Breakfast • 2 (four-inch) whole grain pancakes • 1/2 cup mixed berries • 2 teaspoons sugar-free maple syrup • 1 cup fat-free milk Lunch • Herbed Chicken Soup with Spring Vegetables (find recipe on Food Network.com) • 1 cup tossed salad with 2 tablespoons low-calorie dressing • 1 (one-ounce) whole grain roll • 1 small apple Dinner • 4 ounces grilled salmon • 1/2 cup brown rice cooked with low-fat chicken broth • 1/2 cup cubed cucumber mixed with 1/2 cup cubed tomatoes tossed with 2 teaspoons olive oil and 1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar • 5 roasted asparagus spears • 1 (one-ounce) slice rye bread Snacks • 10 almonds • 1/2 cup melon cubes tossed with 1 teaspoon lime juice Today’s Takeaway Tip: Fiber is extremely important for keeping blood sugar stable. Since fluctuating blood sugar levels can cause feelings of hunger, irritability and low energy, high-fiber foods, such as the whole grain pancakes, whole grain roll and brown rice, will help you to have a happier and healthier day.…
In “Why Museums are the New Churches” by Jason Farago, he argues how the art museum has surpassed the church as the most important and ultimate building of our society. Also, Farago continues to show how people mimic and copy religious acts and rituals while visiting a museum. He provides numerous examples from history and buildings from around the world. He also gives many modern examples of this shift from churches to museums. Throughout his writing, Farago builds an argument that museums have become the most vital building, and he uses some interesting techniques along the way.…
Museums bring history and culture to life by allowing individuals to gain unique hands on experience that is different from learning from textbooks or television. One can never know the reality behind certain artifacts and art until they see it for themselves. The perception of viewing a multitude of replicas and pictures such as the Mona Lisa can be dramatically different from witnessing the painting up close. The interactive experience allows one to engage and immerse ourselves back into time to learn about the truth of different cultures and traditions. The intent of museums is not purely to enthrall historians and scholars, but to create an environment which is welcoming to all individuals. While historians argue that museums…
With so many collections confined in one area, it’s literally impossible to see everything in one visit. In result visiting the museum, no matter how often, will always be a new experience. And with new artifacts added from time to time, there’s something new to see every time.…
Museums are a perfect way to represent what history has unfolded for the public’s eye. Consideration needs to be made when a person is shopping for fragments of history such as arts or artifacts. A main consideration is profit; however, there are consequences if the museums does not make enough money. If a museum does not make enough money, this could suggest that people are not interested in taking tours throughout the museums anymore,the new age of technology is taking over. What happens after the museums cannot keep their wonderful art?…
Museums have long served a purpose as cultural staples. For every museum, big and small, careful consideration is used in selecting its contents. When securing new items for a museum, it is most important to consider public appeal, educational value, and cost-effectiveness.…
In this essay, I will argue that ethnographic museums privilege viewing, at the expense of other senses. I will further argue that by privileging the visual, ethnographic museums become problematic in two ways- firstly, by not accurately representing the cultures they are supposed to be exhibiting, and secondly, by limiting the experience of museum-goers who may be visually impaired or otherwise unable to visit museums that are purely mono-sensorial. After outlining and discussing the problems associated with ocularcentric post-colonial museums, I will offer a few solutions to these problems. The majority of colonial museums privileged viewing and the visual. In the 17th and 18th century, Europeans believed reason and sensuality to be opposing…
Although structure and utility as the meaning of act of ‘building’, architecture has a crucial visual component as well, and throughout the centuries, buildings have either failed or succeed in terms of either individual or societal aesthetic standards (Zukowsky, 2015). In this essay, two buildings are selected in similar functions with strong contrast in design and built within 20 years of each other. As for the function, museum as an important medium of communication to be analyzed, which is primarily but not essentially exclusively and engaged in the visual communication of objects of scientific and cultural interest. Therefore, museum design, both in terms of display and architecture, must thus at least contribute communicate to an individual actively and preferably (Brawne, 1965). The museums that have been chosen to compare are National Museum of Roman Art and Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum and the selection of…
When one goes to a Museum, it is easy to assume that they will go to the most famous and well known pieces that are showcased, look at them, and then be well on their way. Although Museums are a part of the spectacle, when looked at in the right context they can also enable to viewer to gain a new perspective. What better a place than to think “otherwise” than a museum? The setting upholds works of art that are categorized and characterized by certain attributes. But these institutions can also view the everyday in a new context – take a look at the Surrealists or the Stituationalists. In Museum Hours, by Jem Cohen addresses how people should look at art through a different lens, and how value legitimizes collections of art in museums.…
Let’s start with the building style, or architecture, of the Museum. The Museum describes itself as an “Eclectic mixture of children’s playground, funhouse, surrealistic pavilion, and architectural marvel.”. The Museum is built almost entirely out of recycled or repurposed architectural and industrial materials, including cranes, old bridges, a human-sized hamster wheel, a bank vault, and even an old school bus. That gives it an irregular personality with the unexpected always lurking around the next corner.…
Safe havens for cultural and civic expression, museums reflect the broader ideas and possibilities for social change. 2 Communities and museums are becoming strong partners in the cultural and social life of citizens and empowering those citizens to take ownership of its institutions.…
Art and artifacts fill museums, without them people would not visit museums. Museums teach people about all kinds of things. The art and artifacts should have meaning or historical background. The art and artifacts represent cultures and important events. The person responsible for choosing and securing new art or artifacts needs to consider many factors. They need to consider the price, the purpose, and the creator of the art or artifact.…
The second reason I want to to to the Art Museum is because you can see unique different drawings or paintings. They might have drawn them from the imagination or the world. I like to draw because it is a fascinating to come up with some type of thing…
The museum has always been found as a viable source of accurate information regarding history. So in today’s media rich society most people who are really curious about learning about Egypt would rather visit the museum rather than pick up a book on Egyptology and read it. The museum is a good place to start for people to go and observe visually what is left of Ancient Egypt. And these exhibits help to construct an idea of what this Ancient civilization was truly like compared to the entertainment industries depiction of it. This act of going to the museum to fulfill ones curiosity on the subject is just one way the museum…
The museum itself was a forgotten place on the outskirts of the city where it doesn’t seem appealing at all. It is built on waste ground where rubbish is scattered all over the place and is infested with many cats. You would think the area around the museum was deserted. In 1946, the museum was introduced as part of the city’s new exhibition.…