Food
museums
Introduction
Links
to Museums by Themes:
Food | Agriculture
& Seafood | Historic Farm, Ranch
& Village | Beverage
The
importance of food related museums
Food vs. military museums
Food
Exhibits are Entertaining
Food
Museums : an introduction
"A food museum is a museum about food, pure
and simple. Museums about food are a relatively new museum category,
one generally overlooked by traditional guidebooks. Yet, the public's
interest in food history and traditions is clearly on the rise.We
are not out to determine what makes something called a museum
technically legitimate. Our purpose is to pinpoint places that
illuminate food history for the public. We are after the spirit
of inquiry and enthusiasm for a subject, for the places that not
only preserve the past but also bring it to life.
Food-related
museums and food heritage sites include professional academically
accredited institutions, avowedly commercial public relations
ventures, earnestly unsophisticated operations, and variations
on all three."
---from
Gastronomie! Food Museums and Heritage Sites of France by
Tom Hughes and Meredith Sayles Hughes
Museums
about food & eating
True
food museums, as we think of them, are few and far between. Furthermore,
they are a relatively recent fusion of disciplines that combine
the history of art, agriculture, food industry; natural and social
sciences; archaeology; ethnography; geography; together with the
emerging academic fields of gastronomy & culinary studies.
The
Agropolis Museum

The
Agropolis Museum is the food museum of France, and the
most exciting and comprehensive museum about food we know of anywhere.
Dedicated to describing the global story of people, food, and
agriculture, it deftly combines solid information with exceedingly
imaginative, inviting displays. Unlike many museums today that
rely almost entirely on oversized graphics, Agropolis combines
actual artifacts with multimedia. It goes right at the central
role food plays in life, honors those who deliver and cook food,
and does not neglect those whose major rule is in the eating.
Here
you can walk the history of early food gathering and agriculture,
and see lively mini exhibits of many of the world's fruits, vegetables
and animals. You can meet eight farmers from around the world,
peer into their homes and hear their stories on video.
Another
exhibition on display re-creates world food and drink preparations.
For example: the tea ceremony in Japan, pasta making in Italy,
and coffee rituals in Ethiopia. A voyeur’s delight, you
look right into a life-size corner of a fully realized room from
which the family has just stepped away.
The
animation and audiovisual offerings at Agropolis are numerous
and changing. Two recent animations tell the story of grains in
ancient Egypt, as well as bread-making in Egypt today. This exhibit
is available online, as are virtual versions of the museum's three
primary permanent exhibitions.
At
the core of the building is a permanent sculptural exhibition
called the “Banquet of Humanity”, or “The Dining
Table of the World”, a creation so powerful it silenced
the idle buzz of visitors every time we ventured into it. Eight
couples sit at a roundtable set in furrowed ground. At the center
is water and perched atop the water, Planet Earth. The couples
represent three poor countries, three average income countries
and two rich. The rich are Japan and France. The poorest is Somalia.
Calories eaten per adult per day in France are 3,632. Somalia--1,600.
Outside
the circle is another couple, utterly excluded from the table.
They are naked. The woman reaches out a hand as if in cooperation,
the man holds up his fist in protest. This powerful work by Henri
Rouvieres goes to the heart of Agropolis's chief focus--- despite
all scientific advances, money and effort, world hunger remains
a battle not yet won.
Agropolis
provides numerous innovative programs and activities for children.
French schoolchildren can participate in La Petite Ecole du Gout,
a cooking and tasting class. The museum operates a bookshop with
Agropolis publications as well as books on assorted food subjects,
mostly in French.
(Description excerpted from Gastronomie: Food Museums &
Heritage Sites of France.)

This Agropolis display focuses on a specific food source,
in this case, the potato.

Peer into the world's kitchens in this gallery.

" The Banquet of Humanity."
Two other museums that focus on the whole story of people and
their food:
Alimentarium
in Vevey, Switzerland
The Culinary Archives and Museum
in Providence, Rhode Island, USA
Single Food Subject Museums
There
are museums about bread, oysters, olive oil, mustard, foie gras,
seafood, beer, wine, coffee, jam, noodles and, of course, chocolate.
Here is a report about two in Europe.
Choco-Story:
The Chocolate Museum, Bruges, Belgium

