First you clean the dinosaur's teeth. Then you open the museum.
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First you clean the dinosaur's teeth. Then you open the museum.
New plexiglass covers are installed around various exhibits and touchable objects in the “T. rex: The Ultimate Predator” exhibition at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, Aug, 27, 2020. When the American Museum of Natural History reopens on Sept. 9, it will — like all cultural institutions that have been retrofitted for the Covid era — look and feel a little different. Amy Lombard/The New York Times.

by Melena Ryzik



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Don’t expect to put your arm around Teddy Roosevelt for a selfie. Or poke a finger in a moon crater, or scrape the mighty jaw of a T. rex.

When the American Museum of Natural History reopens on Sept. 9, it will — like all cultural institutions that have been retrofitted for the COVID era — look and feel a little different.

The sculpture of Roosevelt, seated on a bench just inside a lower entryway and formerly a popular spot for photos, has been cordoned off with stanchions. Ditto the model of the moon in the Rose Center for Earth and Space, where once you could stand and learn your lunar weight.

Touch screens are off, and so are the films at the Hayden Planetarium. The hall of meteorites will stay unexplored, and the small theater tucked underneath the long, long tail of the Titanosaur will remain empty. Under the behemoth’s outstretched neck last week, a museum staff member was testing an army of automatic hand sanitizer machines. Their robotic blurp is now part of the soundtrack to many exhibition halls.

The reimagining and reengineering of the museum experience is meant to be noticeable, and assuring, said Ellen V. Futter, the museum’s president. “We’re very keen for people not only to be safe but for people to feel safe,” she said, especially as they reenter large public spaces for possibly the first time in months.

But for all the changes — which include the hours, ticketing, prices and live programming (none to speak of) — much will remain the same. The blue whale is still suspended there. (Where else could hold her?) The dioramas are just as frozen, if now a little less dusty. The museum has used the longest closure in its 150-year history as an opportunity to do some deep cleaning.

One recent weekday, a worker was perched atop a lift, swabbing a far back corner of the tippity-top of a prosauropod’s glass case. The floors are ultrapolished. So are the T. rex’s teeth.

Even the interactive objects that are now off-limits have been protectively spiffed up, with an eye toward the moment when they can be accessible again. Michael Meister, the director of exhibition design, was rolling through the dinosaur rooms with a cart laden with custom-made plexiglass covers, popping them on. “They’re all made to be flexible — to come right off,” he said. “The goal isn’t to hide anything or remove anything,” because the expectation, the hope, is that these adjustments will be temporary, he said.

On the museum’s front steps, the statue of Roosevelt on horseback, flanked by an African man and a Native American man — for years the object of criticism as a symbol of racism and colonialism — is still there, though the museum and the city agreed in June that it should be removed. No plans have yet solidified, but the exhibition “Addressing the Statue” continues, now with signs to help control crowds in a narrow hallway there.

Across the museum, there are new air filters, one-way traffic patterns and orange stickers denoting where to stand in each corner of an elevator to maintain social distancing. (Only two people at a time, the museum requests.)




That is a tall order when the Central Park West building normally has about 5 million visitors a year, nearly half a million of them schoolchildren. Now, capacity is capped at 25%, but a museum spokesman said they plan to go below that initially, for an even more intimate experience — allowing hundreds, not thousands, of visitors in per hour, up to about 3,500 a day. Early sales for timed tickets have been strong, he said.

The museum has operated through pandemics and serious outbreaks before. In 1908, it opened an exhibition about tuberculosis, the bacteria-borne lung disease that was the city’s leading killer at the turn of the 20th century. It was a proto-blockbuster of a show, with lines around the block; as many as 10,000 people saw it on a single day, according to the museum.

Its success led to the creation of a public health division at the museum, whose curator had the foresight to begin collecting specimens of bacteria and other microbes. That collection formed the basis of a national repository that still exists as a key resource for researchers.

Early in this pandemic, the museum created online resources to help the public understand the coronavirus and the search for a cure; more programming is planned. Its scientists are also working on related research. Sharing facts and evidence-based science “is very much in our sweet spot,” Futter said. “Science and education have never been more important.”

Fun is good too. The museum is reupping “The Nature of Color,” an immersive exhibition that had just opened when the pandemic shutdown began on March 13.

To reenter the grand halls and ornate spaces of institutions like the Natural History or the Met, after months in which our world shrank so much — to too-small apartments and overly familiar neighborhoods, the numbing roteness of domestic routine — is to quickly rediscover awe. Art museums give us beauty and challenge our thinking. Natural history museums, which showcase the evolution of our world and its multifarious cultures over eons, offer perspective.

Even for Futter, who began visiting the museum as a girl of 5 or younger, it was emotional to return. “Going in and out of its doors every single day and night, and not having done so for months, was difficult and painful,” she said. “Coming back was moving and actually very happy.”

She expects that many museumgoers may be flooded with emotion too — with nostalgia and a sense of community, relief and joy at the return, however vigilant, to a vibrant remembered life.

“The visit itself is transporting,” she said. “We let you visit everywhere, seven continents and outer space, on Central Park West and 79th Street.

“Equally true is the enormous reassurance that there are some things that are constant — and we are one of them.”

© 2020 The New York Times Company










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