One might presume that, as multisensory as the collection experience might have been for early moderns, the sense of taste, at least, would have been excluded from that experience. However, while it is true that visitors to collections did not customarily go around tasting the exhibits, their visit still might be informed by gustatory gus·ta·to·ry or gus·ta·tive
adj.
Of or relating to the sense of taste.
 associations. Just as occurs today, museum visits might be coupled with meals. In early public museums, however, visitors sometimes brought food to eat within the collection space itself. (68) In private collections, the owner, if so inclined, might provide a collation COLLATION, descents. A term used in the laws of Louisiana. Collation -of goods is the supposed or real return to the mass of the succession, which an heir makes of the property he received in advance of his share or otherwise, in order that such property may be divided, together with the . Hans Sloane customarily ended his guided tour guided tour guide nvisite guidée;
what time does the guided tour start? → la visite guidée commence à quelle heure? 
 of his collection with coffee in the library. (69) For those who wished for more meal and less museum, there was Don Saltero's Don Saltero's was a coffee house based in Chelsea, London, founded in 1695 by James Salter. Don Saltero's was distinct from other seventeenth and eighteenth century London coffee houses in that it contained many cabinets of curiosities.  coffee house, established by Sloane's former servant and embellished with a range of curious objects, many of them cast-offs from Sloane's museum. (70)

Not only might meals be taken within a museum, the museum itself might be conceptualized as a meal. When the Prince and Princess of Wales Noun 1. Princess of Wales - English aristocrat who was the first wife of Prince Charles; her death in an automobile accident in Paris produced intense national mourning (1961-1997)
Diana, Lady Diana Frances Spencer, Princess Diana
 visited Sloane's museum in 1748, exhibits were set up on and removed from tables like the courses of a meal. The first course was precious stones gems; jewels.

See also: Precious
 as found in nature. "[T]he same tables were covered for a second course with all sorts of jewels, polish'd and set after the modern fashion, or with gems, carv'd or engraved en·grave  
tr.v. en·graved, en·grav·ing, en·graves
1. To carve, cut, or etch into a material: engraved the champion's name on the trophy.

2.
 ..." The third course consisted of gold and silver ornaments from around the world. (71)

Though not a standard part of a museum visit, the most direct involvement of taste in the museum occurred when collectibles were themselves eaten or sampled. Von Uffenbach, for example, records the following experience when visiting Sloane's collection:
  Among other things he pointed out to us the nests that are eaten as a
  delicacy. It is said that the material is formed in the sea like the
  succino and used by the birds to build their nests. But, judging from
  its taste, appearance and feeling, I took it for a gum or
  resin .... (72)


Von Uffenbach uses his sense of taste here as an instrument of investigation which supplements sight and touch. Although he doesn't make a point of it, by tasting the birds' nests he also creates a bond with the Asian peoples who eat the nests: "the nests that are eaten" become "the nests I have eaten."

In fact, certain foods which had recently been introduced to England and would later become commonplace items were still considered exotic enough in the eighteenth-century to be interesting museum pieces. (It was the rare and curious which were generally prized by museum collectors and visitors, rather than common specimens which might also be found in comprehensive collections.) Sloane, for example, possessed a branch of the coffee tree with its leaves and berries in his collection, the viewing of which would have provided an appropriate prelude for the subsequent partaking of coffee in the library with which favoured guests were honoured. (Sloane was also interested in the cacao cacao (kəkä`ō, –kā`–), tropical tree (Theobroma cacao) of the family Sterculiaceae (sterculia family), native to South America, where it was first domesticated and was highly prized by the Aztecs.  bush of Central America Central America, narrow, southernmost region (c.202,200 sq mi/523,698 sq km) of North America, linked to South America at Colombia. It separates the Caribbean from the Pacific. , and even marketed his own brand of chocolate as a restorative for invalids.) (73)

In the case of exotic animals, many of them had been eaten by hungry sailors before their skins or shells arrived at a museum. (74) Others

were imported for medicinal use. Indeed, their presumed medicinal effect was a common reason for ingesting the kinds of rarities exhibited in museums. Characteristic museum pieces which were also items in contemporary pharmacopoeia pharmacopoeia or pharmocopeia (fär'məkəpē`ə), authoritative publication designating the properties, action, use, dosage, and standards of strength and purity of drugs.  included not just specimens of plants and animals Plants and Animals are a Canadian indie-rock band from Montreal, comprised of guitarist-vocalists Warren Spicer and Nic Basque, and drummer-vocalist Matthew Woodley.[1] They are signed to Secret City Records. , however, but also such things as mummy flesh and even fossils and stone axes--which would be taken in powdered form. (75) The rare and wondrous qualities that made an object a likely museum piece might also make it strong medicine.

