Tag Archives: Grand Rapids Public Museum

Grand Rapids Public Museum hosts 2nd annual Collections and Cocktails event

The 1909 Austin Model 60 from the Stahl’s Automotive Foundation will be featured at this Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Collections & Cocktails event.

By Christie Bender

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) will once again host Collections & Cocktails, a new annual fundraiser focusing on the Museum’s Collections, their stories and the preservation and education with these artifacts, on Wednesday, May 2.
This year, Collections & Cocktails will focus on the Museum’s Transportation Collection, featuring dinner and signature cocktails to go along with the exciting stories of these artifacts. Tickets are available to the public and can be found at grpm.org/2018Collections-Cocktails.

 

“On behalf of the Grand Rapids Public Museum, we are excited to host this event to bring attention to the preservation and maintenance of our Collections,” said Gina Schulz, the Museum’s VP of Corporate and Foundation Giving. “This year we are focusing on the Transportation Collection, that boast some of the largest artifacts that we care for. This event allows the community to see many more of these items, as well as give support to keep them for generations to come.”

 

Demonstrate your passion for preserving these important artifacts along with the thousands of others pieces in the GRPM Collections by supporting this event through a sponsorship, purchasing a table or individual tickets. More information on the event and funding opportunities can be found at grpm.org/2018Collections-Cocktails or by contacting Gina Schulz at gschulz@grpm.org or 616.929.1705.

 

One of the Museum’s most memorable pieces to be displayed at the event is Grand Rapids’ own 1949 Herpolsheimer Child Passenger Train. Many local residents remember riding this well-known train as children while shopping in the Herpolsheimer’s department store downtown. This iconic piece has been preserved in the Museum’s Collection since 2000, and Collections & Cocktails attendees will be able to relive (or experience for the first time) a piece of their childhood.

 

The GRPM has brought a very rare Grand Rapids made car to the Museum for this event and the summer, an Austin Model 60. This particular Austin, believed to be one of only four remaining in the world, has been meticulously restored to its original showroom condition. This piece is on loan from Stahl’s Automotive Foundation. The Austin Automobile Company was founded by Walter Austin in Grand Rapids in 1903, the same year the Ford Motor Company was started in Detroit. The Austin Automobile Company hand-built only a few vehicles each year, but was well known for their “high grade pleasure cars.” In 1909, an Austin Model 60 would have retailed for $7,000.

 

A long time piece of the GRPM Collections that hasn’t been on display since 2013, the Lorraine automobile is coming out of storage for Collections & Cocktails. This Model 20-T, the only known surviving example of a Lorraine, and is a rare reminder that more than furniture was made in the Furniture City. The Lorraine Motors Corporation was one of several Grand Rapids Car manufacturers in the early 20th century. About 250 to 300 Lorraine automobiles were assembled in Grand Rapids each year between 1919 and 1921. The bodies were produced by Ligonier of Ligonier, Indiana. The engines were made in North Tonawanda, New York, by Herschell-Spillman, the same company that built the GRPM’s carousel. Lorraines were medium-priced autos. This 4-door convertible, with a 4 cylinder, 192 cubic inch engine, was listed at $1,425 in 1920. The Lorraine will be part of the Museum’s core offerings located on the 2nd floor.

The Public Museum’s 1913 Indian Model E Motorcycle also will be on display.

 

 

Other rarely seen artifacts being featured at the event include the GRPM’s 1913 Indian Model E Motorcycle (last displayed 2011-2012) and the unique clam shell or folding boat (1941-1946) donated by Thomas Devine and manufactured by Jack Henningsen of Twin Port a Boat.
To see more of the Museum’s Collections visit the GRPM online database GRPMcollections.org.

Concerts Under the Stars hosts Major Murphy at Chaffee Planetarium

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) continues the 2018 Concerts Under the Stars series in the Chaffee Planetarium with new music from Grand Rapids’ band Major Murphy on Thursday, April 12.

 

Major Murphy reimagines 1970s radio rock with bristling sensitivity for our present era. They have debuted three albums with the newest “No. 1” being released just recently on March 30, combining the sounds of rock, pop and dream pop.

 

This concert will feature a chilled-out tempo and atmosphere, and the sprawling jam, expanding in effervescent layers of psychedelia. The concert begins at 7:30 p.m., with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments, beer and other beverages will be available for purchase.

 

Major Murphy is the collaboration of Jacob Bullard, Jacki Warren, and Brian Voortman. Their first EP was recorded before they had ever formally played a show, but in the months following its release, the band hit the road and begin playing out regularly. These shows gave Major Murphy a new perspective and confidence to their music.

 

This concert will feature a custom light show on the planetarium’s dome, which boasts state-of-the-art technology with 4k visuals and surround sound for an amazing immersive concert experience.

 

Tickets are $10 for GRPM members, $12 for non-members if purchased in advance, and $15 for non-members on the day of the concert. Tickets are currently on sale at grpm.org, by calling 616.929.1700 or at the Museum’s front desk.

 

The final 2018 Concerts Under the Stars will take place on May 15 with local band Mertle.

Area organizations offer lots of activities to make sure no student is left bored this spring break

The Grand Rapids Art Museum will be offering free admission to students.

 

Looking for something to do on spring break? Well, there are lots of camps and activities available through a variety of organizations. Here are just a few ideas.

 

 

Wyoming and Kentwood Parks and Recreation Departments

 

There is always something to do at a local park and with the weather warming, a chance to get some fresh air is always a nice option. Along with that, make sure to check out your local parks and recreation department for programs or activities taking place during the week. It is also a good time to check out the spring and summer leagues. For the Wyoming Parks and Recreation Department, click here.

 

Kentwood Parks and Recreation will be hosting its annual Easter Egg Hunt on Saturday, March 31 at 10 a.m. at Kentwood City Hall, 4900 Breton Ave. SE. Also, Kentwood is currently taking applications for the Kentwood Farmers Market, which opens in June. For Kentwood Parks and Recreation Department, click here.

 

 

The Salvation Army Kroc Center

 

Family art projects, bounce houses, swimming, and climbing are just a few of the family–friendly activity options available at The Salvation Army Kroc Center during Spring Break 2018, April 2–6.

 

The Salvation Army Kroc Center is located at 2500 S. Division Ave.

 

Open swim, climbing wall, and game room hours will be extended. Special guest presentations at 11 a.m. each morning include Blandford Nature Center, Binder Park Zoo, puppeteer Kevin Kammeraad, and interactive drumming with WaZoBia.

 

Day passes are only $7.50 for all ages, and Kroc Center members get unlimited free access to all activities. All children age 11 and under must be supervised by an adult while visiting the Kroc Center. New this year, the Kroc has added a “family room” where parents and kids looking for a break can have snacks, play games, and more.

 

Also new this year is an annual Family Pool & Play Pass, cost is $99, which provides day pass access to the Kroc Center for a family of up to five people during the most popular open swim times – Saturdays and Sundays, Spring Break, and Christmas Break.

 

For more information, visit GrKrocCenter.org/springbreak or call 616-588-7200.

 

 

The Grand Rapids Art Museum will host two drop-in art studio programs, April 3 and 7.

Grand Rapids Art Museum

 

The Grand Rapids Art Museum will offer free admission to kids 17 and under during Spring Break, April 3-7.

 

The Grand Rapids Art Museum is located at 101 Monroe Center NW.

 

Free admission includes entry to all of the Museum’s current exhibits, as well as related programming offered at the Museum on the day of the visit. The Museum will offer two drop-in art studio programs during the week, April 3 and 7 from 1-4 p.m., as well as a drop-in tour, April 7 from 1-2 p.m.

 

GRAM’s current exhibits are “Alexis Rockman: The Great Lakes Cycle,” exploring the past, present, and future of North America’s Great Lakes; “From Wilderness to Resource: A Story in Pictures,” a selection from GRAM’s permanent collection designed to complement the Rockman exhibit; and “Tony Mendoza: Cats and Dogs,” featuring the work of Ohio-based photographer and writer of Cuban descent Tony Mendoza.

 

For more information, visit artmuseumgr.org/exhibitions

 

 

At the Grand Rapids Public Museum, students can create a mermaid or unicorn puppet.

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) will have its two traveling exhibits, planetarium shows, hands-on activities and more from Spring Break, which will run from March 30 – April 8.

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum is at 272 Pearl St. NW.

 

Museum hours will be extended until 8 p.m. from April 2 – 6. The Museum will be closed Sunday, April 1 for Easter.

 

Special hands-on activities include creating your own Chinese dragons, make-and-take your own mermaid or unicorn puppet, playing BIG games, build structures with Keva blocks and Magformers magnetic shapes, and special Museum artifacts on a touch-it table.  Visitors can explore the mythical creatures from around the globe in the “Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids,” and become a water droplet in “Water’s Extreme Journey.”

 

Keva blocks and Magformers magnetic shapes

On Tuesday, April 3, there will be a special Science Tuesday activity in the Museum’s Watershed Lab using an augmented reality sandbox. Visitors will change the topography of a land map, creating different terrains from lakes to mountains to learn how a watershed works. This Lab will be free with general admission.

 

The GRPM will be offering additional Chaffee Planetarium show times for the most popular shows. Planetarium shows are $4 with general admission, $5 for planetarium-only tickets and free to Museum members.

 

For more information on Spring Break activities including planetarium shows and for tickets visit grpm.org.

 

 

Grand Rapids Ballet

 

The Grand Rapids Ballet will offer two programs for youth during the week of April 2-6, a Spring Break for Kids day series of one-hour program of entertainment and activities, and a series of longer Day Camps focused on dance and physical fitness activities.

 

The Grand Rapids Ballet is located at 341 Elllsworth Avenue SW, Grand Rapids.

 

Spring Break for Kids will run Monday-Friday, April 2-6, from 10:30 to11:30 a.m., at the Peter Martin Wege Theatre. Doors open every day at 10:30 a.m. for fun activities including a Gymco obstacle course and costume dress-up, followed by a 30-minute kid-friendly ballet, “Mother Goose’s Friends”. Tickets are $7 per day.

