Auckland Museum's season of marine draws to a close
Auckland Museum's season of marine draws to a close with record visitation for Moana exhibition and Tall Ships setting sail
Auckland Museum's marine exhibition Moana - My Ocean has one long weekend left before it closes but it has already broken visitation records attracting more than 160,000 visitors in the four months since it opened.
The
visitor numbers are the highest recorded for an Auckland
Museum-developed exhibition in the last two decades. The
exhibition opened in late June this year www.aucklandmuseum.com/whats-on/exhibitions/moana Moana
– My Ocean was developed following an Auckland Museum-lead
expedition to the Kermadec Islands in 2011 and the two-year
exhibition project saw the museum working with marine
science and technology partners around New Zealand and
overseas. The exhibition – which is free entry – uses
real marine specimens, 3D film, full-scale shark models,
augmented reality and artificial intelligence to take
visitors on a journey from Auckland's coastal waters through
to depths of the Kermadec Trench. Auckland Museum's head
of natural sciences Dr Tom Trnski, who lead the Kermadec
Islands biodiscovery expedition and helped to develop Moana,
says one of the exhibition's strengths is that it evokes the
feeling of venturing into the unknown. "People think we've
explored our world and seen everything there is to see and
then you show them underneath the water and they realise
we've barely begun. That's what this exhibition does - it
stops people short and reminds them how much we have to
learn, how much more there is to discover about how our
marine environment."
The Moana - My Ocean exhibition is
open daily from 10am to 5pm through to its final day this
Monday 28 October. Auckland Museum is also taking part in
the Tall Ships Festival over Labour Weekend, with a team
onsite at The Cloud next to the Voyager NZ Maritime
Museum. Embracing the marine themes of the festival, the
museum will be displaying its five-metre tall ‘living’
taniwha, commissioned with dinosaur-creators Erth Visual &
Physical. Throughout the weekend, the museum team will share
the Maori oral histories associated with taniwha, including
their role in signifying environmental risks and
dangers. There will be family-friendly games from the
museum's Moana “Fishy Business” holiday programme and a
craft activity for kids to make a shark jaw headband. The
museum will also be sharing specimens from its marine
collections – a taster of the larger Moana – My Ocean
exhibition on at the museum. “Some of the specimens
we’ll have on display include baleen, shark jaws, turtle
and whale vertebrae and people will have the change to ask
our team about our marine collections and the
behind-the-scenes workings of the museum,” says museum
senior programmer Rachel Prebble. The museum’s
contribution to the Tall Ship Festival has also extended to
supporting two berths for young New Zealanders on the
British tall ship the Lord Nelson. Neville Rakena from the
Nga Rangatahi Toa education centre in Otara will join the
Lord Nelson for its voyage from Auckland to Wellington and
sea cadet Tobias Miller will join the ship for the voyage
from Wellington to Nelson. This is the first visit to New
Zealand for the 55-metre square rigged vessel which is on a
two-year global voyage. The Lord Nelson is crewed by
disabled and able-bodied people and aims to promote the
messages of equality and inclusion on its travels around the
world. ENDS