While public museums such as the Ashmolean were presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 safeguarded from such gustatory appropriation by visitors there no doubt were many private collectors who literally ate their museums, or at least part of them. Aside from its medicinal, gastronomic gas·tro·nom·ic   also gas·tro·nom·i·cal
adj.
Of or relating to gastronomy.



gastro·nom
 or scientific value, eating a museum piece was, perhaps, the ultimate act of ownership. Even museum visitors who were unable to eat the particular "unicorns' horns" or Egyptian mummies on display, might have partaken of them in the past through their local apothecary apothecary /apoth·e·cary/ (ah-poth´e-kar?e) pharmacist.

a·poth·e·car·y
n. pl. a·poth·e·car·ies Abbr. ap.
1.
. (76) Indeed the apothecary's shop itself often resembled a museum with its exotic materia medica materia medica: see pharmacology. . (77) Early collections, consequently, might provide a "feast" for more than just the eyes.

It is notable how many of the founders and curators of early museums, at least in England, were men of science. Hans Sloane, for example, was a physician and naturalist, while Elias Ashmole, founder of the Ashmolean, was an ardent student of botany and chemistry. (78) Many visitors to museums, such as Evelyn and Von Uffenbach, were also keenly interested in scientific matters. The strong association between science and museology mu·se·ol·o·gy  
n.
The discipline of museum design, organization, and management.



muse·o·log
 served to reinforce the use of multiple senses when interacting with museum pieces. For all its fascination with optic glasses, seventeenth and eighteenth-century science, or natural philosophy, still emphasized the importance of multi-sensorial investigation for understanding the nature of the objects under study. Indeed, whereas today sight would be considered a more serious way of comprehending museum pieces than touch or smell, in the seventeenth century sight might have been deemed the more superficial or frivolous form of apprehension. Thus Robert Hooke Noun 1. Robert Hooke - English scientist who formulated the law of elasticity and proposed a wave theory of light and formulated a theory of planetary motion and proposed the inverse square law of gravitational attraction and discovered the cellular structure of cork , curator of the Royal Society's museum or "Repository" stated that the occular inspection of objects needed to be accompanied by the "manual handling ... of the very things themselves." (79) He also warned that:
  The use of such a collection is not for divertisement and wonder, and
  gazing ... like pictures for children to admire and be pleased with,
  but for the most serious and diligent study of the most able and
  proficient in natural philosophy. (80)


For Hooke such diligent study included noting such qualities as
  Sonorousness or Dulness. Smell or Taste. Heat, or Cold ... Gravity, or
  Levity. Coarseness, or Fineness. Fastness, or Looseness. Stiffness, or
  Pliableness. Roughness, or Brittleness. Claminess, or
  Slipperiness. (81)


The fellows of the Royal Society : Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

This is a list of people who are or were Fellows or Foreign Members of the Royal Society of London.
 took such recommendations to heart. The physician and botanist Nehemiah Grew Nehemiah Grew (September 1641 - March 25, 1712) was an English vegetable anatomist and physiologist.

Grew was the only son of Obadiah Grew (1607-1688), Nonconformist divine and vicar of St Michaels, Coventry, and was born in Warwickshire.
, for example, tasted many items he catalogued in the Society's museum. Experiments undertaken at the Royal Society might also involve multisensory inquiry. The report of a 1679 experiment on hartshorn harts·horn  
n.
1. The antler of a hart, formerly used as a source of ammonia and in smelling salts.

2. Ammonium carbonate.
 which had been softened by boiling noted that the result "smelt, tasted and felt" like "old cheddar or Parmesan cheese a kind of cheese of a rich flavor, though from skimmed milk, made in Parma, Italy.

See also: Parmesan
." (82) In 1681 Evelyn recorded being present at an experiment on phosphorus at the Royal Society, part of which involved dissolving phospurus in ale. "Of this I drank," wrote Evelyn, "& [it] seem'd to me to be of an agreeable amber scent, with very little altering the tast of the Ale." (83)

While prominent in its promotion of empirical philosophy, the Royal Society was by no means unique in its sensory methodology. When Von Uffenbach felt and tasted his way through collections he was employing current scientific methodology. So was Robert Plot, who would become the first Keeper of the Ashmolean, when he classfied the echoes produced by Oxfordshire colleges and caves or noted the odours of fossils. (84)

Here then we have a wide, though perhaps not comprehensive, range of reasons for why visitors to early museums and collections found it "meaningful and necessary"--in Elias's words--to engage with exhibits using more than their eyes. The particular reasons in any case would depend on the interests and background of the visitor. Celia Fiennes would seem to have been motivated primarily by general curiosity in her sensory explorations, Zacharias Von Uffenbach by scientific interest and Sophie de la Roche by a desire to establish an intimate connection with the artefacts' original owners. It was no doubt often the case that the interactions of a visitor were prompted by different motives, or a combination of motives, depending on the particular piece--a sculpture might receive an aesthetic touch, an exotic shell a scholarly touch, and a religious icon a devotional touch. Some of these reasons for interacting with museum pieces would lose relevance in modernity, others which survived would be repressed re·pressed
adj.
Being subjected to or characterized by repression.
 or redirected within a museum context due to the rise of new paradigms of perception and of appropriate museum use.