 

Spring Break Day Camp will run Monday-Thursday, April 2-5, at the Grand Rapids Ballet School. Each day of Day Camp includes social and physical activity for boys and girls ages 3-6 years. In the camps, campers will learn the fundamentals of etiquette, cooperation, goal-setting, musicality, flexibility, strength, and more. Campers can enroll in one day or all four days For cost, call 616-454-4771 (Ext. 17). The camps are also available for entire weeks during summer vacation.

 

For more information call 616-454-4771 (Ext.10) or visit GRBallet.com.

 

Grand Rapids Mini Maker Faire is back for fifth year, call for makers is now open

By Christie Bender

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum just announced the 2018 Grand Rapids Mini Maker Faire dates for its fifth annual event, as well as the registration for makers is now open. This year’s Grand Rapids Maker Faire will take place August 18 and 19.

 

Maker Faire celebrates community members who are making or creating things by inviting them to share with the public what they have made. Everyone is a maker, and unfinished products are also encouraged.

 

Individuals and groups can now sign up at GrandRapids.MakerFaire.com. This year’s Maker Faire will be held at the Grand Rapids Public Museum and nearby Grand Valley State University’s Kennedy Hall of Engineering.

 

Maker Faire is looking for participants who enjoy tinkering, hacking, building and designing new technology-based inventions. Any groups or individuals interested in participating in the Maker Faire should complete the application at GrandRapids.MakerFaire.com. The Call for Makers will close on July 27.

 

Spots are first come, first serve basis with openings inside both the GRPM and GVSU as well as outside on the GRPM’s lawn. Makers participation is free for those showcasing. Makers interested in selling products at their booth require a small commercial fee.

 

Part science fair, part county fair, and part something entirely new, Maker Faire is an all-ages gathering that celebrates community members who are making things. All of these “makers” come to Maker Faire to show what they have made and to share what they have learned.

 

Featuring both established and emerging local “makers,” the Grand Rapids Maker Faire is a family-friendly celebration featuring tech enthusiasts, crafters, educators, hobbyists, engineers, artists, students and commercial exhibitors.

 

The Faire will be open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on August 18 and 19. Tickets will go on sale in early summer.

 

The Grand Rapids Mini Maker Faire is being organized by a collaborative committee that includes members from: DTE Energy, GR Makers, The Geek Group, Grand Rapids Community College, Grand Valley State University, Kent District Library, Kent Intermediate School District, Michigan Crossroads Council- Boy Scouts of America, WMCAT and the Grand Rapids Public Museum.

 

Follow the development of the Grand Rapids Maker Faire on Twitter @makerfaireGR, as well as on its Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/makerfairegr/ .

 

Grand Rapids Mini Maker Faire is independently organized and operated under license from Maker Media, Inc.

Grand Rapids Public Museum announces new concert with Mertle added to Concert Under Stars Series

By Christie Bender

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

Due to popular demand, a sixth, additional concert has been added to this year’s Concerts Under the Stars at the Grand Rapids Public Museum. Local band Mertle will be playing in the Chaffee Planetarium May 15.

Visitors can sit back, relax and enjoy the fully immersive audio and visual experience, with live band and live visuals on the planetarium dome.

Mertle is a local alternative, indie pop/rock band comprised of Max McKinnon (vocals, and keys), Kendall Wright (guitar), Connor Wright (drums) and Jared Demeester (bass).  Mertle has opened for The Shins, as well as other shows in the Lansing and Grand Rapids areas, including at the Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park.

This concert will also feature visuals by Meghan Moe Beitiks.

“We are excited to be adding an additional band to this year’s line-up,” said Kate Moore, VP of Marketing and PR for the GRPM. “The concerts have continued to be popular and sell out before each date, so we are bringing another opportunity for the community to experience music in the Chaffee Planetarium.”

The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m., with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments, beer and other beverages will be available for purchase.

Tickets are $10 for GRPM members, $12 for non-members if purchased in advance, and $15 for non-members on the day of the concert. Tickets are currently on sale at grpm.org, by calling 616-929-1700 or at the Museum’s front desk.

The remaining 2018 Concerts Under the Stars Series continues with Major Murphy on April 12 and will close with Mertle on May 15.

Dan Rickabus is next featured performer Museum’s ‘Concerts Under the Stars’

Dan Rickabus performs at the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Chaffee Planetarium

By Kate Moore

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) continues the 2018 Concerts Under the Stars series in the Chaffee Planetarium on March 22 hosting Dan Rickabus and his 9-piece band.

 

Drummer, producer and songwriter Dan Rickabus spends his days crafting sounds for The Crane Wives, Public Access, Seth Bernard and many others in Michigan’s beautiful music community. Last summer, he released a new collaborative solo record called “Void / Journal” – an album of cosmically conscious, existentially charged, groove-oriented dream-folk that explores what it means to be alive and breathing amidst the limitless beyond.

 

Dan has gathered a 9-piece band of his friends and collaborators to perform the vibrant, immersive music of “Void / Journal” in the mystical setting of the planetarium.

 

Dan Rickabus will be joined by a nine-piece band of friends.

“This performance is an honor and a dream come true for us,” Rickabus said. “We can’t wait to share this artistic adventure with you.”

 

This concert will feature a custom light show on the planetarium’s dome by Nate Eizenga. Nate is a Grand Rapids native who moonlights as a video artist, focusing on accompaniment for live musical performances. By using controllers intended for digital music production to create, mix and manipulate video in real time he crafts a visual experience that toes the line between artistic spontaneity and musical synchronicity. Since his first public show in 2015 Nate has performed for numerous events, including past Concerts Under the Stars shows.

 

The recently renovated planetarium boasts state-of-the-art technology with 4k visuals and surround sound, for an amazing immersive concert experience.

 

Concerts will begin at 7:30 p.m., with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments, beer and other beverages will be available for purchase.

 

Tickets are $10 for GRPM members, $12 for non-members if purchased in advance, and $15 for non-members on the day of the concert. Tickets are currently on sale at grpm.org, by calling 616-929-1700 or at the Museum’s front desk.

 

The next 2018 Concerts Under the Stars will take place on April 12 with the alternative rock sounds of Major Murphy.

Grand Rapids Public Museum to Host Free Day March 18

Finny, the finback whale skeleton, greats visitors as they enter the Grand Rapids Public Museum.

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) will open its doors free of charge on Sunday, March 18, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Visitors will receive free general admission on this day to explore the Museum’s three floors of core exhibits at no cost, and get hands on with agriculture-themed activities from Kent County Farm Bureau and artifacts from the GRPM Collections.

 

“Thanks to Kent County Farm Bureau, we are excited to offer the community the chance to explore the Museum free of charge again this year,” said Kate Moore, Vice President of Marketing & PR at the GRPM. The Kent County Farm Bureau is sponsoring the event. “The GRPM continues to be the West Michigan hub for hands-on science, history and cultural education, and continue to increase access to the Collections for all.”

 

“On behalf of more than 1,200 Kent County Farmers, Kent County Farm Bureau is excited to welcome our City family and friends to the Grand Rapids Public Museum to see agriculture in action,” said Kent County Farm Bureau Board President Jim May.

 

Another popular exhibit at the Grand Rapids Public Museum is the Streets of Old Grand Rapids.

The GRPM offers fun, hands-on learning opportunities for all ages through a variety of core and traveling exhibits. Visitor favorites include the Streets of Old Grand Rapids, an immersive exhibit that transports visitors back to 19th century of downtown Grand Rapids, and West Michigan Habitats, that showcases the vast wildlife found in West Michigan.

 

The current traveling exhibit Water’s Extreme Journey will be included free of charge for visitors on the Museum’s Free Day. Visitors will become a water droplet as they enter an experiential maze to learn about water conservation.

 

Additional experiences for visitors include the special traveling exhibit Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids, planetarium shows and the Museum’s 1928 Spillman Carousel – that are available for an additional charge.

 

The free day will be held during the Museum’s normal hours, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, March 18. For more information on the event, visit grpm.org.

 

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids runs through May 20 at the Grand Rapids Public Museum.

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids features models and replicas of preserved specimens as well as cast fossils of prehistoric animals to investigate how they could have, through misidentification, speculation, fear, or imagination, inspired the development of some legendary creatures.

 

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids offers many interactive stations throughout the exhibition. Visitors can build their own dragon on an engaging touch-screen and watch it come alive before their eyes in a virtual environment.

 

Visitors touch casts of a narwhal tusk to discover how they lent credence to the centuries-old belief in the unicorn. Hands-on stations also include the lower jaw of Gigantopithecus (extinct group of apes) and a life-size reproduction of the talon of a Haast’s eagle.  

 

Dragons, Unicorns, and Mermaids explores how some animals could have been misidentified as mythical creatures. 

Admission to Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids is $12 for adults, $7 for children, $9 for Kent County resident adults, $4 for Kent County resident children, and $2 for all Museum members! Tickets include general admission to the Museum.

 

Mythic Creatures: Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids is organized by the American Museum of Natural History, New York (amnh.org), in collaboration with the Australian National Maritime Museum, Sydney; Canadian Museum of History, Gatineau-Quebec; Fernbank Museum of Natural History, Atlanta; and The Field Museum, Chicago.

Astronomer discusses possibility of ninth planet in upcoming presentation

Astronomer Dr. David Gerdes visits Grand Rapids to talk about the possibility of a ninth planet.

 

Is there a ninth planet after all? The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) and Grand Rapids Amateur Astronomical Association (GRAAA) hosts Dr. David Gerdes, one of the lead astronomers searching for the ninth planet, on Thursday, March 15 at Schuler Books, 2660 28th St. SE.

 

There was a great deal of controversy when Pluto was officially removed as a planet in 2006, and it has not completely died down in the more than a decade that has elapsed since its demotion. Now there is growing evidence that a much larger planet lies beyond Pluto, and its discovery would mean that the solar system has nine planets again.

 

On Thursday, March 15 at 7 p.m., Dr. Gerdes will explain his latest research in a presentation The Coolest Place in the Solar System: New Worlds Beyond Neptune, located at Schuler Books, 2660 28th St. SE. The event is free and open to the public.

 

As one of the leading astronomers searching for a ninth planet, Dr. Gerdes is a well-known Professor of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Michigan. Gerdes is currently located in Chile and utilizes a large telescope for his research.

