American history makeover for Smithsonian Museum
The furry puppet, created by Jim Henson and used on television in the 1970s and 1980s, is among tens of thousands of exhibits and artifacts that will be carefully stored as the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History prepares for a massive, two-year renovation.
The museum closes Tuesday, and it has been buzzing with activity. Many items in the way of the construction will be relocated to the building's wings, where they will be protected from the dust. They include Oscar, the first ladies' evening gowns and 4,000 lighting devices dating from the early 17th century.
"It's similar to moving your china cabinet, but not really," associate curator Stephen Velasquez said with a laugh, after spending most of August moving the lighting devices to temporary storage space in a former gallery. "We very carefully, emphasize carefully, transfer each object."
Protecting the museum's massive collection has been an enormous undertaking. Most tourists see only a small percentage of the museum's 3.5 million items, like the Star-Spangled Banner, the 30- by 42-foot flag that inspired the words for the national anthem.
Many of the items were already stored at the museum and at facilities in suburban Virginia and Maryland; others are part of exhibits on loan to the Smithsonian's partners.
And even as the museum searches for enough storage space--it's still collecting items.
Simply put, "we collect stuff," said William Yeingst, chair and curator of the museum's division of Home and Community Life.
Curators and conservators have been making plans for more than six months, and it can take weeks to move a vast collection of silver tea sets, flatware and ordinary Tupperware into temporary storage.
As for the Star-Spangled Banner, it will be carefully rolled up and placed in a crate. And Oscar the Grouch should be safe with extra padding inside his body to prevent any new wrinkles on the aging puppet.
The biggest construction worries for conservationists are humidity and temperature changes, excessive dust and potential vibrations from the construction. Several objects are so large they will have to be protected in place.
The largest artifact is a 21/2-story timber-framed house that stood for 200 years in Massachusetts. It is now just inches from the museum construction zone, so museum staff members will build a plywood box around it, with hopes that building vibrations don't cause damage. Seismographs will be used to monitor the area.
"There are no standards in the conservation field for vibrations," said Richard Barden, the museum's chief conservator. "This is a good test case."
The exact relocation and storage costs aren't available, but they have been imbedded in the museum's operating budget and in the $85 million renovation project.
The renovation comes four years after a blue-ribbon commission report sharply criticized the museum's layout and presentation--calling them confusing.
So, starting this fall, workers will slice through five floors of the building to create a new skylight and atrium that will be the core of the new exhibition space scheduled to open in 2008. The Star-Spangled Banner will be the centerpiece, with a dramatic new gallery that will use special lighting to depict "the dawn's early light."
Designers will also add new exhibit walls and open spaces to make the country's largest history museum easier to navigate.
The project will bring the most significant changes since the museum opened in 1964 as the Museum of History and Technology.
"It's a very exciting time for the museum," Yeingst said. "It's not often a museum goes through this kind of change."
Several exhibits already have closed, including "The American Presidency: A Glorious Burden" gallery and the popular "First Ladies: Political Role and Public Image" exhibit. Eight gowns from former first ladies remain on temporary display until Tuesday.
Some of the most popular objects are being cleaned and prepared for exhibition elsewhere while the museum is closed. Dorothy's ruby slippers from "The Wizard of Oz" will be part of the exhibit opening Nov. 17 at the nearby National Air and Space Museum, along with R2D2 and C3PO from "Star Wars," President Lincoln's top hat and new artifacts from Hurricane Katrina.
Labor Day is the last chance to see the museum before its closing. Beth Austin, an American who lives with her husband and children just outside of Paris, made it just in time with her youngest daughter, 10-year-old Chloe.
"I thought this would be a good time to bring her down to see some significant Americana," Austin said on a recent visit. "When in her regular French life does anyone talk about the Star Spangled Banner?"