Significantly, divisions among the fields of aesthetics, science and religion were not as clearly marked in the period under consideration as they would come to be in late modernity Late modernity (or liquid modernity) is a term for the concept that some present highly developed societies are continuing developments of modernity.

A number of social theorists (Beck 1992, Giddens 1991, Lash 1990) critique the idea that some contemporary societies
. In private and public collections, objets d'art often mingled with botanical and zoological specimens and historical and ethnographic artefacts. (Indeed, natural objects which looked as though they had been crafted by hand, such as the marble lizard mentioned above, were favourite museum pieces.) Even in the "New Philosophy" with its emphasis on empirical observation, adhered to by many of the key figures in the development of the early modern museum, the mythical and the magical often mingled with the natural and the historical. Hans Sloane upheld the efficacy of a number of wonderworking won·der·work  
n.
A marvelous or miraculous act, work, or achievement; a marvel.



wonder·work
 remedies in his medical practice which would later be dismissed as superstitious. Elias Ashmole had an abiding interest in astrology and occultism occultism (əkŭl`tĭzəm), belief in supernatural sciences or powers, such as magic, astrology, alchemy, theosophy, and spiritism, either for the purpose of enlarging man's powers, of protecting him from evil forces, or of predicting . Robert Plot was an alchemist. This characteristically premodern mingling of spheres of knowledge was accompanied by a multisensory understanding of the cosmos according to which crucial information was transmitted and discernible through all sensory channels. (85) If the museum was a little cosmos then it too could be regarded as constituting a multisensory tapestry of colours, textures, sounds and smells.

Soon, however, the scientific world view--and the museum--would become much less sensuous in nature. Due to technological developments as well as to changes in scientific practice and theory, the nineteenth-century scientist was expected to gather information by means of microscopes and measuring devices This is an incomplete list of measuring devices.

word Measures
accelerometer acceleration
actinometer heating power of sunlight
alcoholometer alcoholic strength of liquids
altimeter altitude
ammeter electric current, amperage
 and not by sniffing or tasting the material under study. Indeed, the non-visual senses would be given little role to play in modern scientific inquiry. (86) By the end of the nineteenth-century, in fact, the use of the proximity senses of smell, taste and touch, had been generally relegated to the realm of the nursery and the "savage." Civilized adults were deemed to comprehend the world primarily though sight and secondarily through hearing. (87)

As regards the museum, this sensory shift meant that allowing visitors close contact with museum pieces could no longer be justified by scientific values. The important thing in modernity was to see. All that a modern museum-goer could reasonably expect, therefore, was to have a clear, well-lit view of the objects on display. This move away from physical interaction with museum pieces coincided with the increasing nineteenth-century

concern for conservation. As the number of visitors to museums grew so did the risk of damage to he collections. A hands off policy, hence, came to be regarded by curators as a practical necessity. (88)

Sociological factors also played a role in this sensory transition. In the world of the museum, just as in the real world, not everyone was considered equal. On his first visit to the Ashmolean Von Uffenbach was dismayed to find the museum full of "country folk" who "impetuously im·pet·u·ous  
adj.
1. Characterized by sudden and forceful energy or emotion; impulsive and passionate.

2. Having or marked by violent force: impetuous, heaving waves.
 handle[d] everything." (89) What was the meaning of this "impetuous im·pet·u·ous  
adj.
1. Characterized by sudden and forceful energy or emotion; impulsive and passionate.

2. Having or marked by violent force: impetuous, heaving waves.
 handling" by "country folk," people who left no records of their museum visits? Perhaps a combination of manual exploration, tactile frisson, vicarious vicarious /vi·car·i·ous/ (vi-kar´e-us)
1. acting in the place of another or of something else.

2. occurring at an abnormal site.


vi·car·i·ous
adj.
1.
 possession and communal participation--reminiscent of the tradition of taking food by the hand from a common pot. To Von Uffenbach--and to the custodians--it evidently signified a lack of order. Von Uffenbach was not against handling exhibits as such, as we know from his own manual explorations of museum pieces, he was opposed to what he saw as the rough, untutored handling of the uncultured masses. There were definite class distinctions of touch in the museum, and gender distinctions as well. Von Uffenbach reserved his greatest scorn for lower-class women who visited museums. In the case of the Ashmolean he noted with disgust that "even the women are allowed up here for sixpence six·pence  
n.
1. A coin formerly used in Britain and worth six pennies.