 

There may be more than one additional planet lurking beyond Neptune. As Dr. Gerdes will explain, whatever is out there is so far away that any reflected sunlight would be very feeble, so its detection involves study of how its gravity effects other objects lying near the fringes of the solar system. These would include Pluto and other Kyper Belt objects.

 

Dr. Gerdes believes telescopes may now be big enough to detect worlds beyond Neptune if they knew where to look. He and colleagues are making calculations that will tell astronomers where to point telescopes to search. An announcement of a major discovery could be coming in the next few years.

 

This event is co-sponsored by the GRPM and GRAAA. For more information at graaa.org under Events Calendar.

Grand Rapids Public Museum shines a microscope on the human microbiome

“Zoo in You: Microbes” opens at the Grand Rapids Public Museum May 19.

By Kate Moore

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

Trillions of microbes make their homes inside our bodies, and the Grand Rapids Public Museum will introduce you to them! Opening May 19, Zoo in You: Microbes, allows all ages to explore this fascinating and complex world inside us that is our microbiome— a dynamic, adaptable and delicately balanced ecosystem much like any other found in nature.

 

At Zoo in You, learn who our constant microbial companions are, where they live, how diverse they are and in what ways scientists are discovering just how important they are to our personal health. Visitors are invited to explore this vibrant world of our inner microorganisms through engaging, interactive, and bilingual exhibits and programs.

 

“The Museum is excited to take our visitors to a microscopic level to have fun while learning about the organisms who live inside us,” said Kate Moore, VP of Marketing & PR. “This exhibit is a great, hands-on way for all ages to learn more about science. The community can look forward to additional science programming and events to go along with this new exhibit!”

 

Zoo in You has three thematic areas:  Meet the Microbes, Our Complex Ecosystems and Exploring our Microbiome:

 

Meet the Microbes

Go on an interactive journey to learn all about the four major types of microbes that live in and on us! From bacteria to archaea, fungi to viruses, these tiny non-human organisms outnumber our human cells ten to one. Through hands-on activities, learn about “good” microbes, watch how our microbiome reacts to every day occurrences, and manipulate a marble maze to learn how a newborn baby is first colonized by microbes.

 

Our Complex Ecosystems

Delve deeper into the lives of microbes with green screen technology to get a “weather report” on the climate conditions of your nose, mouth, gut or skin, and a touch-screen video game that challenges guests to keep gut microbes in balance. Adults and kids alike are invited to explore the eye-opening hand “washing” station to observe just how long it takes to be free of germs.

 

Exploring Our Microbiome

Get up close and personal with microbes as they answer tough questions and use a microscope to examine real preserved specimens. Build your own viruses using puzzle pieces, assemble DNA strands as quickly as possible, and even try your hand at matching DNA patterns to the correct microbes. Plus, a unique photo opportunity allows you to imagine what they would look like as a microbe.

 

Zoo In You is free with general admission to the GRPM and runs through September 2, 2018. For more information, visit grpm.org/ZooInYou.

 

Museum members can be the first to see the exhibit on Saturday, May 19 from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. at the members only preview! Members can RSVP for the member preview at grpm.org/ZooInYou.

 

Zoo in You was produced and is toured by the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry. This exhibit was made possible by a Science Education Partnership Award (SEPA) from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Under the Stars features one woman band at the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Chaffee Planetarium

Jes Kramer

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) continues the 2018 Concerts Under the Stars series on March 1 hosting one woman band Jes Kramer for a fully immersive audio and visual experience in the Chaffee Planetarium.

 

This concert will feature a custom light show on the planetarium’s dome that complements Kramer’s music. The recently renovated planetarium boasts state-of-the-art technology with 4k visuals and surround sound, for an amazing immersive concert experience.

 

Concerts will begin at 7:30 p.m., with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments, beer and other beverages will be available for purchase.

 

Tickets are $10 for GRPM members, $12 for non-members if purchased in advance, and $15 for non-members on the day of the concert. Tickets are currently on sale at grpm.org, by calling 616.929.1700 or at the Museum’s front desk.

 

The 2018 Concerts Under the Stars Series will continue March 22 with alternative folk by Dan Rickabus and April 12 with the alternative rock sounds of Major Murphy.

Grand Rapids Public Museum celebrates space exploration during ‘Roger That!’ event

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) announced it would host a second year of Roger That! featuring retired NASA Astronaut Guion “Guy” Bluford to celebrate of space exploration and the life of Roger B. Chaffee. Roger That! is a multi-day experience starting on Feb. 16 with activities for school field trips and an academic conference, and Saturday, Feb. 17 with a public celebration. “Roger That!” is planned in partnership with Grand Valley State University (GVSU).

 

On Saturday, Feb. 17, “Roger That!” will include exciting and educational exhibitions and activities throughout the GRPM including docent-led presentations about the early life of Roger B. Chaffee, telescope demonstrations with the Grand Rapids Amateur Astronomical Association (GRAAA), hands-on activities including solar system bracelets and planispheres, and more. As part of this celebration, all planetarium shows on February 17 will be $2 off!

 

A special presentation by former astronaut Guion “Guy” Bluford will take place in the Museum’s Meijer Theater on Saturday, February 17 at 11 a.m. Guy Bluford will present Flying in Space: The Space Shuttle and Beyond. Bluford flew four missions for NASA from 1983-1992, and is best known as the first African American to fly in space, during his first flight, STS-8, on the Challenger. After retiring from service as an astronaut in 1993, Bluford entered the business world, and he continues to give talks throughout the country about his experiences with NASA and the future of America’s space program. Tickets to this presentation are $2 for GRPM members and $10 for non-members, and can be purchased at grpm.org/Roger-That. Tickets include general admission to the Museum for the day.

 

Visitors on February 17 can also learn about the future of space exploration through student-submitted projects. Student design challenge submissions will be on display in the GRPM’s Galleria.

 

Field Trips – February 16

Local students will have an opportunity to learn about space exploration through a series of programs and a presentation at the Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium at the GRPM on February 16! Hands-on activities include Magformers workshop, exploring the GRPM’s space-related artifacts including tektite, meteorite, and a sample of a space shuttle tile, learning more about Roger B. Chaffee, creating their own solar system necklace, engineering activities led by area engineers and educators including bridge building, robotics, water treatment and more. Schools interested in booking a field trip can reserve at grpm.org/schools.

 

Academic and Public Conference

The GVSU conference, “Roger That! A Celebration of Space Exploration in Honor of Roger B. Chaffee,” will take place February 16-17 at the DeVos Center on the Pew Grand Rapids Campus. Roger B. Chaffee was an astronaut and Grand Rapids native who died during testing on Apollo I in 1967.

 

The conference will kick off with a presentation, “Art/Space: NASA Space Art Program and Beyond,” by Grand Valley illustration professors Durwin Talon and Guin Thompson, followed by breakout sessions featuring a variety of science, art and society topics related to space exploration. The conference is free and open to the public; register by February 11at www.gvsu.edu/rogerthat.

 

Apollo Tragedy

On January 27, 1967, tragedy struck NASA’s Apollo program when a flash fire occurred in command module 012 during a launch pad test of the Apollo/Saturn space vehicle being prepared for the first piloted flight, the AS-204 mission. Three astronauts, Lt. Col. Virgil I. Grissom, a veteran of Mercury and Gemini missions; Lt. Col. Edward H. White, the astronaut who had performed the first United States extravehicular activity during the Gemini program; and Grand Rapids Native Roger B. Chaffee, an astronaut preparing for his first spaceflight, died in this tragic accident. The Grand Rapids Public Museum renamed its planetarium to the Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium the same year.

 

Grand Rapids Public Museum

The Grand Rapids Public Museum is an invaluable, publicly-owned institution that is home to more than 250,000 unique artifacts that tell the history of Kent County and beyond, houses the only planetarium in the region, and is responsible for protecting the Norton Indian Mounds, a national historic landmark. The Grand Rapids Public Museum is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, with its main location in downtown Grand Rapids, MI at 272 Pearl Street, NW. For additional information including hours of operation, admission fees and exhibit/event listings, please visit www.grpm.org.

GRAM’s popular ‘Andy Warhol’s American Icons’ exhibit will end its run this Sunday

Grand Rapids Art Museum (supplied).

Organized by the Grand Rapids Art Museum, Andy Warhol’s American Icons showcases Warhol’s vision and celebration of America by bringing together paintings, prints, photographs, and films that create a handbook of American cultural icons.

 

“One of the Museum’s first exhibitions in its new building was Rapid Exposure: Warhol in Series in spring 2008. We can’t think of a better way to celebrate our 10th anniversary at 101 Monroe Center than by bringing back key works by this quintessential contemporary artist,”  commented GRAM’s Director and CEO Dana Friis-Hansen during the Oct. 28 grand opening of the American Icons exhibit.

 

American Icons spotlights iconic figures like Marilyn Monroe, Sitting Bull, Muhammad Ali, Liz Taylor, and one of the most famous Grand Rapidians, Gerald R. Ford. Products and symbols can be icons as well; the exhibition includes Warhol’s well-known Campbells soup can screenprints and an important early painting on loan from the Whitney Museum of American art, Green Coca-Cola Bottles (1962), among other symbols of America. American Icons draws on artworks from GRAM’s collection, as well as works from private collections and other public art institutions throughout the country, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, The Andy Warhol Museum, and the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts.

 

More on the exhibit and hours: http://www.artmuseumgr.org/2017/04/07/andy-warhols-american-icons/

 

Local artist Edye Evans Hyde featured performer at Museum’s next ‘Concerts Under the Stars’

Edye Evans Hyde

The Grand Rapids Public Museum continues the 2018 Concerts Under the Stars series on Thursday, Feb. 8, hosting local jazz vocalist Edye Evans Hyde for a fully immersive audio and visual experience in the Chaffee Planetarium.

 

Hyde has been singing jazz, blues and pop music for more than 30 years in West Michigan, Los Angeles, Asia and Europe. Hyde was the 2011 West Michigan Jazz Society Musician of the Year. Over the years, she shared the stage with world-renowned blues singer Linda Hopkins, pop singer Michael Bolton, vocalist Maria Muldaur, actress Connie Stevens, the late Ray Charles, and Cuban trumpet player Arturo Sandoval.

