Secrets and tips from 7 of the world's greatest museums (gallery selection)
THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, New York City: Throughout the Met, you might be able to spot the face of Audrey Munson - several times. Seth Kamil, president of Big Onion Walking Tours, which offers a tour of the Met, explains: "She is the face and body of approximately fifteen public sculptures in New York City, including the statue atop the Municipal Building, the Strauss Memorial at 106th and Broadway, and many others - plus the Mercury Dime. She was also the first woman to appear nude in a feature-length film." Munson lived to be 104 - though she spent most of her life in an insane asylum. (Photo: Daniel Chester French, Mourning Victory from the Melvin Memorial, 1912-15 Marble, courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art)
THE BRITISH MUSEUM, London: "The Rosetta Stone - arguably the most significant archaeological discovery ever made - is only in the museum because of the undignified wrangling between French and British forces in 1801, and ended up being transferred to the British in the streets of Cairo on a cart," says archaeologist Lawrence Owens, who leads walking seminars for Context in London. "The Brits were so pleased that they even carved some graffiti on the side of it. Some of the early exhibits were pure theatre and typical of the Enlightenment curiosity cabinet. These notably included a dried thumb dug up from basement of St. James coffeehouse in 1766, a pair of glasses made from the beard of a shellfish found off Sicily in 1764, and a 1762 gift of a piece of lace made from the hair of Elizabeth the First." (Photo: Trustees of the British Museum)
THE NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART, Washington: Art historian and curator Liz Tunick, who leads walking seminars for Context in Washington, D.C., tells us that the West Building of the National Gallery housed a gymnasium for museum staff until it was converted into gallery space. The locker rooms for showering still remain. (Photo © 1989, Dennis Brack/Black Star. Courtesy of the National Gallery of Art, Washington)
THE GETTY MUSEUM, Los Angeles: Take a close look at two works: Jan Brueghel the Elder's "The Entry of the Animals into Noah's Ark" and Peter Paul Rubens' "The Calydonian Boar Hunt." No, they don't bear much outward resemblance, but it turns out that the panels they were painted on were cut from the same tree, which the Getty discovered by matching up the tree rings. The two panels were reunited after 400 years. "Rubens and Brueghel were the most renowned painters in 17th-century Antwerp, and they were also neighbors, close friends, and shared a dealer" says Julie Jaskol, the museum's assistant director of media relations. "And they clearly bought their panels from the same provider!" (Photo: J. Paul Getty Trust)
THE VATICAN, Rome: Context Travel's Jessica Stewart reveals in a Condé Nast Traveler "Secrets of the Vatican" story that the Simonetti staircase is open to the Greek Cross in the morning. Visitors who go first thing can walk down the spiral and straight to the Sistine Chapel to view it nearly empty - if they arrive early enough. (Photo: Getty Images)
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