2. The sum of six pennies.


sixpence
Noun
; they run here and there, grabbing at everything and taking no rebuff from the Sub-Custos." (90)

While I will not explore the implications of such class and gender divisions in the museum in the present essay it is clear from contemporary accounts that the sensory impressions gathered by the (male) connoisseur and scholar were understood to be on a different plane from those of the common visitor. As museums became more open to and frequented by the general public in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries not only was there an increased danger of damage to artefacts from handling there was also an increased sense--manifested in the quote by Anna Jameson above--that the "vulgar" touch of the common visitor profaned the exhibits, and implicitly the social elite who acquired collections and supported museums.

Indeed, it may have been as much the desire of the elite to prevent the lower classes from showing disrespect towards the cultural and political authority museum pieces were seen to represent, as the modern emphasis on conservation and the development of more visually-oriented models of science and aesthetics, that resulted in the non-visual senses being almost entirely shut out of the museum by the mid-nineteenth century. After all, a characteristic act of revolution is the toppling of statues, as had been dramatically illustrated during the French Revolution. Louis-Sebastian Mercier described visiting a post-Revolutionary museum of toppled monuments in Paris in 1797:
  I walked on tombs, I strode on mausoleums. Every rank and costume lay
  beneath my feet. I spared the face and bosoms of queens. Lowered from
  their pedestals, the grandest personages were brought down to my
  level; I could touch their brows, their mouths.... (91)


Perhaps due to scenes such as this, the fear that museums might be a target of working-class rage seemed ever-present in the minds of nineteenth-century administrators in England. (92) No wonder one mid-nineteenth-century official wrote with satisfaction of the workers in the National Gallery of London that one could see them "sitting wondering and marvelling over those fine works, and having no other feeling but that of pleasure or astonishment, they have no notion of destroying them." (93) This sounds remarkably like Robert Hookes' description of gawking children pleased with pictures but now the tone is complacent rather than contemptuous. Certainly there is no sign of the "impetuous handling" observed by Von Uffenbach in the Ashmolean or by Anna Jameson in the art galleries of her youth.

Whatever the reasons for this sensory shift, investigating how people have behaved in museums, how they have perceived and interacted with the exhibits, not only furthers our understanding of the development of the museum, it also offers an excellent example of how the sensory values of a particular time and place attained practical expression within a key cultural site.

Department of Sociology Noun 1. department of sociology - the academic department responsible for teaching and research in sociology
sociology department

academic department - a division of a school that is responsible for a given subject
 and Anthropology

Montreal QC H3G IM8

Canada

ENDNOTES

Part of the research on which this essay is based was made possible by grants from Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (French: (le) conseil de recherches en sciences humaine en Canada) (SSHRC/CRSH) is a Canadian federal agency which supports university-based training and research and training in the humanities and social  and the CUPFA Professional Development Fund.

1. H.M. Bateman, The Boy Who Breathed on the Glass in the British Museum (London, 1976).

2. The role of touch in the contemporary museum, particularly as regards the visually impaired, is discussed in Fiona Candlin, "Don't Touch! Hands Off! Art, Blindness and the Conservation of Expertise," Body & Society 10 (2004): 71-90.

3. The subject of visitor response to museums has been treated by a number of scholars and administrators, but rarely as regards sensory response. See Lynne Teather, "Museology and Its Traditions: The British Empire British Empire, overseas territories linked to Great Britain in a variety of constitutional relationships, established over a period of three centuries. The establishment of the empire resulted primarily from commercial and political motives and emigration movements , 1845-1945," (Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Leicester History
The University was founded as Leicestershire and Rutland College in 1918. The site for the University was donated by a local textile manufacturer, Thomas Fielding Johnson, in order to create a living memorial for those who lost their lives in World War I.
, 1984), ch. 9; Kenneth Hudson Kenneth Hudson OBE, MA, FSA (born 4 July 1916 – died 28 December 1999) was an industrial archaeologist, museologist, broadcaster and author.

He was one of the most prominent personalities on the European museum scene and one of the pioneers of industrial archaeology in
, A Social History of Museums: What the Visitors Thought (London, 1975).

4. Pierre Jean Grosley, A Tour to London, T Nugent, trans. (London, 1772).

5. Norbert Elias, The Civilizing Process: The History of Manners and State Formation and Civilization, E. Jephcott, trans. (Oxford: Blackwell, 1994), p. 52.

6. Shane Leslie Shane Leslie was the name by which Sir John Randolph Leslie (September 24 1885 – August 14 1971), 3rd Baronet of Glaslough, County Monaghan, an Irish-born diplomat and writer, was known following his days at Cambridge University[1]. , Men Were Different: Five Studies in Late Victorian Biography (Freeport, NY, 1967), p. 94.

7. Sarah Womack, "Salad Days Over for Dinner Table," National Post, 10 June 2005.

8. See, for example, Arjun Appadurai Arjun Appadurai is a contemporary social-cultural anthropologist focusing on modernity and globalization.