 

Each concert features a live custom light show on the planetarium’s dome that complement the various genres throughout the series. The recently renovated planetarium boasts state-of-the-art technology with 4k visuals and surround sound, for an amazing immersive concert experience.

 

Concerts will begin at 7:30 p.m., with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. Refreshments, beer and other beverages will be available for purchase.

 

Tickets are $10 for GRPM members, $12 for non-members if purchased in advance, and $15 for non-members on the day of the concert. Tickets are currently on sale at grpm.org, by calling 616-929-1700 or at the Museum’s front desk.

 

The 2018 Concerts Under the Stars Series will continue Mar. 1 with one-woman-band Jes Kramer, Mar. 22 with alternative folk by Dan Rickabus, and will close on Apr. 12 with the alternative rock sounds of Major Murphy.

Grand Rapids Public Museum hosts live mermaid in current exhibit

Mermaid Phantom visits the Grand Rapids Public Museum this month.

By Katie Moore

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

A live mermaid will be visiting the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) Jan. 13 and 14 as part of the Museum’s Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids exhibit.

 

For this special weekend, visit Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids to explore the various mythical creatures of the world and meet Mermaid Phantom! Mermaid Phantom will be in the exhibit from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. both January 13 and 14. Visitors can talk to Phantom, ask her questions about mermaids and mythical creatures, touch her tail and take photos with her!

 

“I am so excited to come warm up my fins at the Grand Rapids Public Museum when I visit the Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids the weekend of Jan. 13 and 14,” said Mermaid Phantom. “I haven’t seen humans in Lake Michigan since last summer! I hope I’ll meet plenty of people so we can take tons of pictures together… and talk about mermaid things too!”

 

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids featuring models and replicas of preserved specimens as well as cast fossils of prehistoric animals to investigate how they could have, through misidentification, speculation, fear, or imagination, inspired the development of some legendary creatures.

 

Admission to Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids is $12 for adults, $7 for children, $9 for Kent County resident adults, $4 for Kent County resident children, and $2 for all Museum members! Tickets include general admission to the Museum, and can be purchased online at grpm.org or by calling 616.929.1700.

 

Mermaid Phantom will be talking about mermaid life along with discussing other mythical creatures.

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids offers many interactive stations throughout the exhibition. Visitors can build their own dragon on an engaging touch-screen and watch it come alive before their eyes in a virtual environment.

 

Visitors will touch casts of a narwhal tusk to discover how they lent credence to the centuries-old belief in the unicorn. Hands-on stations also include the lower jaw of Gigantopithecus (extinct group of apes) and a life-size reproduction of the talon of a Haast’s eagle.  

 

This exhibit is located on the Museum’s third floor and runs through May 20.

 

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids is organized by the American Museum of Natural History, New York (amnh.org), in collaboration with the Australian National Maritime Museum, Sydney; Canadian Museum of History, Gatineau-Quebec; Fernbank Museum of Natural History, Atlanta; and The Field Museum, Chicago.

Public Museum extends its weekend hours starting Jan. 6

The Grand Rapids Public Museum. (Supplied)

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) just announced changes to open hours for 2018 starting this Saturday, Jan. 6, including earlier hours on Sundays.

 

Starting this weekend, visitors can visit the Museum from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. This provides more opportunities for visitors to take advantage of the GRPM as the community hub for science, history and culture.

 

“We are excited to open earlier on Sundays for our visitors,” said Kate Moore, the Museum’s Vice President of Marketing & PR. “Based on visitor patterns we are shifting our hours to better accommodate our guests to be open when they want to visit us.”

 

The GRPM will be open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. For more information on upcoming exhibits, events and more, visit grpm.org.

 

The Museum will no longer offer their extended evening hours on Tuesday nights with plans to do more regular evening programming at the Museum, including the Concerts Under the Stars series and Beer Explorers.

On Tap: Railtown takes over Ionia, 57 Brew Pub sold, beer & doughnuts

Railtown Brewing Company knows its beers and has the taps to proved it. (grnow.com)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org 

 

Kentwood’s Railtown Brewing Company — OK, actually Dutton’s Railtown — will be invading downtown Grand Rapids Ionia Avenue next week when several holiday variations of its Good Mooed milk stout are featured at a Tap Take Over at the Craft Beer Cellar.

 

According to Facebook posts by both brewer and tapper, the Railtown Good Mooed Tap Take Over will take place Thursday, Dec, 28, from 6-10 p.m. The Craft Beer Cellar is located at 404 Ionia Ave. SW.

 

Plan is, at this point, to have four versions of Railtown’s milk stout on tap. In addition to its Good Mooed (a true-to-style milk stout), also available will be Festive Mooed (featuring coffee, cinnamon and nutmeg), Best Mooed Ever (with coconut, almond and chocolate — think Almond Joy), and Viscous Mooed, which is described as “A completely new and experimental brew for Railtown. The base remains true to the Good Mooed brand however, it was double mashed leading to an ABV of 10.3 percent. They also added a generous amount of bittersweet cocoa. The resulting brew is thick, rich, and chocolaty with a nice balance between sweet and bitter.”

 

Oh ya, there will also be a couple other non-mooed kegs from Railtown on tap for those not into being mooed.

 

Also, remember there is free street parking at downtown parking meters after 5 p.m. weekdays. For more information visit the Facebook pages of either.

 

Greenville’s 57 Brew Pub and microbrewery sold, taps and all 

 

After five years in business, and plenty of great beers brewed and backyard concerts held, the 57 Brew Pub & Bistro has been sold to investment group HMV Holdings, according to a press release by Calder Capital.

 

HMV Holdings is a partnership between Andy Hurst, Jason Mahar, and Marc Vander Velde, who all have strong ties to the Greenville area and are excited to share their brewpub vision with the community, Hurst told WKTV.  Planned changes include a tap expansion that will allow them to continue to brew and serve their own beer while also offering other craft beers from around the state and country.

 

Founded in 2012 — and known to locals as simply “57 Brew Pub” — the pub is a family-owned, award-winning microbrewery and restaurant, according to the release. The business was designed and built from the ground up as a brewery and brew pub, and was founded and run by Greenville locals, Bob and Dottie Olsen. They decided to sell in order to retire to a warmer climate, and say they are pleased that the brewery will continue to be operated by locals.

 

For more information on 57 Brew Pub visit 57brewpub.com .

 

GRPM Beer Explorers goes all beer and doughnuts

 

Founders Brewing Company, Robinette’s and the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) will join forces for the next museum Beer Explorers program on Jan. 11, 2018,  as Beer & Doughnuts will offer a twist on a Founders beer tasting.

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Beer Explorers program will pair Founders beer with Robinette’s doughnuts. (Supplied)

According to supplied information, this class pairs Founders beer with Robinette’s doughnuts, allowing participants to “explore their sense of taste and what combinations appeal to individual palates.”

 

The class begins at 6:30 p.m. and will be held on the 1st floor of the GRPM. Admission to each class includes general admission to the museum as well as four beer and doughnut samples. A cash bar will also be available.

 

Spoiler alert: Beer Explorers will continue on Feb. 8 with Brewery Vivant and the Pilot Malt House to learn all about how malts influence the different beers. They had me at Vivant …

 

Tickets are $22 for non-museum members and participants must be age 21 or older. Tickets can be purchased at grpm.org.

 

Public Museum creates a ‘bang’ of a show for Chaffee Planetarium on Higgs boson

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma

joanne@wktv.org

 

Imagine taking a complicated theory such as the Higgs boson and creating a 30-minute film that not only provides an explanation of the theory and its importance for all ages to understand but developing a component that children with autism would also enjoy.

 

That is exactly what the Grand Rapids Public Museum did with its recently released original production “Subatomic,” now showing at the museum’s Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium.

 

“The show focuses on arguably the most significant scientific discovery in the last 50-75 years,” said Grand Rapids Public Museum President and CEO Dale Robertson. “We tend to think about science having great discoveries happening a long time ago: Newton’s theory of gravity in 1676, Einstein’s theory of relativity in 1915.”

 

Museum visitors check out the pinball-style interactive exhibit demonstrates how the Higgs boson was discovered.

British theoretical physicist Peter Higgs proposed a theory in 1964 that stated that a field exists joining everything and giving it mass. For about the next 50 years, the scientific community set about to prove this theory with more than 10,000 scientists around the world collaborating. In 2012, the largest machine in the world, a Large Hadron Collider, discovered the Higgs boson. It also has been nicknamed “the God particle” because it’s said to be what caused the “Big Bang Theory” that created the universe many years ago but more importantly to the scientific community, it gives validity to The Standard Model of Physics, the authoritative theory for particle physics. There is also hope that the Higgs boson will help shed light on other mysteries such as dark matter.

 

“It is a very difficult concept but we are trying to do now particularly with the passage of our millage and promise to the community is to really bring significant discoveries and significance happenings to the world right here locally to Grand Rapids and doing it in a partnership way,” Robertson said.

 

And just like international collaboration that took place to discover the Higgs boson, there a large collaboration with groups like Hope Network and Ferris State University’s Kendall College of Art and Design along with a couple internationally know scientists with local ties.

 

“So this really is the biggest of big sciences but here is what is great about it two West Michigan natives were among the scientists who collaborated worldwide to discover the Higgs boson,” Roberton said, adding that Dr Jacob Bourjaily, a theoretical physicist at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen and a graduate of Forest Hills and Dr. Brian Winer, chair and professor of physics at Ohio State University and a graduate of Ottawa Hills High School, participated in the project.

 

“Both have shared with us right up front that they have very fond memories of coming on school tours [to the Public Museum], with their parents and so forth on weekends to see planet shows,” Robertson said. “It was inspiring to them as a child growing up and lead to a path that they chose for their career.

 

“We know that we touch lives here at the museum and we know that we touch lives here at the planetarium, which is exactly what it exists to do,” Robertson said.

 

Visitors look at how mass is created.

