|
| Freud Museum |
Foundling Museum
Thomas
Coram, shipwright and businessman, was so horrified by the abandoned
children he saw in London he spent 17 years raising funds to build the
Foundling Hospital. The hospital doubled up as the country’s first
public art gallery and concert hall, with paintings donated by William
Hogarth and recitals by fellow governor George Frideric Handel.
Best exhibit The donated Hogarth paintings.
Foundling Museum, 40 Brunswick Square, WC1 (7841 3600/www.foundlingmuseum.org.uk). Russell Sq tube.
Freud Museum
A
beautiful Hampstead house and the great psychoanalyst’s home after he
fled Austria, the Freud Museum is not only preserved as it was when
Sigmund died, but as it was in Austria when he fled in 1938. He had the
position of everything in his study written down, so it could be
exactly recreated in London.
Best exhibit The original couch.
Freud Museum, 20 Maresfield Gardens, NW3 (7435 2002/ www.freud.org.uk). Finchley Rd tube.
Feature continues
Geffrye Museum
FREE
Lavishly
charting the changing face of British domestic interiors, the Geffrye
Museum is set out a bit like IKEA might have been in the year 1600.
Named after former Lord Mayor Sir Robert Geffrye, it’s possibly the
city’s most stylish museum, boasting a fine restaurant and an art
installation in the basement. Best exhibit Gardens showing the evolution of horticulture since the seventeenth century.
Geffrye Museum, Kingsland Rd, E2 (7739 9893/www.geffrye-museum.org.uk). Old St tube/rail then 243 bus.
|
| Grant Museum of Zoology |
Grant Museum of Zoology
If
you’re not fazed by the skeletons of a walrus, a baboon and a giant
iguanadon that face the entrance, you’ll find many a fascinating animal
specimen here (quite a lot of them preserved in glass jars, and plenty
of skeletons). Part of University College London, it might at first
appear chaotically cluttered, but specimens are carefully categorised
into evolutionary groups.
Best exhibit A dodo (whose bones are stored in a box and laid out in specially cutout padding).
Grant Museum of Zoology, University College London, Gower St, WC1E (7679 2647/www.grant.museum.ucl.ac.uk). Goodge St tube.
Guards Museum
The
Guards Museum tells the story of the Grenadier Guards, Coldstream
Guards, Scots Guards, Irish Guards and Welsh Guards – the five
regiments that, together with the Household Cavalry, the Life Guards,
and the Blues and Royals, make up the Household Division of the Army.
The museum is mostly given over to displays of uniforms, pictures and
regimental silver but if you’ve always wondered just how uncomfortable
those bearskin hats are, ask staff if you can try on the one they keep
for the purpose.
Best exhibit The potty from a doll’s house
with which Florence Nightingale used to administer liquor to the men
she realised weren’t going to make it through the night.
Guards Museum, Wellington
Barracks, Birdcage Walk, SW1 (7414 3271/www.theguardsmuseum.com). St
James’s Park tube.
Guildhall Clockmakers' Museum
FREE
Situated
in a single room within the Guildhall Library building, this collection
of watches and clocks is reckoned to be the oldest in the world. The
collection tells the story of clockmakers in London and Europe and
contains some of the most decadent and spectacular timepieces you’ll
ever lay your eyes on.
Best exhibit Ornate marine timepieces (one dating back to 1724 was acquired for £75,000).
Guildhall Clockmakers' Museum, Guildhall Library, Aldermanbury, EC2 (7332 1868). St Paul’s tube.
Handel House
Seemingly
removed from the modern world, Handel House offers much to soothe and
inspire, not just for disciples of the eighteenth century composer, but
for lovers of Georgian architecture, interiors and portrait painting.
Handel lived here from 1723 to 1759, while composing the ‘Messiah’. You
move from room to room, opening doors as if exploring a private
residence and Handel’s music plays delicately during frequent recitals.
Best exhibit The museum’s treasured facsimile of the original ‘Messiah’ manuscript, complete with notations and smudges.
Handel House, 25
Brook St, W1 (entrance behind in Lancashire Court) (7495
1685/www.handelhouse.org). Bond St or Oxford Circus tube.
|
| The Horniman Museum's walrus |
Horniman Museum
FREE
A
25-foot Alaskan totem pole outside the main entrance gives a clue as to
what’s in here: a wealth of quirky anthropological and natural history
treasures. You can while away hours perusing the place, but the Grade
II-listed natural history gallery – refreshingly devoid of computer
touchscreens – possibly contains the most memorable: a comically
over-stuffed walrus (the work of an over-zealous 1880s taxidermist).
The Horniman Museum must be south London’s most
cherished public attraction. The collection is built upon that of
Victorian tea trader Frederick John Horniman, who began acquiring
objects in the 1860s. The buildings are a mix of the original Victorian
and recent additions – which won a prize for architectural excellence
from RIBA in 2004. The gardens’ spectacular views make for pleasurable
picnicking. And, if you’re still not convinced, it’s free.
Horniman Museum, 100 London Rd, SE23 (8699 1862/www.horniman.ac.uk). Forest Hill rail.