Appadurai was born in Bombay, India in 1949 and educated in the United States. He was formerly a professor at the University of Chicago where he received his MA and PhD.
, ed., The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective (Cambridge, 1986); Tim Dant, Material Culture in the Social World (Buckingham, 1999); Lorraine Dixon, ed., Things That Talk: Object Lessons from Art and Science (New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, 2004).

9. Works dealing with the cultural history of the senses include Alain Corbin, The Foul and the Fragrant: Odor and the French Social Imagination, M. Kochan, R. Porter, and C. Prendergast, trans. (Cambridge, MA, 1986); Constance Classen, Worlds of Sense: Exploring the Senses in History and Across Cultures (London, 1993); Peter Charles Hoffer Peter Charles Hoffer (b. 1944 in Brooklyn, New York) is an American historian.

He has taught at the Ohio State University, the University of Notre Dame, Brooklyn College, and is currently distinguished research professor at the University of Georgia.
, Sensory Worlds in Early America (Baltimore, MD, 2003); David Howes, ed., Empire of the Senses: The Sensual Culture Reader (Oxford, 2004); Mark M. Smith, How Race is Made: Slavery, Segregation and the Senses (Chapel Hill, 2006).

10. How characteristic the comportment com·port·ment  
n.
Bearing; deportment.

Noun 1. comportment - dignified manner or conduct
mien, bearing, presence

personal manner, manner - a way of acting or behaving
 of visitors to English museums was of visitors to European museums in general is a subject for future research. I have thus far found no reason to believe there were major differences.

11. On the early history of museums see Oliver Impey and Arthur MacGregor, eds., The Origins of Museums: The Cabinet of Curiosities For the 2002 novel by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, see The Cabinet of Curiosities

Cabinets of curiosities (also known as Wunderkammer or wonder-rooms
 in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Europe (Oxford, 1985).

12. Celia Fiennes, The Journeys of Celia Fiennes (London, 1949), p. 33.

13. Zacharias Conrad von Uffenbach, Oxford in 1710, W.H. Quarrell and W.J.C Quarell, eds. and trans. (Oxford, 1928), p. 26.

14. Cited by Frank Herrmann, ed., The English as Collectors (London, 1972), p. 126.

15. Elias, The Civilizing Process, p. 55.

16. Mark Girouard, Life in the English Country House The English country house is generally accepted as a large house or mansion, once in the ownership of an individual who also most likely owned another great house in the West End of London. Hence one moved from one's town house to one's country house.  (New Haven New Haven, city (1990 pop. 130,474), New Haven co., S Conn., a port of entry where the Quinnipiac and other small rivers enter Long Island Sound; inc. 1784. Firearms and ammunition, clocks and watches, tools, rubber and paper products, and textiles are among the many , CT, 1978), pp. 100-101.

17. Fiennes, Journeys, pp. 33-37.

18. Fiennes, Journeys, pp. 34-35.

19. Cited in R.F. Ovenell, The Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1986), p. 147.

20. Ovenell, Ashmolean Museum, p. 147.

21. Cited in Martin Welch, "The Ashmolean as Described by its Earliest Visitors," in Arthur MacGregor, ed., Tradescant's Rarities (Oxford, 1983), p. 68; see also Uffenbach, Oxford in 1710, p. 24.

22. Paul Freart de Chantelou, Diary of Cavaliere Bernini's Visit to France, A. Blunt and G.C. Bauer, eds., M. Corbett, trans. (Princeton, NJ, 1985), p. 185.

23. Ovenell, Ashmolean Museum, p. 50.

24. Ovenell, Ashmolean Museum, pp. 147-148

25. Ovenell, Ashmolean Museum, p. 197.

26. Zacharias Conrad von Uffenbach, London in 1710, W.H. Quarrell and M. Mare, trans. (London, 1934), p. 92.

27. Von Uffenbach, London in 1710, p. 93.

28. Von Uffenbach, Oxford in 1710, p. 58.

29. Von Uffenbach, London in 1710, p. 40.

30. William Hutton, A Journey to London, 2nd ed. (London, 1818), pp. 124-125.

31. Frederick Kielmansegge, Diary of a Journey to England in the Years 1761-1762, Countess Kielmansegg [sic], trans. (London, 1902), p. 182.

32. Von Uffenbach, Oxford in 1710, pp. 13, 23.

33. Cesar de Saussure Noun 1. de Saussure - Swiss linguist and expert in historical linguistics whose lectures laid the foundations for synchronic linguistics (1857-1913)
Ferdinand de Saussure, Saussure
, A Foreign View of England in the Reigns of George I George I, king of Greece
George I, 1845–1913, king of the Hellenes (1863–1913), second son of Christian IX of Denmark. After the deposition (1862) of Otto I, he was elected to succeed on the throne of Greece.
 and George II George II, king of Great Britain and Ireland
George II (George Augustus), 1683–1760, king of Great Britain and Ireland (1727–60), son and successor of George I.
, Madame von Muyden, trans. (London, 1952), p. 88.