Touching lives is part of the reason why Museum officials purposefully focused on those with autism developing a program that would be particularly appealing to the autism population from the theory of universal design learning and improving the experience for everybody, Robertson said. “Subatomic” has three parts with a live presentation with the planetarium presenter right in the middle of the room talking to the audience. Then there is the full dome presentation with the audience exiting out to the hands on activities focused on specific principles.

 

“We learned through our Hope Network partnership that with certain principles, it begins the gears turning and then to immediately go into something that has multi-sensory, active learning engagement helps make that visceral, cerebral connection that will lead into increased learning,” Robertson said about offering the hands on portion after the film’s showing. Activities include a pinball-style particle collider that allows guests to try their hand at having two balls shoot through a wire frame and collide.

 

“I have been absolutely amazed with the groups here and the partnerships that takes something that is very complex and make it very accessible and is one of those great things that has happened in our life time,” “Robertson said. “Being able to take it in and understand and beginning to relate to it…I have seen it three to four times, and continue to want to comeback because I find it that inspiring.”

 

“Subatomic” is part of the Chaffee Planetarium’s regular schedule. Planetarium shows are $4 with regular admission and $5 for planetarium only. Museum members receive free admission to planetarium shows. The program meets middle school curriculum as it does explore such scientific concepts as gradational waves and atoms and the program can be reserved for school groups and field trips. For more information, visit www.grpm.org.

 

Holiday show wraps up 2017 Michigan Wurlitzer Organ Concert Series

John Lauter

Join the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) for the final Mighty Wurlitzer Organ Concerts of the 2017 series with special holiday music performances by John Lauter on Friday, Dec. 15 and Saturday, Dec. 16.

 

Lauter will present holiday cheer this season bringing to life favorite holiday songs on the GRPM’s 1928 Mighty Wurlitzer Theater Organ. Tickets are recommended to be purchased early, as they are likely to sell out.

 

A Detroit native, Lauter began his organ, piano and music studies at age 14, with his public debut at the Redford Theatre at age 16. He has presented concerts in Detroit, Grand Rapids, Boston, San Francisco, Phoenix, Denver, Wichita, Chicago, Cleveland, Atlanta, Toronto and more. John has been on the staff of the Fox Theatre, and was staff organist of the Michigan Theatre in Ann Arbor for 17 years. He is the musical curator of the Stahl Museum in Chesterfield and just completed the installation of a large Wurlitzer Theatre Organ there.

 

Shows will be held at 7 p.m. on Friday, Dec. 15, and at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 16, in the Meijer Theater at the GRPM.

 

Tickets for individual concerts are $8 for Museum member adults, $4 for Museum member children, $10 for non-member adults and $5 for non-member children. Tickets are available by visiting www.grpm.org/Organ or by calling 616-929-1700.

‘Meet Finny’ a new virtual reality, touchscreen experience at the Public Museum

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) announced today that a new virtual reality experience will be opening on Saturday, Dec. 16, featuring Finny, the Museum’s iconic 1905 finback whale skeleton that hangs above the first floor Galleria.

 

At the “Meet Finny” kiosk, visitors will come face to face with Finny in the Finny Virtual Reality experience. An HTC Vive headset and hand controls will be available to put on and spend a few minutes interacting with Finny in a whale’s natural environment.

 

Visitors will see Finny swimming around as you stand on the ocean floor, and learn about whale anatomy through the layers of its body. As visitors look through the headset, small targets will be seen on the whale, that allow users to click and learn more about fin whales. Learn about Finny’s blubber layer, internal organs and skeleton!

 

Additionally, visitors can interact with two video touchscreens to learn more about Finny and fin whales in general. Museum visitors can explore the history of Finny, how this artifact came to the Museum and see images of Finny throughout history, as well as interact with scientific findings about fin whales, including what they eat, how big they are and more!

 

“Using technology to enhance our experiences here at the Museum is one of our priorities,” said Dale Robertson, President & CEO of the GRPM. “Creating a virtual reality experience and interactive exhibit for one of our most iconic artifacts allows visitors to learn more about it from a scientific and historical perspective, while adding a new dimension to visitor trips to the Museum.”

 

“Meet Finny” was created through local partnership with Externa CGI and Freshwater Digital. “Finny Virtual Reality” is sponsored by Externa CGI.

 

“The team at Externa CGI and I were thrilled to play a part in bringing Virtual Reality (VR) to the Grand Rapids Public Museum,” said Brian Knapp, Creative Director at Externa CGI. “We all love the Museum and what it brings to our community and we are honored to be involved.”

 

​”It has been a privilege to partner with the Grand Rapids Public Museum on the Finny project. This display has been an iconic piece of Grand Rapids culture for years and we hope the new digital experience will further enhance the exhibit and inspire the public as much as it inspired our team that worked on the project,” said Matt Downey, President of Freshwater Digital.

 

“Meet Finny” and “Finny VR Experience” will be included with general admission to the Museum. For more information, visit grpm.org/MeetFinny.

 

About Finny
The finback whale skeleton was acquired by the GRPM in 1905 from the estate of Dr. Jacob W. Velie of St. Joseph, Michigan. Velie acquired it on a trip to Florida’s Gulf Coast, where the whale had washed ashore.

 

Measuring about 75 feet in length, the fin or finback whale was a mature adult weighing between 80 and 90 tons. Shaped for speed and endurance, this large baleen mammal is native to the deeper waters of the world’s oceans. The semi-flat v-shared head, tapering flippers, and broad powerful flukes aided in propelling it through the water so swiftly that few predators could overtake it. The large mouths incorporate many rows of baleen plates, a horn-like substance fringed with tiny bristles. This specimen has been restored to reflect how whales appear underwater.

Snowflake Break returns to the Grand Rapids Public Museum

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The Grand Rapids Public Museum is once again hosting family-friendly fun over this year’s holiday break! From Dec. 23 through Jan. 7, the GRPM will celebrate Snowflake Break with additional hands on activities, all included with admission.

 

Offerings will include a variety of family friendly programs and activities themed around history, science and culture, and the exhibits “Dragon, Unicorns & Mermaids and Brain: The World Inside Your Head.” Visitors can make their own take home crafts including: unique paper snowflakes, punched tin crafts and ornaments. Snowflake Break crafts will take place from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Sundays.

 

New for 2017, a feature during the holidays at the GRPM is LEGOs! See historic Grand Rapids like never before, all built from LEGOs. The 1925-era display, complete with operating trams showcases what Grand Rapids looked like during the early 20th century, including a section of the Grand River, the Morton Hotel, and the Grand Rapids Community Foundation building – the former ice house for Anheuser Busch.

 

Visitors to the Museum will be able to view this special holiday LEGO recreation now through January 26, 2018. It is on display in the Streets of Old Grand Rapids and included with general admission. “Built by the West Michigan Lego Train Club.”

 

In addition to the free with admission activities, the GRPM is hosting a holiday themed planetarium show “Let it Snow,” with additional shows daily during Snowflake Break. Visitors are also invited to go on a Santa & Elf Hunt, to find 15 historic Santas from around the World in the “Streets of Old Grand Rapids” exhibit, and 12 elves hidden throughout the 3 floors of the Museum. The Santa & Elf Hunt is included with general admission.

 

Join the Museum for late nights to see “Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids” until 8 p.m. on Dec. 26, 28, 29, and Jan. 2. The GRPM will be closed on Christmas Day and New Year’s Day.

 

Santa finds a new ride at the Grand Rapids Public Museum

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids

 

Explore the various mythical creatures of the world. Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids features models and replicas of preserved specimens as well as cast fossils of prehistoric animals to investigate how they could have, through misidentification, speculation, fear, or imagination, inspired the development of some legendary creatures.

 

“Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids” offers many interactive stations throughout the exhibition, including building your dragon in a virtual environment. Touch casts of a narwhal tusk to discover how they lent credence to the centuries-old belief in the unicorn. Hands-on stations include the lower jaw of Gigantopithecus (extinct group of apes) and a life-size reproduction of the talon of a Haast’s eagle.  

 

The exhibition includes imaginative models, paintings, and textiles, along with other cultural objects from around the world. The exhibit will bring to light surprising similarities and differences in the ways people around the world have been inspired by nature to envision and depict these strange and wonderful creatures.

 

Admission to “Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids” is $12 for adults, $7 for children, $9 for Kent County resident adults, $4 for Kent County resident children, and $2 for all Museum members! Tickets include general admission to the Museum, and can be purchased online at grpm.org.

 

“Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids” is organized by the American Museum of Natural History, New York (amnh.org), in collaboration with the Australian National Maritime Museum, Sydney; Canadian Museum of History, Gatineau-Quebec; Fernbank Museum of Natural History, Atlanta; and The Field Museum, Chicago.

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Streets of Old Grand Rapids are decked out for the holidays.

Brain: The World Inside Your Head

 

“Brain” literally takes you inside the head to probe the geography of a giant brain and stand in the midst of the brain’s constant electrical brainstorm as thoughts and sensations are generated.

 

Upon entry into the exhibit, walk through a shimmering tunnel of flashing fiber-optics that illuminates networks of neurons firing and communicating. From this dynamic beginning, “Brain” invites guests deeper into the brain to discover its basic workings. Trace this brain’s development from infancy through old age, learn the evolution of scientists’ understanding of the brain’s physiology and study the re-created skull of Phineas Gage — a man who survived after his brain was pierced by a metal rod.

 

Admission to “Brain: The World Inside Your Head” will be free with general admission. “Brain”is open now through Jan. 7, 2018.

Last chance to visit the Public Museum’s puzzle room

“The Puzzle Room: Quest for Conviction” will run through Dec. 31 at the Grand Rapids Public Museum. The Puzzle Room gives groups one hour to search a simulation of the Museum’s Archives solving puzzles and finding clues, to create a display of evidence and achieve conviction of a historic Grand Rapids murder.

 

Visitors go on a quest unique only to the Museum and its Collections to convict local 1910s dentist Arthur Waite for the famous Peck Murders in Grand Rapids. Inside the Puzzle Room, there are multiple challenges that take teamwork, communication and investigative skills to uncover, unlock and find the right pieces of evidence to convict the murderer before time runs out.

 

The deaths of John and Hannah Peck in 1916 made national headlines for Grand Rapids, as well as the trial and conviction of Waite.

