|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
|
Established in 1996 |
|
Monday, November 25, 2024 |
|
Ingenious gadgets, real-world quandaries at Washington's all-new Spy Museum |
|
|
A man looks at an example of a facial disguise as he tours the new International Spy Museum during a media preview ahead of its opening in Washington, DC, May 7, 2019. A lipstick pistol, a button-hole camera, a lethal umbrella and an authentic waterboarding table: the espionage worlds' heroic, ingenious and sordid sides are all on show in Washington's all-new, much-expanded International Spy Museum. SAUL LOEB / AFP.
by Paul Handley
|
WASHINGTON (AFP).- A lipstick pistol, a button-hole camera, a lethal umbrella and an authentic waterboarding table: the espionage world's heroic, ingenious and sordid sides are all on show in Washington's all-new, much-expanded International Spy Museum.
The hugely popular showplace that once conjured James Bond and Austin Powers as much as it did actual life-and-death Cold War intrigue has grown and, in the tailwind of 9/11 and the War on Terror, grown up.
Relocated in a gleaming new steel and glass building double the size of its former premises, the Spy Museum still amazes and charms with the tales and gadgets of the undercover world going back centuries.
But now it also depicts the complex and often unsettling challenges of the world of shadows, with visitors asked in clever interactive games and simulated situation rooms to decide: could I be an intelligence agent?
Disguises, microdots, suicide needles
The Spy Museum has been one of the US capital's most popular private destinations since it opened in 2002.
The new premises open officially on Sunday, just ahead of the summer tourist season.
On show, as before, is the iconic Aston Martin DB5 from 1964's James Bond thriller "Goldfinger."
But now there is also room for an equally sleek 1980s Amber surveillance drone, the precursor of the Predator.
There is a British World War II one-man submarine, and an actual section of the CIA/MI6 tunnel that penetrated East Berlin in the 1950s to tap Soviet communications.
And there are gadgets galore: a pregnant woman disguise from the CIA and a suicide needle hidden in a silver dollar coin, for use by Francis Gary Powers, the U2 spy plane pilot shot down by the Soviet Union in 1960.
There are historical encryption machines, including Germany's Enigma, and a display on the microdot technology central to spying for decades last century.
Among all manner of odd items throughout the museum are a saboteur's exploding lump of coal, pills that CIA operatives entering Cuba could use to sedate barking dogs and the sketchbook of a KGB agent operating undercover in New York in the 1950s.
"The objectives of spies have not changed over the centuries," said Keith Melton, whose massive collection of espionage gear is the core of the museum.
"The only thing that has changed is the technology, and how they accomplish the objectives."
Could you be an agent?
The museum's coverage is global, and mostly without judgement. China's theft of US secrets and technology is on display; so is the theft, centuries ago, of China's silkworm and tea cultivation know-how by Westerners.
Woven in between are engaging, well-designed interactive exhibits and challenges that press the question: what would the visitor do?
One tests a person's lock-picking ability, while another takes visitors through a series of tests of memory, judgment and observation in a simulated spy operation.
In yet another, visitors take the role of CIA analysts in the 2011 situation room where, holding deeply imperfect intelligence, they must decide whether to advise President Barack Obama to approve a raid on the Abbottabad, Pakistan compound possibly housing Osama Bin Laden.
Complex issues are engaged and not whitewashed. The museum puts on show the spying world's failures, including a display of the actual intelligence that, if it had drawn more attention, might have helped prevent Al-Qaeda's September 11, 2001 attack.
And, with a waterboard on display and a video discussion of actual participants, there is a disquieting debate on the CIA's use of torture after 9/11.
'The essence of espionage'
The museum has its roots in the 7,000-piece collection of Melton, a navy veteran and engineer who, beginning in the 1960s traveled the world to amass.
He advertised that he was a buyer of any spy technology, and he sought out and befriended agents and officials from all sides of the Cold War game.
"As the wall fell in Berlin, I was there," he said, and the collection's extensive spyware from East Germany's Stasi service is the result.
Weeks after the Soviet Union crumbled in December 1991, he traveled to Moscow.
"I went and knocked on the door of KGB headquarters and said I'm here to buy spy equipment," Melton said.
While he raised some suspicions, many realized he was a genuine collector who didn't talk about politics.
"I like gadgets, they like gadgets," he said.
"Cameras, microdots, coding machines, short range transmitters: that's the essence of espionage."
The pride of his collection is gruesome, but he spent four decades seeking it: the ice axe that Joseph Stalin's assassins used to murder Leon Trotsky in Mexico in 1940, in the climax of an intense three-year intelligence operation.
Melton is hugely proud of the new museum, but somewhat wistful about the new digital age, in which computer technology has replaced many espionage tools.
"I think we are past the golden era of spy devices. This is now the most powerful spy device in the world," he said, pointing to his smartphone.
© Agence France-Presse
|
|
Today's News
May 11, 2019
Secret chamber uncovered 2,000 years on at Nero palace
One of Rufino Tamayo's last paintings to highlight Sotheby's May offerings of Latin American Art in New York
"Butcher" album sells for £180,000 alongside other items of iconic Beatles memorabilia at Julien's Auctions
Works by Helen Frankenthaler on view at at the Palazzo Grimani in Santa Maria Formosa
Peabody Essex Museum debuts first exhibition of the Lynch Collection of American Art
Fondazione Prada opens major retrospective dedicated to Jannis Kounellis following his death in 2017
Ingenious gadgets, real-world quandaries at Washington's all-new Spy Museum
The sixth edition of GLASSTRESS returns for the 58th Biennale di Venezia
Christie's announces highlights included in the various owner Design auction
Time, Forward! A project by Omar Kholeif, Maria Kramar and V-A-C opens at the Venice Biennale
N.C. Wyeth and Cecilia Beaux lead American Art & Pennsylvania Impressionists Auction at Freeman's
Pavilion shines a spotlight on Singapore's music appreciation history
The Barber Institute of Fine Arts acquires Greyhound with Puppies by Joseph Gott
Exhibition of works by Evariste Richer opens at Emmanuel Barbault
Painting and performance at The Merchant House: Pino Pinelli, Elsa Tomkowiak and Mary Sue
P·P·O·W opens a show of works by Carolee Schneemann's beloved feline companion, La Niña
French MPs debate law on speedy Notre-Dame restoration
In Iraq, religious rap meets a chorus of controversy
Modern in Fort Worth opens 'Disappearing-California, c. 1970: Bas Jan Ader, Chris Burden, Jack Goldstein'
First Pacific Northwest solo exhibition for Oscar Tuazon opens at Bellevue Arts Museum
Malta in Venice offers multi-sensory exhibit on migration and displacement
Pete Howard joins Heritage Auctions as Entertainment & Music Consignment Director
Seema Rao to join Akron Art Museum as Senior Experience Officer
Colnaghi celebrates the timeless appeal and enduring legacy of the Grand Tour
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|