34. Von Uffenbach, London in 1710, p. 186.

35. Robert Mandrou, Introduction to Modern France: An Essay in Historical Psychology, R.E. Hallmark, trans. (New York, 1976), p. 53

36. David Summers, The Judgement of Sense: Renaissance Naturalism naturalism, in art
naturalism, in art, a tendency toward strict adherence to the physical appearance of nature and rejection of ideal forms. Artists as diverse as Velázquez, J. F. Millet, and Monet, have followed naturalistic principles.
 and the Rise of Aesthetics (Cambridge, 1987), p. 326.

37. Von Uffenbach, Oxford in 1710, p. 13.

38. John Evelyn, The Diary of John Evelyn, E.S. de Beer, ed. (Oxford, 1955), vol. II, p. 516.

39. Samuel Pepys, The Diary of Samuel Pepys, R. Latham and W. Matthews, eds. (Berkeley, 1976), vol. VIII, p. 326.

40. Chantelou, Diary, p. 185

41. See, for example, Francis Haskell Francis Haskell (born 1928, died January 18 2000, Oxford) was an English art historian, whose writings placed emphasis on the social history of art.

He read history at King's College, Cambridge and became a Fellow there in 1954.
 and Nicholas Penny Nicholas Penny (born 1949) is a British art historian.

Penny studied at St Catharine's College, Cambridge and at the Courtauld Institute of Art in London, from which he graduated in 1975.
, Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture Classical sculpture refers to the forms of sculpture from Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome and the Hellenized, and Romanized civilizations under their rule or influence from about 500B.C. to fall of Rome in AD 476. , 1500-1900 (New Haven, CT, 1981), pp. 163, 235

42. Evelyn, Diary, p. 283

43. The intimate contacts which took place between gallery-goers and sculptures in eighteenth-century France are depicted in the work of the contemporary artist Gabriel de St. Aubin. See Susan Stewart For the "As the World Turns" character, see Dr. Susan Stewart.

Susan Stewart is an American poet, university professor and literary critic born in 1952.
, "Prologue: From the Museum of Touch" in Material Memories, Marius Kwint, Christopher Breward and Jeremy Aynsley, eds. (Oxford, 1999): 29-30.

44. Geraldine A. Johnson. "Touch, Tactility, and the Reception of Sculpture in Early Modern Italy" in A Companion to Art Theory, P. Smith and C. Wilde, eds. (Oxford, 2002), p. 66.

45. Friedrich Schiller, On the Aesthetics and Education of Man, E.M. Wilkinson and L.A. Willoughby, eds. and trans. (Oxford, 1982), p. 195.

46. Jodi Cranston, "The Touch of the Blind Man: The Phenomenology phenomenology, modern school of philosophy founded by Edmund Husserl. Its influence extended throughout Europe and was particularly important to the early development of existentialism.  of Vividness in Italian Renaissance Art," in Sensible Flesh: On Touch in Early Modern Culture, E.D. Harvey, ed. (Philadelphia, 2003): 238-239

47. Johnson, "Touch," p. 64.

48. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Roman Elegies The Roman Elegies (German: Römische Elegien) is a series of poems by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Along with the Venetian Epigrams, they were written during his Italian Journey and celebrate the sensuality and vigor of Italian and Classical culture.  and Venetian Epigrams, L.R. Lind, trans. (Wichita, KS, 1974), p. 45.

49. Johann Gottfried Herder, Sculpture: Some Observations in Shape and Form from Pygmalion's Creative Dream, J. Gaiger, ed. and trans. (Chicago, 2002); Robert E. Norton, Herder's Aesthetics and the European Enlightenment (Ithaca, NY, 1990), ch. 6

50. For a discussion of this issue, weighted on the side of anti-tactility, see James Hall James Hall may refer to:

In politics and government:
  • James Hall (Iowa politician) Mayor of Davenport, Iowa (1850)
  • James W. Hall (Texas politician), Texas state senator, 1927–1928
, The World as Sculpture: The Changing Status of Sculpture from the Renaissance to the Present Day (London, 1999), ch. 4. Hall refers to many informative sources in his work.

51. Ovenell, Ashmolean Museum, p. 50.

52. Von Uffenbach, London in 1710, p. 69.

53. Sophie de La Roche, Sophie in London, C. Williams, trans. (London, 1933), pp. 107-108.

54. See, for example, Christopher Nyrop, The Kiss & Its History, W.F. Harvey, trans. (London, 1901), p. 155.

55. See Keith Thomas Keith Thomas may refer to several people, including:
  • Sir Keith Thomas, a British historian
  • Keith Thomas, a British footballer
  • Keith Thomas (producer), Grammy Award-winning gospel producer
, "Magical Healing: The King's Touch," in The Book of Touch, Constance Classen, ed. (Oxford, 2005): 354-362.