 

“The Puzzle Room is a unique way for the Museum to use historical stories and artifacts to create a different way for visitors to challenge themselves, have fun and interact with the Collections,” said Kate Moore, VP of Marketing & PR at the GRPM. “With the popularity and positive feedback of The Puzzle Room, we are looking forward to creating other unique experiences in the future.”

 

The Puzzle Room opened in July 2017 as a pilot experience for Museum visitors. The Museum has been and will continue through the end of the calendar year to collect and evaluate visitor data from this experience in order to curate future experiences offered.

 

Admission to The Puzzle Room is $10 for members and $15 for general public.
The Puzzle Room experience is recommended for ages 12 and up, and for 3 to 10 participants. Visit grpm.org/PuzzleRoom for more information.

‘Let It Snow’ Holiday Show returns to the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Chaffee Planetarium

This holiday season relax and recline as the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s (GRPM) Chaffee Planetarium celebrates the holiday season with the holiday show, Let it Snow, beginning Friday, Nov. 24.

 

Let it Snow features a new variety of festive classics from Frank Sinatra and Chuck Berry to Burl Ives and Brenda Lee, and includes a stunning multi-media finale by the Trans Siberian Orchestra. The soundtrack is visually enhanced with thematic animation, and special effects, making it a must see this season for both adults and children.

 

The program is a fun and entertaining experience for all ages, especially families. Tickets are $4 each with general admission to the Museum, free to Museum members and $5 each for planetarium only tickets. For more information and show times, visit grpm.org/Planetarium.

 

The recently renovated Chaffee Planetarium offers brand new shows featuring the latest Digistar projection technology and immersive surround sound for an unbelievably rich and realistic experience. The Chaffee Planetarium reopened in March 2014 after a major renovation, including all new technology, sound system, full dome and seating. The renovation was made possible through the generosity of our donors, including the lead gift from The Wege Foundation.

 

The Chaffee Planetarium is named for Grand Rapids native, Roger B. Chaffee, who died with fellow Apollo 1 astronauts Gus Grissom and Ed White during a pre-launch test in 1967. The Planetarium was originally opened in 1994 and underwent a multi-million dollar renovation fall 2013 to spring 2014.

GR Public Museum launches new, original production in Chaffee Planetarium

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) is pleased to announce that it will open a brand new original production in the Chaffee Planetarium on Oct. 21. The show, titled Subatomic, will take visitors through the discovery of the Higgs boson, a scientific quest solved in our lifetime.

 

Subatomic will take viewers on a journey of scientific discovery. In 2012, after a 48-year search and the construction of the world’s largest machine, more than 10,000 physicists celebrated the discovery of the Higgs boson, an elusive subatomic particle crucial to physics and existence itself. Learn more about this important discovery, and how it fits into humanity’s quest for unraveling the secrets of the universe.

 

Subatomic will include a produced portion, followed by a live and interactive portion with a planetarium staff member, and hands on components just outside the Chaffee Planetarium to demonstrate the concepts highlighted in the show. The entire show will be 30 minutes in length.

 

Subatomic was developed through collaborations between the GRPM, scientists, and local experts specializing in serving neuro-diverse audiences. It will be part of the daily schedule of shows in the Chaffee Planetarium upon its launch.

 

For scientific accuracy, the Museum worked with academic advisors Dr. Jacob Bourjaily, theoretical physicist at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, Dr. Brian Winer, Chair and Professor of Physics at The Ohio State University, and Dr. Reinhard Schwienhorst, physics professor at Michigan State University. Numerous interns and staff helped produce the show with assistance from Kendall College of Art and Design for audio and sound editing. Subatomic is narrated by Grand Rapids’ own Adrian Butler.

 

“It is exciting to be part of a project like this” said Prof. Brian Winer, of The Ohio State University. “I was pleased to be one of the many experts the Museum worked with for the development of this show, which undoubtedly covers one of the important scientific discoveries in our lifetime – the Higgs boson. This show is a great way to bring a complex idea involving physics to the general public.”

 

The Museum also partnered with Dr. Mira Krishnan and Hope Network at the beginning of the show’s development, discussing the creation of an experience that would resonate for children with autism. Dr. Krishnan made recommendations for how the GRPM could visually enhance the show for these unique learners. As a consequence, a shorter show was developed, with some specialized graphics to emphasize complex scientific concepts in different ways, a live presentation was created to complement and reinforce the show, and hands-on activities were developed for students and Museum visitors to learn more scientific concepts in kinesthetic ways outside of the planetarium.

 

“I first approached the Museum looking for ways to make our community more accessible to people with differences. I was really overwhelmed with the Museum’s support for this,” said Dr. Mira Krishnan, a clinical neuropsychologist. “The Museum’s focus on universal design gave us a really common language to make Subatomic more autism and learning difference friendly. Beyond that, I did applied physics before I became a psychologist, so being a part of this particular project is an amazing dream come true for me, because it brings together so many of my passions!”

 

“This project has a great story,” said Dale Robertson, President and CEO of the Grand Rapids Public Museum. “From the very beginning, we were working with Dr. Krishnan to make this an experience that could be enjoyed by all audiences. We then brought in scientists – two of whom grew up in Grand Rapids – to consult on the content of the project. The group then took a very complex idea, physics and the discovery of a subatomic particle, and made it accessible for all learners. This is all part of our effort to embrace universal design for learning in the Planetarium and throughout the Museum.”

 

The show begins on Oct. 21 and will be part of the Chaffee Planetarium’s regular schedule. Subatomic can also be reserved for school groups and field trips. Planetarium shows are $4 with general admission and $5 for planetarium only. Museum members receive free admission to planetarium shows.

 

For additional information on the Chaffee Planetarium or to view the full schedule, visit grpm.org/planetarium.

Grand Rapids Public Museum explores the workings of the mind in upcoming exhibit

Jim Pestka, university distinguished professor of food science and human nutrition, Melissa Bates, Ph.D student and Jack Harkema, university distinguished professor of pathobiology, work at the microscope on Tuesday August 30, 2016. (Photo supplied)

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) just announced a new exhibit, The Life of the Mind, opening Saturday, October 21, telling the story of mental health treatment from the late 18th century through to today.

 

The Life of the Mind explores the evolution of mental health care based on an increase in knowledge of how the brain and mind works and on society’s changing perspectives of mental illnesses.

 

Featured artifacts from the GRPM’s extensive Collections provide fascinating evidence about the progression of medical intervention for mental illness from radical treatments of the 19th and 20th centuries, to the more research-based therapies of present-day practice.

 

This new exhibit will accompany the traveling exhibition Brain: The World Inside Your Head offering visitors a deeper dive and local angle on the subject matter.

 

“The Museum continuously works to add a Grand Rapids component to all of our experiences for the community. With the Brain exhibit, it’s a natural tie to the topic of mental health, and is a collaboration with local students at Calvin College,” said Dale Robertson, President & CEO of the GRPM. “The exhibit is unique as it tells the story of nationwide changes to mental health treatments over time using Grand Rapids artifacts.”

 

Many artifacts featured in The Life of the Mind were generously donated to the GRPM by Pine Rest Christian Mental Health Hospital where they had been originally used. Established in 1910, Pine Rest is one of only a handful of private, independent, free-standing behavioral healthcare institutions that remains in the United States, and is one of the largest with 198 inpatient beds.

 

The Life of the Mind exhibit was developed by GRPM staff, based on a student project from Calvin College, where Historical Research and Writing students presented the concepts of a mental health exhibit to tell of the technological and societal changes in advancement of mental health care. The GRPM has worked with the History Department at Calvin College since 2011 in various capacities, including provided Collections access for several classes.

 

This exhibit is running in conjunction with the Museum’s current traveling exhibit Brain: The World Inside Your head. Both exhibits are included with the cost of general admission to the Museum, and run through January 7, 2018.

 

Brain: The World Inside Your Head

 

Brain literally takes you inside the head to probe the geography of a giant brain and stand in the midst of the brain’s constant electrical brainstorm as thoughts and sensations are generated.

 

Upon entry into the exhibit, visitors walk through a shimmering tunnel of flashing fiber-optics that illuminates networks of neurons firing and communicating. From this dynamic beginning, Brain invites guests deeper into the brain to discover its basic workings. Trace this brain’s development from infancy through old age, learn the evolution of scientists’ understanding of the brain’s physiology and study the re-created skull of Phineas Gage — a man who survived after his brain was pierced by a metal rod.

 

For audiences of all ages, the experience-based exhibit employs innovative special effects, 3D reproductions, virtual reality, hands-on learning activities and interactive technology to delve into the inner workings of the brain, including its processes, potentials and mysteries.

 

 

For more information about The Life of the Mind or other exhibits and activities at the Grand Rapids Public Museum, visit grpm.org.

Grand Rapids Public Museum hosts special Halloween Mighty Wurlitzer Organ Concerts

Andrew Rogers

Join the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) for special Mighty Wurlitzer Organ concerts of the 2017 series with Andrew Rogers, accompanied by the 1925 horror silent film classic The Phantom of the Opera on Friday, Oct. 13 and Saturday, Oct. 14.

 

The Phantom of the Opera features Lon Chaney Sr. as the deformed phantom who haunts the Paris Opera house. Rogers will accompany the film on the GRPM’s 1928 Mighty Wurlitzer Theater Organ.

 

Rogers is a Detroit native. He is an organist at the Michigan Theatre in Ann Arbor and the Detroit Fox, he also scores and performs silent films, and performs concerts throughout the U.S. and internationally. Rogers, a resident of Fenton, Mich., started his musical studies with the accordion. He won local and national competitions by playing transcriptions of classical orchestral music. Rogers graduated with a degree with honors in psychology from Michigan State University. In his time, he earned scholarships from the University of Michigan, which made it possible to travel on two Historic Organ Tours, which were through France, Italy, and Switzerland. In 2003, Rogers was invited to play for a public program in Michigan, which was for Japan’s Foundation for Global Harmony.

 

Shows will be at 7 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 13, and at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 14, in the Meijer Theater at the Grand Rapids Public Museum, 272 Pearl St. NW.

 

Tickets for individual concerts are $8 for Museum member adults, $4 for Museum member children, $10 for non-member adults and $5 for non-member children. Tickets are available by visiting www.grpm.org/Organ or by calling 616-929-1700.

