Adventures in Parenting

Stories and Photos Tagged 'museums'

View: All | Photos | Stories | Statuses | Videos | Milestones

Reading The Polar Express at the Met

by Graham // 0 comments // tagged with: Elisabeth, museums

Img_0353_medium

For three years now we've been going to the Met once a week for Start with Art. (Katherine joined us for our weekly ventures starting at six weeks old!)

Charles read The Polar Express to the kids last week, in his wonderful, dramatic voice before the kids when up to see the Christmas tree and nativity scene in the galleries.

If you live in NYC and have young kids, I highly recommend Start with Art.

In concert at the Met

by Graham // 0 comments // tagged with: museums

Img_9179_medium

Part of the Afghanistan family day was a concert by these three musicians. It was fantastic!

Floating mid-water

by Graham // 0 comments // tagged with: museums, little friends, church

Img_9153_medium

This was a great experiment at the American Museum of Natural History that can be easily duplicated at home. The kids each had a plastic Easter egg. They filled it with pennies and put it in the water. Their aim was to get just enough so that it floated halfway between the top and bottom (like a fish).Once they had succeeded, they put the same egg in a glass of saltwater to see how salinity affects buoyancy. What fun!

Mass and melting

by Graham // 2 comments // tagged with: museums, church

Img_9154_medium

At the American Museum of Natural History today the volunteer educators were out! This volunteer showed the girls two identically sized slabs. One was metal, and the other a medium weight foam rubber. The metal slab came out of the freezer, and was cold to the touch. The rubber one was room temperature. The educator asked the girls on which slab would an ice cube melt more quickly. They (and I) responded: the warm one.

Then she put one ice cube on each slab. The one on the cold slab melted quickly in front of us, and the other hardly melted at all! Does anyone else know why?

Decision maker

by Graham // 1 comment // tagged with: museums, art

Img_7117_medium

On a trip to the Met this weekend, I saw this chap and thought that I probably resemble him in my decision-making.

Why do people throw coins?

by Graham // 2 comments // tagged with: Elisabeth, museums, home schooling, art

Yesterday I took Elisabeth and Zoe to the Met for their art class. We arrived early and wandered around the Greek and Roman galleries, where we found this fountain.



The girls noticed all the coins in the fountain and asked me, "Why is there money in here?" I stumbled for words. "People think it gives them good luck?" I happened to have my ipod in my pocket, and there was a wifi network in the gallery, so I googled "throwing coins in fountain" and it pulled up a New York Times article that cited one of the Met historians on the origin of the practice:

Joan Mertens, the Met’s curator of Greek and Roman art, came up with a story, appropriately enough, from ancient Greece. Amasis, the king of Egypt in the sixth century B.C., predicted trouble for his ally Polykrates unless Polykrates showed some humility. Amasis, Ms. Mertens said, told Polykrates he should throw into the sea his most valued possession: an emerald ring.

“Sort of as proof or a sign, someone in Polykrates’s household came in with a big fish who had the ring in his stomach,” she said, “so it came back to him.”

From that, she said, came the notion of “casting away something that is meaningful to you, and if you’re lucky, you will be reunited with it.”
I learned something, and enjoyed yet another trip to the Met.

Shoveling

by Graham // 0 comments // tagged with: Elisabeth, museums, art

Img_6963_medium

Elisabeth insisted on helping.

Washing dishes

by Graham // 0 comments // tagged with: Elisabeth, museums, art

Img_6967_medium

It is great to have such a good helper!

Fake ice

by Graham // 0 comments // tagged with: museums, Elisabeth

Img_6935_medium

The American Museum of Natural History has a rink made of synthetic ice. I said to Rebecca that I couldn't imagine that it could mimick the properties of ice. The guy in front of us turned around and said, "Yeah. It's terrible. We tried it for 10 minutes and gave up. You can't glide."   

Home Delivery

by Graham // 0 comments // tagged with: museums

Photo_100408_002_medium

On Saturday, Elisabeth and I visited the Home Delivery exhibit at MoMA while Rebecca studied for her boards. I'm the kind of person who walks through MoMA with a dazed expression, not knowing what to make of the art. On this occasion, however, our friend and fellow parishioner, Jeremy Edmiston gave us a "gallery talk" on the house he was exhibiting [beach house, at top of picture], explaining its design. I really enjoyed it, and walked away with a much greater appreciation for design.