The Museum of Ridiculously Interesting Things

The Museum of Ridiculously Interesting Things

a collection of ridiculously interesting art, objects, ideas, and history

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Author Archives: Chelsea Nichols

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Netsuke shaped like a cluster of rats made from ivory.

A cluster of rats

7 October 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

Categories: Curiosities, history, Museums • Tags: japan, museum, netsuke, rat, sculpture, unsettling

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Mug shot of Daniel Tohill (aka Daniel Lohill), thief from New Zealand.

Ridiculously photogenic New Zealand criminal

28 September 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

Categories: history, Museums • Tags: criminal, daniel lohill, daniel tohill, humor, mug shot, museum, new zealand, nostalgia, photography, time, victorian era

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Curators cleaning an elephant skin at the Museum of Natural History.

Cleaning the elephant skin

12 July 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

My last post on the inflatable skins in James Lomax’s Untitled (Me and My Friend) (2011) reminded me of this ridiculously interesting series of photographs from the archives of the American Museum of Natural History. Taken between 1933-1935 by Thane L. Bierwert, they show museum staff engaged in the task of cleaning and re-mounting the skin of an elephant for display. As well as offering a great (and I suspect rare) behind-the-scenes glance of a 1930s natural history museum, that […]

Categories: history, Museums • Tags: elephant, history, museum, skin, taxidermy, unsettling

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Detail of James Lomax's sculpture of inflatable skins.

James Lomax’s inflatable skins

11 July 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the preserved skins of exotic animals from faraway lands were brought back to Europe by explorers. The hides would be handed over to taxidermists whose job it was to prepare them for display by stuffing the skins and giving them a life-like appearance. However, the taxidermists often just had to guess at the shape and appearance of these unfamiliar animals based on crude sketches and descriptions, resulting in grotesque physical distortions which would […]

Categories: Contemporary Art • Tags: art, body, grotesque, inflatable, installation, sculpture, taxidermy, unsettling

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Post mortem photograph of child on chair with hidden mother behind.

More hidden mothers in Victorian photography

5 July 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

Categories: Curiosities, history • Tags: death, hidden mothers, images, photography, unsettling, victorian era

125
Arthur's Seat mysterious coffins.

The mysterious coffins of Arthur’s Seat

29 June 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

I was recently in Edinburgh for the really incredible Sensualising Deformity conference, and while there I was reminded of my one of my favorite museum objects, in the National Museum of Scotland: the mysterious little coffins of Arthur’s Seat. In 1836, five boys were hunting rabbits on the north-eastern slopes of Arthur’s Seat, the main peak in the group of hills in the center of Edinburgh. In a small cave in the crags of the hill they stumbled across seventeen […]

Categories: Curiosities, history, Museums • Tags: archaeology, coffins, curiosities, figurine, museum, mystery, outsider art, sculpture

31
Vintage photograph of old woman with no teeth.

GUEST POST: Mrs Marvel on ‘Things I’m Glad Are Out of Style’

12 May 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

Categories: Guest Post, history • Tags: fashion, guest post, humor, photography, style, victorian era

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Vintage advertisement for Mr and Mrs Bese Cuppers and Leeches.

Leeches! Leeches!! Leeches!!!

6 May 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

Leeches have been used for bloodletting for centuries. In fact, they became so popular in the 18th and 19th centuries that they were almost farmed to extinction in Europe. Although falling out of fashion in the later half of the 20th century, their medical use is making a comeback in microsurgery and reconstructive surgery due to the anti-coagulant properties of their secretions, which is useful for reducing blood clots and venous pressure from pooling blood, and for healing skin grafts. […]

Categories: Curiosities, history • Tags: advertisements, ephemera, illustration, images, leeches, medicine, nostalgia, science, unsettling, victorian era

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Illustration of a map of a woman's heart, published in the nineteenth century.

A Map of a Woman’s Heart, 1833-1842

2 May 2012 by Chelsea Nichols

Published by D.W. Kellog between 1833-1842, this amusing Map of the Open Country of Woman’s Heart paints the “fairer sex” in a rather unflattering light. From the mole traps in the Province of Deception, to the city of Moi-meme in the Land of Selfishness, to the Plains of Susceptibility in the Region of Sentimentality, this ever-so-charming illustration certainly demonstrates this Victorian gentleman’s equal taste for maps and disdain for women. I suspect this fellow must have had a recent broken […]

Categories: Curiosities, history • Tags: anatomy, art, humor, love, map, victorian era

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About the museum

For those with a taste for the peculiar, The Museum of Ridiculously Interesting Things is an imaginary museum that explores the strange place between art and curiosities.

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