 

The third concert of the series will be Theatre Organ Through the Decades performed by Justin Stahl on Friday, Nov. 17, at 7 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 18, at 2 p.m.

 

The fourth and final concert of the series will be Holiday Classics on Friday, Dec. 15, at 7 p.m. and Saturday, Dec. 16, at 2 p.m. by John Lauter. This holiday classic is a sellout show, great for the entire family. Tickets are recommended to be purchased early.

Public Museum announces tickets on sale for ‘Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids’ exhibit

By Kate Moore

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) announced today that tickets are now on sale for the new traveling exhibit, Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids, which will open this November.

 

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids, organized by the American Museum of Natural History in New York, traces the natural and cultural roots of some of the world’s most enduring mythological creatures from Asia, Europe, the Americas, and beyond.

 

Opening on Saturday, Nov. 11, visitors will explore the various mythical creatures of the world. Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids features models and replicas of preserved specimens as well as cast fossils of prehistoric animals to investigate how they could have, through misidentification, speculation, fear, or imagination, inspired the development of some legendary creatures.

 

Admission to Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids is $12 for adults, $7 for children, $9 for Kent County resident adults, $4 for Kent County resident children, and $2 for all Museum members. Tickets include general admission to the Museum, and can be purchased online at grpm.org or by calling 616-929-1700.

 

Museum members can be the first to see the new exhibit at the members only preview on Friday, Nov. 10, from 6 to 10 p.m. Members are encouraged to dress as their favorite mythical character for extra excitement! Member preview tickets are $2 per member, and available at grpm.org/Dragons.

 

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids offers many interactive stations throughout the exhibition. Visitors can build their own dragon on an engaging touch-screen and watch it come alive before their eyes in a virtual environment.

 

Visitors will touch casts of a narwhal tusk to discover how they lent credence to the centuries-old belief in the unicorn. Hands-on stations also include the lower jaw of Gigantopithecus (extinct group of apes) and a life-size reproduction of the talon of a Haast’s eagle.  

 

The exhibition will include imaginative models, paintings, and textiles, along with other cultural objects from around the world. The exhibit will bring to light surprising similarities and differences in the ways people around the world have been inspired by nature to envision and depict these strange and wonderful creatures.

 

This exhibit will be located on the Museum’s third floor and run from Nov. 11 to May 20.

 

Dragons, Unicorns & Mermaids is organized by the American Museum of Natural History, New York (amnh.org), in collaboration with the Australian National Maritime Museum, Sydney; Canadian Museum of History, Gatineau-Quebec; Fernbank Museum of Natural History, Atlanta; and The Field Museum, Chicago.

During ArtPrize, the Grand Rapids Public Museum has half price admission

The Grand Rapids Public Museum. (Supplied)

During ArtPrize Nine the Grand Rapids Public Museum will be open with regular Museum hours and half off general admission fees.

 

This means that a Kent County adult resident who would normally pay $5 would pay $2.50. Kent County seniors and students go from $3 to $1.50 each.

 

 

The Museum will be showcasing “Brain: The World Inside Your Head” traveling exhibit, free with paid admission. This exhibit takes visitors through the human head, learning about neurons firing, how the brain works and much more.

 

 

The GRPM will once again host an outdoor exhibition in which the artwork will visually lend itself to the setting of the Museum grounds. Each year the GRPM curates a rewarding experience with approachable art that is intriguing, distinctive and engages the viewer’s capacity for awe and curiosity. Located in the heart of downtown Grand Rapids along the busy river walkway, the GRPM is able to offer a 24-hour experience.

 

 

The GRPM will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays through Saturdays, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Tuesdays and from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sundays of ArtPrize. For more information about artists, exhibitions, special programming and tickets visit grpm.org.

Music laser light shows once again take over the Grand Rapids Public Museum’s Chaffee Planetarium

By Christie Bender

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

Back by popular demand, the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) will host a second and final week of Laser Light Shows at the Chaffee Planetarium. For one week only, visitors to the Chaffee Planetarium can recline, relax, and rock out to dazzling laser light performances set to popular and classic music. From Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin to 1990s hits and today’s hottest pop, get ready for a timeless journey of light and sound.

 

Laser Light Shows have something for every music lover, including: Laser Beatles, Pink Floyd’s The Wall, Laser Vinyl (the best of classic rock), Laser Zeppelin, Laserpolis (pop, rock, alternative and oldies), Laser Country, Electro Pop (today’s hottest hits), Lase Rock (classic rock), Laser Tribute (great artists whose music has inspired many), Electrolase (electronic dance music), Laser U2 and Metallica.

 

This special week of Laser Light Shows will take place during ArtPrize starting Monday, Sept. 25 and continuing through Sunday, Oct. 1. Shows begin at 3 p.m. each day.

 

Tickets to shows are $4 with Museum general admission, and $5 for planetarium-only tickets. Members receive free admission to planetarium shows. General admission to the Museum is half off during ArtPrize, Sept. 20 through Oct. 8. For a full schedule and to purchase tickets in advance, please visit grpm.org/Planetarium.

Grand Rapids Public Museum’s new exhibit ‘Brain: The World Inside Your head” opens this month

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) is opening a new exhibit, Brain: The World Inside Your Head, on September 16! Brain literally takes you inside the head to probe the geography of a giant brain and stand in the midst of the brain’s constant electrical brainstorm as thoughts and sensations are generated.

This fascinating exhibit for all ages provides a hands‑on and up‑close look at the human body’s most essential and fascinating organ by exploring its development, geography and function.

Upon entry into the exhibit, visitors walk through a shimmering tunnel of flashing fiber-optics that illuminates networks of neurons firing and communicating. From this dynamic beginning, Brain invites guests deeper into the brain to discover its basic workings. Trace this brain’s development from infancy through old age, learn the evolution of scientists’ understanding of the brain’s physiology and study the re-created skull of Phineas Gage — a man who survived after his brain was pierced by a metal rod.

This traveling exhibit employs innovative special effects, 3-D reproductions, virtual reality, hands-on learning activities and interactive technology to delve into the inner workings of the brain, including its processes, potentials and mysteries.

Brain: World Inside Your Head is a great way for all ages to be hands-on in learning about our brains!” said Kate Moore, Vice President of Marketing & PR at the GRPM. “As the hub of science for West Michigan, we are offering an inside look at the anatomy of our heads and information on brain health.”

Admission to Brain: The World Inside Your Head will be FREE with general admission. Brain will be located on the Museum’s second floor and run from September 16 to January 7, 2018.

On Saturday, Sept. 16, Grand Valley State University will be hosting their Brain STEM event at the GRPM from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. BrainSTEM is a free community event to display the interactive, innovative, and creative activities relating to science, technology, engineering, and math.

Media is invited for a special preview of Brain: The World Inside Your Head on Friday, September 15 from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Please RSVP to Christie Bender at cbender@grpm.org.

Grand Rapids Public Museum announces 2017 Mighty Wurlitzer Organ concert series

Dave Wickerham performs Sept. 15 and 16.

By Christie Bender

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

Join the Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) for the first Mighty Wurlitzer Organ concert of the 2017 series with performances by Dave Wickerham on Friday, Sept. 15 and Saturday, Sept. 16.

 

His performance, “Red White & Blue, An American Music Tribute,” will showcase popular music from the American Songbook, featuring hit tunes by composers such as George Gershwin, Irving Berlin and Cole Porter.

 

Dave Wickerham began playing the organ at 4 years old. He then began his studies of the instrument at 7 and carried out his formal studies of the classical organ at the University of Arizona. His career of organist has led him travel across the country, as well as across the world. Throughout this career, he has been a Staff Organist at various venues including Organ Stop Pizza Restaurants, Pipes and Pizza and Piper Music Palace, as well as internationally for the Theatre Organ Society of Australia, touring in Australia and New Zealand.  Dave and his family currently live in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, where Dave holds the position of Co-Manager and Organist in Residence at the historic Crystal Theatre in Crystal Falls.

 

Shows will be held at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 15 and at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 16 in the Meijer Theater at the GRPM.

 

Tickets for individual concerts are $8 for Museum member adults, $4 for Museum member children, $10 for non-member adults and $5 for non-member children. Tickets are available by visiting www.grpm.org/Organ or by calling 616-929-1700.

 

The second concert of the series will be Musical Scores to the Silent Film “Phantom of the Opera” performed by Andrew Rogers on Friday, Oct. 13 at 7 p.m. and Saturday, October 14 at 2 p.m.

 

The third concert of the series will be “Theatre Organ Through the Decades” performed by Justin Stahl on Friday, Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 18 at 2 p.m.

 

The fourth and final concert of the series will be Holiday Classics on Friday, December 15 at 7 p.m. and Saturday, December 16 at 2 p.m. by John Lauter. This holiday classic is a sellout show, great for the entire family. Tickets are recommended to be purchased early.

 

The Mighty Wurlitzer Organ

The Wurlitzer Company of North Tonawanda, New York, manufactured and shipped Opus #1836, a “3 manual special”, to the Stanley Theater of Jersey City, New Jersey, on February 9, 1928. The Mighty Wurlitzer Organ spent two decades entertaining customers at the Roaring 20’s Pizza Parlor on 28th Street in Grand Rapids, before it was moved to its current location at the Grand Rapids Public Museum.

Grand Rapids Public Museum adds two new shows to the line up at the Chaffee Planetarium this fall

By Kate Moore

Grand Rapids Public Museum

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) will launch two brand new shows at the Chaffee Planetarium this month Sesame Street’s One World, One Sky and Friday Mediation.

 

One World, One Sky will thrill young audience members when they find themselves on Sesame Street with their famous friends, Big Bird and Elmo. The fun begins when Elmo’s friend, Hu Hu Zhu, visits from China and the three of them take the audience on an exciting journey of discovery to learn about the sun, stars, and Big Dipper. Elmo and Hu Hu Zhu blast off on an imaginary trip to the moon and when they return home to Earth everyone discovers that, no matter where we live, we all share the same sky.

 

One World, One Sky will begin showings on Saturday, Sept. 16. Tickets may be purchased at the Museum’s front desk. Show times can be found by visiting grpm.org.