At
the entrance to “The
Choco-Story”, the Chocolate Museum in Bruges,
Belgium, opened in 2004, in a 500 year-old building, is a 120
kg chocolate egg by Belgian choco-artisan Jacky Vergote. Belgium
gives Switzerland a run for its money as a chocolate capital.
The
exhibition traces the history of chocolate enjoyment from the
Aztecs of Mexico to the Belgian chocolatiers of today. Artifacts
include Mayan pottery used for serving chocolate and 19th-century
chocolate molds.
Theobroma
cacao or "food of the gods," quickly caught the attention
of Cortez and his Spanish invaders, who observed that Montezuma's
men drank 2,000 goblets a day. Brought to Spain, chocolate was
originally sold in pharmacies but soon entered the courts and
the drawing rooms of the well-to-do. French Queen Marie Antoinette
commissioned a blue cornflower hot chocolate service from Sevres
in 1752 (a replica is on display.)
Don’t
miss the tasting at the close of your visit.
The
Olive Museum, Imperia, Italy
Three
views of the Olive Museum, exterior and two galleries from the
museum's website.
The
Museo
dell’Olivo is in the town of Imperia, Liguria.
Fratelli Carli, an olive oil producer established in 1911, has
put on display 6,000 years of olive history. This evergreen tree
has helped nudge civilization along. Its fruit has lighted the
way, eased passage of the stones that built the pyramids, filled
coffers, and allowed cooks to sauté with ease.
Filling
an Art Nouveau building that was once the company's headquarters,
this artful display has grown from an original family collection
of old oil lamps, containers and carved olive wood boxes. The
olive’s influence through history is well illustrated by
mills, measures, baubles, and tools thoughtfully placed in context.
You
can also visit the modern Carli olive processing operation adjacent
to the museum.
(Excerpts from the article, "Museum Options for Travelers
with Taste," by Meredith Sayles Hughes, Wall Street Journal
Europe, January 6, 2006.)
Food-Themed
Museums
Musee
has compiled the following list of
food-themed museums.
Agricultural
& Seafood Industry Museums
Many
museums and exhibits focus on bygone food production.
Here
are links to the
world's agriculture/seafood
museums.
Farm
& Ranch Heritage Museums Here
are links to the world's village
and living history museums.
Beverage
Museums
Here are links to the world's museums about beverages:
beer
& brewing museums, wine
& viticulture museums, liquor
& spirits museums.
The
importance of food museums
To
eat is a necessity of life. The act of eating binds us to the land
every day from birth to death. In the search for food, not only
did we invent agriculture and technology, but also created culture
and organized society. The history of the world, with its exchange
between mankind and nature, is really the story of food, diversity
and cooking. --Jacques
Lefort, President, Agropolis Museum
First we eat, then we do everything else. --M.F.K.Fisher
Food
museums give attention to sustenance the way other museums focus
on art, war and science. In fact, food-related museums and heritage
sites frequently span the traditional subject matters of other
museums.
To
examine how we have nourished our species is to explore all that
is our world.
Food
museums and their educational outreach programs are increasingly
critical for several reasons. The first is that with globalization
of food sources and dominance of chain restaurants, local and
regional food production, marketing, cooking and dining traditions
are quickly disappearing. Museums will be the only places where
evidence of bygone food traditions and histories will be saved
for future generations.
Food
museums are also places where people, especially students and
children, can connect with food. Most people live in urban or
suburban settings and have no opportunity to see food production
in gardens, farms or ranches. Outdoor food markets have dwindled.
Busy families either eat fast food out, or convenience food in,
and seldom dine together. One consequence of these factors may
well be the rising obesity rates among many people, including
children, in the developed world.
Food-focused
museums help people develop different attitudes about food and
their dietary choices. Educational outreach programs that extend
and expand school curriculum help students to take a new look
at food.
While
numerous interesting and important farm and agriculture history
museums exist, these concentrate on the machinery and mechanics
of bygone food production. There is concern that these rural arts
institutions aren't having as strong an impact on a modern pop
culture-oriented public as they once did.
Museums devoted to eating and specific foods can be dynamic and
up-to-date. Witness the Japanese approach. Japan has developed
a series of
urban food theme park museums that are packing in young and
old.
Museums of Food, Museums of War
"History celebrates the battlefields
whereon we meet our death, but scorns to speak of the plowed fields
whereby we thrive. It knows the names of the kings' bastards
but cannot tell us the origin of wheat. This is the way
of human folly."---J. H. Fabre, (1823-1915)
Very
few museums are dedicated to the subject of food preparation and
eating. Is this possibly because nourishment has been mainly a
female activity? Until recently domestic subjects have taken a
back seat to the more traditional male pursuits of war, weapons,
battles, political and natural histories.
We
love museums of any kind. Material evidence of wars, weapons and
battles are extensive and inherently visual and interesting. Simply
put, there's a lot of stuff to collect and put on display. (This
