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Little-Known
Museums In and Around London
Rachel Kaplan
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Little-Known Museums |
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Rachel Kaplans delightful guide provides timely support for museums off the beaten
track in the wake of the recent move to make many of Londons larger and more famous
entrance-charging museums, including the Natural History Museum and the Victoria and
Albert Museum, free of charge. The book provides a wealth of information about the content
and appeal of the museums, yet also fuels the readers desire to see for themselves.
The one problem, almost inevitably with this type of volume, lies with the subjectivity of
the selection. Some museums, such as the Museum of London, are arguably too well known to
merit inclusion, while others, including the fascinating Horniman Museum in Forest Hill,
are inexplicably absent. Nevertheless, an admirably wide range of museum types is
presented, catering to a diverse range of readers. It is useful for numerous demographics,
from those looking for a child-orientated outing that involves more than looking at
dinosaurs to those who might want an unusual alternative to tours of stately homes.
Despite the Horniman Museum quibble, inclusion of quirky South London
venues including the Dulwich Picture Gallery, the Cuming Museum, the Bramah Tea and Coffee
Museum and the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum provides a laudable exception to the prevalent
North and West London bias exhibited in virtually all London guides to tourist attractions
and events. While the three latter entries are marginal collections that deserve the
praise and exposure they receive here, the Dulwich Picture Gallery is a highly significant
art collection. It is also an attractive and unusual building in the stunning setting of
Dulwich Village, just down the road from Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidmans one-time
London residence.
To focus upon the Dulwich Picture Gallery entry as an example of
Kaplans achievement, she successfully conveys the Gallerys significance and
history in less than four pages: the collection of seventeenth and eighteenth century
paintings and its pioneering status as a museum. She also incorporates some of her
trademark obscure facts, such as the story of the theft of much of the original bequest of
William Cartwrights paintings. Kaplan also correctly emphasizes the importance of
the Gallerys Shakespearean connection: it was founded by the thespian impresario
Edward Alleyn and it possesses the sole surviving portrait of Richard Burbage, the first
celebrity Shakespearean actor. It might perhaps also have been of
significantly general interest to mention that Dulwich College is the home of Philip
Henslowes Diary, a unique and priceless sixteenth-century survival that has
granted early theatre scholars most of their knowledge of the stage business in
Shakespeares day.
Hammering
home the truism that visitors see more of London than residents, this book is a useful and
attractive guide for tourists and Londoners alike. It is also a fascinating book of trivia
and history that may be dipped in and out of for pleasure without ever having visited or
intended to visit the museums. A wealth of detail means that it is not exactly a handbag
or pocket sized volume but it is portable enough. The combination of color and black and white illustrations is both evocative and useful. The
unusually sumptuous visual element succeeds in encapsulating the elusive spirit of venues
such as the eccentric Sir John Soanes Museum and beautiful Kenwood House in
Hampstead. Though such details do age frustratingly quickly, more detailed information on
practicalities such as admission prices (where relevant) and refreshment options would
have been helpful.
This book forms a useful supplement to
familiar general publications, such the Rough Guides, which do not have the space to enter into such
textual and pictorial detail on individual collections. Kaplans elegant and
deceptively simple prose distills an extraordinary amount of scholarship into a
compulsively readable form. It is an uncommon pleasure to read a guidebook marked by such
a rigorous intellectual element as well as clear evidence of comprehensive first-hand
knowledge and enthusiasm. On the basis of this works quality, Rachel Kaplans
other guides, to Paris,
Berlin
and Rome, will prove equally helpful, and many other European cities,
particularly Prague and Amsterdam, would also merit her attention.
- Emma French
(Rachel Kaplan is a contributing writer for culturevulture.net.)