Household Cavalry Museum
Gen up on the cavalry that’s protected royalty from the people for 350 years.
Household Cavalry Museum, Horse Guards, Whitehall, SW1A 2AX (www.householdcavalrymuseum.co.uk). Charing Cross tube/rail.
House Mill Museum
House
Mill was a tidal mill on the River Lea, built in 1776 and operated
until the 1940s. Occasional tours allow you to explore all five floors.
House Mill Museum, Miller’s House, Three Mill Lane, E3 3DU (www.housemill.org.uk). Bromley-by-Bow tube.
|
|
|
|
30 comments
Edgar West - It's not about 'vapid contemporary apology', it's about exhibiting objects with a better understanding of their significance. This is obviously more the case with anthropological objects than with anything involving natural history - the Victorians did a good job of physically acquiring objects but there was little if any genuine concern about their function or contemporary significance - it really was literally a 'treasure hunt'. With the prevalence of the internet being 'culturally poor' is becoming less and less of an issue (and in fact saying so is inaccurate - virtually all of the objects collected during the era of Empire are not 'British' at all, so it's not British culture that's being impovershed) , alterations in museums nowadays are made to convey that artifacts did - and still do - hold deep cultural importance as well as being beautiful, and this normally results in a need for compromise in display methods. Objects from natives here on the Northwest Coast are a great example of this - many of the masks they're world-famous for are in fact not meant to be seen unless being used for a dance, much less displayed openly behind glass. Hence you develop communication with the cultural owners of objects and as such alter display methods to enrich the functions of objects - instead of being permanently behind glass, natives might occasionally visit a museum and use those masks in ceremonial dances, for example.
It can get very complicated, but the short of it is that those changes you witness are genuinely meant to enrich the functions of museum collections rather than 'sterilize' them as might be interpreted. In the simplest terms, we simply know more now than they did then. In any case, there are certainly many places that continue to pay homage to British Victorian eccentricity (in many ways a museum-worthy subject of preservation in its own right), most notably the Sloane Museum.
I don't aim to berate you or anything like that, only to educate. I've been studying this kind of stuff a lot :)
The Wallace Collection is a great art museum that is free and near bond st tube.
The Huntarian and Soane's museums are pretty much opposite each other, and a 20-25 min walk from the British Museum. They make a great combination as they are both really unusual but in totally different ways! Around Lincoln's Inn are lots of historic buildings (the Inns of Court and so on) plus the fields themselves are a pleasant place to eat lunch and have a fairly upmarket cafe/restaurant.
They make a good combination for a day out in London and are themselves very close to Covent Garden for lunch/dinner.
They are my favourite London museums!
I agree with Erik. The Museum of Brands and Packaging is well worth a visit. It is a view of social history over the past 100 years or so by reference to everyday items such as food packaging, advertising styles etc. Educational and nostalgic. www.museumofbrands.com
Horniman Museum
Again took my niece there last summer and it was another museum she enjoyed, it has various exhibits, it also has lovely grounds to walk thru on a good day.. Has a basement fukllof aquariums, this museum is ideal for children as well as adult minds
the museum of brands and packaging is really cool and should be on this list. it's near notting hill tube and showcases food packaging from the turn of the century to present day.
has anyone been to the Horniman Museum ?
am intrigued to go today but don't want to be dissapointed...
I visited the Tea and Coffee Museum about a year ago and was seriously disappointed - too many exhibits (i.e. cramped), appalling lighting etc. I could have made a better job of it myself. I´m so glad they are refurbishing - the newly opened Museum can only be an improvement.
Unlike some of the rather well-known, much-visited museums included in this feature, a genuinely ‘unsung’ museum is the British Optical Association Museum at the College of Optometrists, a delightful Georgian building in Craven Street. Not only are its collections of vision aids, optician’s equipment and all things eye-related of international significance but because its displays are produced entirely in-house they avoid that ‘over-designed’ look that characterises and spoils so many wealthier museums these days. You won’t find a sign on the door and you must book in advance but if you pluck up the courage you’ll not only get a personal guided tour from a genuine expert (tailored to whatever time you have available) but you’ll thoroughly enjoy seeing some wonderful things, both serious and quirky…and all just a stone’s throw from Trafalgar Square. In fact, if you discount art galleries it’s the most centrally located museum in the entire capital and I bet most people don’t know it’s there!
V&A Museum of Childhood
I took my 2yr old niece here last summer and she loved it, its is very accessible and not to huge that a smaller child would lose interest. I would reccommend it
Can anyone give anymore information about the viv stanshall museum, i would love to go there and can't find any info about it?
I too have two more recommendations for those with inquisitive minds (seems like most Londoners do from these posts!). The Freud museum is a treat in Swiss Cottage/Finchley http://www.freud.org.uk/ and the Sir John Soan's museum in Holborn in well worth a visit (and it's free) http://www.soane.org/. Liking all the other recommendations - is there ever an end to the things you can do in London!
the petrie museum is a must if you love anything to do with egypt
The Viv Stanshall museum is fun up there in Finchley
What a brilliant list for people visiting London, my son and I and a friend are coming to London for a short break in February and this is so informative thanks.