56. Cited in Gavin R. De Beer, Sir Hans Sloane and the British Museum (London, 1953), p. 125

57. Von Uffenbach, London in 1710, p. 41; see also Richard D. Altick, The Shows of London (Cambridge, MA, 1978), p. 88.

58. Pepys, Diary, vol. IX, p. 457.

59. Mea Allan, The Tradescants: Their Plants, Gardens and Museum, 1570-1662 (London, 1964); MacGregor, Tradescant's Rarities.

60. On the social history of the sense of touch see Constance Classen, ed., The Book of Touch (Oxford, 2005).

61. Evelyn, Diary, vol. II, p. 471

62. see Altick, Shows of London, ch. 3.

63. Von Uffenbach, London in 1710, p. 83.

64. For example, Evelyn, Diary, vol. II, p. 502; Altick, Shows of London, pp. 88, 89.

65. In 1755 a number of damaged or decayed specimens had to be removed from the Ashmolean. Welch, "The Ashmolean as Described by its Earliest Visitors, p. 68.

66. See Constance Classen, David Howes, and Anthony Synnott, Aroma: The Cultural History of Smell (London, 1993).

67. Anthony a Wood, The Life and Times of Anthony a Wood, L. Powys, ed. (London, 1961), p. 257.

68. See, for example, Michael Levy, A Brief History of the National Gallery (London, 1970), p. 8

69. Von Uffenbach, London in 1710, p. 187. When the composer George Frederic Handel visited Sloane in 1740 he carelessly placed his buttered muffin on a precious manuscript, incurring the anger of his host. See Edward Miller There are several articles about people with the name, Edward Miller:
  • Edward A. Miller, scientist who helped design, develop Corona, the first space-based Earth observation system
  • Edward Allan Miller (b. 1942), a Canadian politician
  • Edward E. Miller, a U.S.
, That Noble Cabinet: A History of the British Museum (Athens, OH, 1974), pp. 38-9.

70. Miller, That Noble Cabinet, p. 26.

71. The account of this visit can be found in Hudson, Social History of Museums, pp. 19-20. Overlooking the symbolism of this carefully prepared royal feast, De Beer sees it as a sign that Sloane's collection had outgrown its space so that not everything could be exhibited at once. De Beer, Sir Hans Sloane, p. 133.

72. Von Uffenbach, London in 1710, p. 187.

73. De Beer, Sir Hans Sloane, pp. 43, 72-73, 98, 110

74. "[B]oth land and sea turtles were delicacies and many of them ended up in the pot and their carapaces in museums ... Iguana iguana (ĭgwä`nə), name for several large lizards of the family Iguanidae, found in tropical America and the Galapagos. The common iguana (Iguana iguana  skins and crocodile heads were often survivors of meals." Wilma George, "Alive or Dead: Zoological Collections in the Seventeenth Century," in The Origins of Museums: The Cabinet of Curiosities in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Cenury Europe, Oliver Impey and Arthur MacGregor, eds. (Oxford, 1985), p. 184.

75. David Murray David Murray may refer to:
  • David Murray, 5th Viscount of Stormont (died 1731)
  • David Murray, 2nd Earl of Mansfield, 7th Viscount Stormont (1727-1796)
  • David Murray (CEO), CEO of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia
  • David Murray (computer scientist)
, Museums: Their History and Use (Glagow, 1904), vol. 1, pp. 40, 50, 73; Ken Arnold
This article is about the programmer. For other people of the same name, see Ken Arnold (disambiguation).


Kenneth Cutts Richard Cabot Arnold
, "Skulls, Mummies and Unicorns' Horns: Medicinal Chemistry Medicinal or pharmaceutical chemistry is a scientific discipline at the intersection of chemistry and pharmacology involved with designing, synthesizing and developing pharmaceutical drugs.  in Early English Museums," in Enlightening the British: Knowledge, Discovery and the Museum in the Eighteenth Century, R.G.W. Anderson, M.L. Caygill, A. MacGegor and L. Syson, eds. (London, 2003.

76. Edward Brown Edward Brown is the name of more than one person of note:
  • Edward D. Brown, African American jockey
  • Edward Brown (Manitoba politician), politician from Manitoba, Canada
 records drinking out of a unicorn's horn kept in a Dutch collection in An Account of Several Travels through a Great Part of Germany (London, 1671), p. 19.

77. Even Shakespeare's impoverished apothecary in Romeo and Juliet Romeo and Juliet

star-crossed lovers die as teenagers. [Br. Lit.: Romeo and Juliet]

See : Death, Premature


Romeo and Juliet

archetypal star-crossed lovers. [Br. Lit.
 had "in his needy shop a tortoise hung/ An alligator alligator, large aquatic reptile of the genus Alligator, in the same order as the crocodile. There are two species—a large type found in the S United States and a small type found in E China. Alligators differ from crocodiles in several ways.  stuff'd and other skins/ Of ill-shaped fishes." Act 5, scene 1, lines 42-44.