might also account for the numerous agriculture and farm related
museums and exhibits. Old farm gear and equipment abound.)
Some would argue that the proliferation of museums and exhibits
with militant subjects is just another example of the power of
the military-industrial complex that US President Eisenhower,
a former Army general himself, warned against. Military might
and expertise is a dominant topic in US society.
The
Florida
State Fair in Tampa is an interesting example. State fairs
are traditionally agrarian showcases. Farm animals, produce and
traditions are featured. The Florida State Fair is no exception.
Its "Cracker
Country" is a permanent assemblage
of 19th and early 20th century farm buildings and rural town
businesses. Volunteers in period costumes portray rural life and
arts. Yet---out in the main part of the fair, seemingly out of
place, but nevertheless quite impressive, was an entire military
museum! The Armed Forces Military Museum had set up camp--complete
with a display-filled trailer, tent, tanks, anti-aircraft guns,
a huge model of a battleship--the works.
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However
gripping military museums may be, we are advocating that equal
attention be devoted to the subject of sustenance--what we eat
and how and why we eat it. One need look no further than the United
States' own National
Museum of American History at the Smithsonian to understand
how overlooked is the story of the nation's foods.
Rio Rancho, the fastest growing city in New Mexico, a place that
hardly existed 30 years ago, despite the fact that its very name
and history is food related, has decided that it needs to do something
to put itself on the cultural map. To develop community pride
it has announced plans to create the largest military museum in
the southwestern part of the USA.
Museums/USA
keeps a directory of the nation's museums, broken down into categories
and by individual states. California, a world food production
center and culinary mecca, has only one institution devoted to
food. COPIA, in Napa, identifies itself as a center exhibiting
wine and food art with no permanent collections. ( California
has several museums dedicated to farm heritage, as well as museums
of off-beat subjects such as skateboards and strippers. )
Museums USA has twenty-four museum categories including
one for "military." There are no categories for food
or agriculture.
15,403
Museums
149
military museums
Musee, an online directory of the world's museums
is divided into 126 categories, including listings for food, drink,
agriculture and military museums.
37,000
museums
1,200
military museums
722 agriculture museums
131 specialty food museums
70 beverage museums
only
7 museums
about food and eating
The Food Subject As Entertainment
The
Land
Pavilions at Walt Disney World's Epcot Center in Florida and
now in California's Disneyland are consistently some of the most
popular Disney attractions. Visitors can see lettuces, tomatoes,
and cucumbers growing hydroponically in greenhouses demonstrating
intensive farming systems. The Land Pavilions also generate a
large volume of follow-up inquiries from visitors. It's no mystery
why. We all eat, and we're interested in food. And food is entertaining.
In
the early 1990's we were guest curators of two food-related exhibits
running simultaneously in the national museums of Canada and the
United States. Our collections and research illustrating the history
of the potato were the basis of "The Amazing Potato"
exhibition at Canada's National Museum of Technology in Ottawa.
( Interestingly, the Canadian public, when surveyed regarding
a new exhibition, picked first "food," and then "the
potato" over all other topics.) The exhibition, planned to
run a year,was extended for two more years. Our collections on
the potato and corn were key components of the Smithsonian's National
Museum of Natural History's "Seeds of Change" exhibition
at the time of the Quincentenary of the Columbus voyage to the
Western Hemisphere. Visitor surveys indicated that these food-related
exhibits were some of the most popular in each museum's history.
People
are fascinated with the story of food. We've been presenting programs
and exhibits on the history of the foods we eat for over a quarter
of a century and the feedback we get is always the same. Whenever
we do a program for kids in a library, for instance, pretty soon
a lot of adults are standing in the back taking in the program.
What
we find compelling are exhibits and information that feature the
foods themselves. The kinds of art and artifacts we at The FOOD
Museum have collected over the years from around the world intrigue
and capture the attention of our audiences young and old, in person
or online.
And
while we personally enjoy farm and agriculture museums, these
mostly concentrate on bygone technologies and feature old machinery
and kitchen items. Even enlivened with demonstrations of rural
arts such as horse shoeing, blacksmithing, cooking, and so on,
these museums are discovering that their audiences have become
so familiar with these activities they are less likely to visit
again.
We
have exuberant visions for a museum, maybe more than one, about
food and eating. In the meantime, we continue to develop The FOOD
Museum Online, while we seek a permanent home for the collection,
its library, archives and programs.
And
we continue to promote the establishment of more museums and exhibits
about food and eating. We welcome your comments and suggestions.
Contact us.
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your visitor comment here.
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