 

 

Friday Meditation is a new experience being offered in the Chaffee Planetarium on Friday’s in conjunction with the Museum’s traveling exhibition, Brain: The World Inside Your Head. Visitors to Friday Mediation will first learn about the brain, what effects stress has on the brain and tools for mindfulness. Then, the experience will take visitors on a deep relaxation exercise where they marvel at beautiful scenery on the planetarium dome, while relaxing and mediating at the same time.

 

The experience will be offered during the lunch hour on Fridays starting on Friday, Sept. 22 and continuing through the exhibitions closing in early January 2018.

 

Planetarium Shows are $4 with general admission and $5 for planetarium only. Museum members receive free admission to planetarium shows.

 

For additional information on the Chaffee Planetarium or to view the full schedule, visit grpm.org/planetarium.

Beer news: Perrin’s birthday party, new Beer Explorers, CSBC wins in London

Plenty is happening this month on a the local beer scene — here is just a taste. (WKTV)

By K.D. Norris

ken@wktv.org

 

Perrin Brewing’s 5-year anniversary party this week is just the first up on the “what’s on tap” beer list at Grand Rapids area breweries this month as the Grand Rapids Public Museum will also offer another trip with its Beer Explorers and, English beer lovers, London (England) is taking notice of Cedar Springs Brewing Company.

 

Comstock Park’s Perrin Brewing will celebrates five years of craft beer brewing and drinking on Saturday, Sept. 9, at the brewery’s backyard with live music entertainment, food trucks, specialty beers, vendors — and the annual corn hole tournament.

 

The live music entertainment line-up includes: 4 p.m., Paradise Outlaw; 4:55 p.m., hi-ker; 5:50 p.m., Miss Atomic; 6:45 p.m., The Crane Wives; 8:15 p.m., Jake Kershaw; and at 9:50 p.m., Papa Vegas.

 

If you haven’t seen/heard The Crane Wives, do so; the band’s show may be the highlight of the day.

 

The local food trucks scheduled to attend will include Blue Spoon Catering, Daddy Pete’s BBQ, Ice Box Brand Ice Cream, Patty Matters, Pizzaiolo, and What the Truck.

 

The party kicks off the general public at 4 p.m. and runs until 11 p.m. Tickets are $7 in advance and $10 at the gate, open to ages 21 years of age and older. Chairs and blankets are welcome just no outside coolers or beverages. Tickets are available in the Perrin Pub or on EventBrite.

 

Perrin Brewery is located at 5910 Comstock Park Dr NW. For more information visit perrinbrewing.com/

 

‘Back to Beer School’ coming to pubic museum’s Beer Explorers program

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum will continue its Beer Explorers program with “Back to Beer School” on Thursday, Sept. 21, with six local breweries scheduled to be represented.

 

Representatives — with tastes/pours — from Perrin Brewing Co., Elk Brewing, Founders Brewing Co., Speciation Artisan Ales, Brewery Vivant and Creston Brewery will be present to talk about various types of beer and what goes into making each of their beers. Although each brewery offers many of the same styles of beers, each beer is crafted differently to bring out unique flavors.

 

The Grand Rapids Public Museum. (Supplied)

Back to Beer School will find each brewery bringing a special brew that was inspired by something within the museum’s collections. Throughout the evening, participants will explore the three floors of the Museum, stopping at different brewery bars to enjoy their samples. Brewers will be available to answer questions and give insights on their beers. Each brewery will have also a special bread made by local bakery Field and Fire to accompany their beer.

 

The evening will begin with a short presentation from the GRPM’s Chief Curator, Alex Forist, who will use artifacts from the museum’s collections to talk about the Grand Rapids history as Beer City.

 

Tickets to Beer Explorers’ Back to Beer School are $20 for non-members. Tickets include six samples, one from each brewery. A cash bar will also be available. Participants must be 21 and older. Tickets can be purchased at grpm.org/Calendar.

 

The museum is located at 272 Pearl Street, NW. For additional information visit www.grpm.org.

 

Cedar Springs Brewing Company a hit at London’s World Beer Awards

 

Cedar Springs Brewing Company announced in August that it had earned three “Best in the U.S.” titles in the World Beer Awards international competition, held in London, England. The contest is the third international competition the two-year-old brewery has entered and placed in.

 

The awards were for their Küsterer Original Weissbier, named “Best Bavarian Hefeweiss” in the U.S., Küsterer Salzburger Märzen, named “Best Seasonal German Pale” in the U.S. and Küsterer Weizenbock, named “Best Strong Wheat Beer” in the U.S.

 

Speaking from experience as Cedar resident and a Stammtisch Cub member from its opening, the weizenbock is both strong and very good.

 

“We are thrilled to once again have been recognized for the quality of our Bavarian and German style beers by an international judging organization,” David Ringler, “Director of Happiness” for the brewery, said in supplied material.

 

“Very few Americans have had the chance to truly experience some of these styles if they haven’t traveled to Europe,” Ringler added. “We want to do justice to these styles.”

 

Cedar Springs Brewing Company is located at 95 N Main, Cedar Springs. For more information visit csbrew.com/

 

WKTV Journal newscast details Celebrate Kentwood, the Buck Creek Clean Up and a very special car

WKTV Staff

news@wktv.org

 

WKTV Journal’s biweekly video newscast premiers its newest episode today with segments on the annual clean up effort for Buck Creek lead by Sherm’s Trout Unlimited and the Friends of Buck Creek and the Kentwood 50th Anniversary celebration “Celebrate Kentwood” along with a special segment on a car housed at the Grand Rapids Public Museum that has a unique connection to the Mackinac Bridge.

 

WKTV Journal’s newscast premiers biweekly on Monday at 8 a.m., and then is broadcast at various times and dates on cable television in the Wyoming and Kentwood areas on Comcast WKTV Channel 25 and on AT&T Channel 99 Community channel. This week, it will run on WKTV 25 Tuesday, Aug. 8, at the following times: 11:58 a.m., 4:55 p.m. and 5:52 p.m., and on Wednesday, Aug. 9 at 1:06 a.m. This week it will run on WKTV Channel 26 on Wednesday, Aug. 9, at 6:58 p.m. and 9:52 p.m.

Furniture catalog collection digitization project helps make GRPM collections accessible online

The Grand Rapids Public Museum. (Supplied)

The Grand Rapids Public Museum (GRPM) is pleased to announce a digitization project made possible through a grant awarded by the Furniture Manufacturers Heritage Advised Fund and the Grand Rapids Community Foundation. The Museum has more than 1,500 rare and out-of-print furniture catalogs that document Grand Rapids’ history in the furniture industry. In partnership with Kent Records Management, Inc., the Museum is in the process of digitizing the furniture trade catalogs created in Grand Rapids and the greater Grand Rapids area, and expects to have the project completed by the end of 2017.

 

The Museum recognizes the historical significance of these catalogs as artifacts documenting the City’s remarkable history in the furniture industry and innovative furniture designs. Museum staff respond to hundreds of research inquiries regarding furniture each year. The effort to digitize the furniture trade catalogs will undoubtedly encourage more research and continue to foster the scholarship of furniture construction, design and the study of Grand Rapids’ furniture history.

 

“This project allows us to make more of our Collections of 250,000 artifacts and specimens available online,” said Alex Forist, the GRPM’s Chief Curator. “Digitizing these furniture catalogs allows for high quality images to be available to the public to learn more about the industry that helped shape our region and our city.”

 

This digitization project will allow the Museum to offer full-page, hi-definition scans to the public to access via the GRPM’s Collections website, GRPMCollections.org. Visitors can view the completed furniture trade catalogs in the Furniture Industry Archives online gallery viewable here: https://www.grpmcollections.org/index.php/Detail/collections/274.

As solar eclipse approaches, WKTV talks to local expert on tips to experience it

By Joanne Baiely-Boorsma

joanne@wktv.org

 

For the first time in 40 years, the North American continent will experience a total solar eclipse, where the moon is between the sun and earth casting its shadow on the earth.

 

And depending where you are on Aug. 21 will determine how much of the solar eclipse you will see, according to David DeBryun, the president of the Grand Rapids Amateur Astrological Association.

 

“Bad news is we are not going to see a total eclipse in Grand Rapids,” DeBryun said during a special interview with WKTV’s Bre Wilson. During that interview, DeBryun said that the Grand Rapids area will experience about an 85 percent of the eclipse.

 

Bre Wilson with David DeBryun

He also noted that the Grand Rapids Public Museum, 272 Pearl St. SW, will be hosting a special Eclipse Day Party on Aug. 21 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. The event will include hands-on solar related activity booths, multiple shows on the half hour of “Eclipses and Phases of the Moon” in the Chaffee Planetarium, and a live stream of the total eclipse will be shown int he Meijer Theater. All Eclipse Party activities will be included with general admission to the Museum. For more, visit grpm.org.

 

While several members of the GRAAA will be on hand at the Eclipse Day Party, DeBryun will not be one of them. He plans to be part of a group heading to Nebraska to see the eclipse. In fact, he has travelled the world to experience solar eclipses, which are a rare occurrence. The next total solar eclipse is July 2, 2019 and will across southern Africa.

 

DeBryun’s first solar eclipse was in 1963, when he was a young boy. “Boy do I remember that because that was the most dramatic thing I had seen in nature at that point,” he said. “It was just overwhelming. And it was the impetus for me to travel the far corners of the earth in the time since then to witness five of these total eclipses of the sun.”

 

With the total solar eclipse happening only about 70 miles away from the Grand Rapids area and going through such major cities as St. Louis and Nashville, DeBryun encourages residents to make the trip to experience the phenomenon especially since the next time a total solar eclipse will travel across West Michigan will be in the year 2099.

 

“I know I won’t make that,” he said with a a laugh.

 

If you plan to check out the solar eclipse, DeBryun encourages people to use the safe viewing glasses available at the Public Museum or to make an eclipse box. For other tips and more discussion about the solar eclipse, check out the interview with DeBryun airing on WKTV channel 25 at 9:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Aug. 14; 7 and 11 p.m. Aug. 15; 11:30 a.m. Aug. 16; and noon and 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18.