78. See further Arnold, "Skulls, Mummies and Unicorns' Horns."

79. Robert Hooke, The Posthumous Works of Robert Hooke, R. Waller, ed. (London, 1971), p. 335. For a history of the Royal Society's Repository, which was one of the tourist attractions of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century London, see Michael Hunter May refer to
  • Michael Hunter (historian), Professor of History at Birkbeck, University of London
  • Michael Wayne Hunter - San Quentin prisoner/writer
  • Michael Hunter (boxer), English bantamweight
, Establishing the New Science: The Experience of the Early Royal Society (Woodbridge, Suffolk Coordinates:  Woodbridge is a town in Suffolk, East Anglia, England. It is in the south east of England, not far from the coast. It lies along the River Deben, with a population of about 7,480 although this seems larger due to the number of , 1989), ch. 4.

80. Cited in De Beer, Sir Hans Sloane, pp. 109-10.

81. Hooke, Works, p. 36.

82. Thomas Birch Thomas Birch (November 23, 1705 – January 9, 1766), English historian, son of Joseph Birch, a coffee-mill maker, was born at Clerkenwell.

He preferred study to business, but as his parents were Quakers he did not go to the university.
, The History of the Royal Society of London ... (London, A. Millar, 1756), vol. III, pp. 486, 489. A number of similar experiments are also recorded in this work. See also Evelyn, Diary, vol. IV, p. 278.

83. Evelyn, Diary, vol. IV, p. 252. Arnold provides an excellent overview of the multisensory practices of the New Philosophers The New Philosophers (French nouveaux philosophes) is a term referring to French philosophers who broke with Marxism and the left in general in the early 1970s. They include André Glucksmann, Alain Finkielkraut, Bernard-Henri Lévy, Jean-Marie Benoist, Christian Jambet, Guy  in "Skulls, Mummies and Unicorns' Horns," which led me to several of the citations above.

84. Robert Plot, The Natural History of Oxford-shire (London, 1677), pp. 7-16, 93-94.

85. See Constance Classen The Color of Angels: Cosmology, Gender and the Aesthetic Imagination (New York, 1998).

86. Von Uffenbach, Oxford in 1710, pp. 24, 31.

87. For a history of the marginalization mar·gin·al·ize  
tr.v. mar·gin·al·ized, mar·gin·al·iz·ing, mar·gin·al·iz·es
To relegate or confine to a lower or outer limit or edge, as of social standing.
 of sensuous experimentation see Lissa Roberts, "The Death of the Sensuous Chemist," in Empire of the Senses: The Sensual Culture Reader, David Howes, ed. (Oxford, 2005): 106-127.

88. See Constance Classen, "The Senses," in Encyclopedia of European Social History from 1300 to 2000, Peter Stearns Peter Stearns is a professor of history at George Mason University, where he is currently provost (since January 1, 2000) with almost 40 years of experience as a teacher and administrator behind him. , ed. (New York, 2001): 355-364.

89. Von Uffenbach, Oxford in 1710, p. 31

90. See Constance Classen, "Touch in the Museum," in The Book of Touch, Constance Classen, ed. (Oxford, 2005): 275-286, pp. 282-284 for a discussion of various factors which contributed to the rise in importance of sight and the decline of the non-visual senses in the museum experience.

91. Cited in Hall, Sculpture, 101. For a vivid description of the destruction of religious objects and monuments in revolutionary France see Louis-Sebastian Mercier, The Picture of Paris Before & After the Revolution, W. and E. Jackson, trans. (London, 1929), pp. 225-229.

92. See Miller, That Noble Cabinet, ch. 7; Tony Bennett

For other people named Tony Bennett, see Tony Bennett (disambiguation).


Tony Bennett (born Anthony Dominick Benedetto on August 3 1926) is an American singer of popular music, standards and jazz who is widely considered to be one of
, The Birth of the Museum: History, Theory, Politics (London, 1995), ch. 2; Jeffrey A. Auerbach, The Great Exhibition of 1851 (New Haven, CT, 1999), pp. 128-9.

93. Cited in Teather, "Museology and Its Traditions," p. 4. Compare this scene with the public disorder and sensory confusion which reputedly re·put·ed  
adj.
Generally supposed to be such. See Synonyms at supposed.



re·puted·ly adv.

Adv. 1.
 reigned in the early years of the Gallery: "Not only were the pictures crowded on the walls, but the crowding of visitors (who often were merely sheltering from the rain), their consumption of food, the general smell and the influx of smoky air, all contributed to make a zoo of the Gallery." Levy, Brief History of the National Gallery, p. 8.

By Constance Classen

Concordia University
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Title Annotation:SECTION I HISTORY OF THE SENSES
Author:Classen, Constance
Publication:Journal of Social History
Date:Jun 22, 2007
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