Florida Museum to open 'Inside Africa' traveling exhibit March 15 Butterfly Rainforest will feature live African butterflies
February 7, 2008
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Journey into the heart of Africa and experience its people and rich cultural history with the new “Inside Africa” exhibit at the Florida Museum of Natural History, opening March 15.
Based on the permanent exhibit at the Field Museum of Chicago, the 6,000-square-foot exhibit takes museum-goers through a journey to selected sites on the world’s second-largest continent and offers a deeper understanding of the vitality, richness and significance of its people from historical and contemporary perspectives.
“Africa is the birthplace of humanity and is a vast continent with incredibly diverse and rich natural and cultural history, most of which is unfamiliar,” said Darcie MacMahon, Florida Museum of Natural History assistant director for exhibits. “We’re excited about the exhibit and our related programs, and their potential to inspire new family and community conversations. The opportunity to feature African butterflies in the Butterfly Rainforest is also a wonderful complement to the exhibit and a great way for visitors to experience African wildlife firsthand.”
Through many hands-on activities, three-dimensional settings, multimedia presentations and an exceptional collection of African artifacts, the exhibit demonstrates the enormous diversity of African geography, societies and political systems, and also helps visitors understand more fully the impact of slavery and freedom movements in Africa and the Americas.
The exhibit will run through Sept. 7. Admission is $6.50 for adults, $5.50 for Florida residents, seniors ages 62 and above and students, and $4 for children ages 3-12. For more information, visit www.flmnh.ufl.edu.
The content of the exhibit is organized into four sections: “Families and Festivals,” “Safari,” “Caravan” and “Diaspora,” which examines the disbursement of Africa’s ethnic population and its cultural development thereafter.
In Families and Festivals, museum-goers can observe modern family life through realistic settings in the courtyard of a suburban home and through videos of the family’s actual courtyard activities. This section contains an orientation gallery that offers basic facts about Africa: its countries, cities, languages, religions and geography.
The Safari section emphasizes African wildlife and ecological tourism. This section features life-size animal skulls and their environmental adaptations, a giant termite mound and interactive video displays on gorilla research.
The Caravan section features interactive and lifelike displays in a desert oasis and a Tuareg family tent. The Tuareg, a semi-nomadic group known for their salt caravans and distinctive blue veils, are the region’s best-known people. An actual goat-skin tent and other household objects depict the everyday life of modern Tuareg merchants who crisscross the Sahara to reach several of Africa’s metropolitan trading cities.
The section titled Diaspora examines Africa’s interrelationships with the Americas, focusing on the dispersal of African peoples from Canada to Argentina. Visitors learn how the majority of Africans historically arrived in the Americas through the transatlantic slave trade. The exhibit also explores African contributions to the creation of contemporary societies and the ways those of African descent celebrate their culture today.
Evergreen Exhibitions produced Inside Africa in collaboration with the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. The exhibit is made possible by Procter & Gamble Co.