Artery

The arts blog of the Independent Weekly

Archives | RSS | Follow on

Friday, December 2, 2011

Khan artistry: Why you should visit the NC Museum of Natural Sciences' exhibit on the Mongolian warlord

Posted by Craig D. Lindsey on Fri, Dec 2, 2011 at 1:52 PM

12.2_GK_poster.jpg
So, tonight is First Friday and, as always, downtown Raleigh will have a bevy (that’s right, I said bevy!) of happenings that wandering folk can dip into. Over at the Museum of Natural Sciences, the museum’s monthly “Natural Horror Picture Show” will show the 1989 comedy Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, which has Alex Winter and a pre-Matrix Keanu Reeves as high-school dunderheads picking up historical icons in a time-traveling phone booth for their history report.

One of those icons is Mongolian warrior/leader Genghis Khan, about whom the museum just happens to have an exhibit. It opened a couple weekends back, and we were invited to visit. The museum hopes you’ll show up tonight for the free movie, but also that you might wanna plunk down cash to see artifacts from Khan’s time.

If you still need convincing, here are five reasons you should check out the exhibit (with help from Albert Ervin, the museum’s special exhibits coordinator).

1. The exhibit has a lot of cool stuff.
The exhibit itself is a traveling museum devoted to both Khan’s legacy and Mongolian culture. You get weaponry both real (like a Mongol cavalry saber) and replicated (like a triple-action crossbow). But the exhibit also has about 200 artifacts belonging to Mongolia, ranging from clothing to bowls to musical instruments, all encased for your viewing pleasure. Ervin says many of these artifacts come from other empires and dynasties Khan conquered.

“His empire was twice the size of the Roman Empire, at its greatest extent,” he says. “So, he accumulated cultural artifacts from the people around him. [Khan] brought people from China and Europe sort of together along the Silk Road.”

2. It gives a well-rounded view of Khan.
Sure, Khan killed a lot of people (as Marc Maximov drolly pointed out in his 8 Days a Week writeup for the Indy), and this exhibit shows the armor, weaponry and tactics he used on the battlefield.

But Ervin says that’s not the whole story.

“I think this exhibit does a good job of showing Genghis Khan as the warrior that he was, because he was that,” says Ervin. “You don’t conquer most of the known world unless you’re a warrior—at least, in his day and age.

"The other side of it is that Genghis Khan was also a statesman. And he had a lot of really—I guess we would call them progressive ideas for his day. He created what would be very similar to a democracy. People rose in the ranks of the hierarchy of his military and of his government based on merit, not based on who they were related to.”

3. The place reeks of incense.
When you first walk in, you’ll find that the exhibit has a very exotic, alluring odor. That comes from a machine, located above a small recreation of the palace Khan's grandson Kublai called home, that blows the scent of incense all over the place. Ervin says that idea came from the exhibit organizers.

“I guess they just felt that it would put people in the mood of a Chinese palace,” he says. (It put me in the mood of an Erykah Badu concert when I took a whiff. But I’m sure your mood may be much different.)

4. This exhibit features a dead person’s bones!
Unfortunately, they're not Khan’s. No one knows where he’s buried. But someone did find the tomb of an unnamed Mongolian princess (they refer to her as “Princess Mummy,” but I like to call her “Karen”), and the bones of said princess are on display at the exhibit.

Says Ervin, “Based on the things that were found in the tomb with her, we can sort of extrapolate about how Genghis Khan may have lived or how he might have been buried.”

5. YOU’LL LEARN SOMETHING!!!!
You might even find it—dare I say—fascinating. “What I think is the cool part of this exhibit is that people will learn that Genghis Khan wasn’t just this ruthless barbarian,” says Ervin.

“He had that other side of him that made a lot of progressive changes in his empire and the people that he conquered. So, his empire wouldn’t have lasted as long as it did if all he was was just going out and killing people.”

Tags: , , ,

Related Locations

Comments (2)

Showing 1-2 of 2

Add a comment

I've also been amazed (or appalled) by the fact that there are virtually no photos of any of the artifacts on the Museum website nor apparently available to illustrate any of the local articles. Curiously, a Google search of "Genghis Khan Exhibit" reveals that major shows have been elsewhere in the US, but it is unclear if this is the same exhibit, or just an after thought.
Frankly, I feel the Museum is either keeping much of this a secret (for whatever reason) or doing a terrible job of marketing the exhibit.
Doubt that I will be attending.

report   
Posted by Ali Baba on 01/01/2012 at 10:45 PM

I went to see this exhibit last week and overall I was disappointed. The exhibit put litte emphasis on his reputation as being evil warrior who raped and pillaged all over the world. The video's were more emphasized than than the artifacts. Finally, one of the more interesting angles was researchers' finding of a genetic marker that 25% of all asian men have in common (which they believe was the marker of Genghis Khan)...its a very interesting story but this exhibit placed it near the exit from the exhibit and didn't elaborate at all.

It's not cheap to attend museums, so think carefully before going.

report   
Posted by Mike on 12/03/2011 at 9:56 AM
Subscribe to this thread:
Showing 1-2 of 2

Add a comment

Latest in Artery

More by Author

Facebook Activity

Twitter Activity

Read indyweekarts's Tweets

Comments

We know you might be feeling accountable about bankruptcy. Think about this: Every year more than a thousand people data …

by wanilaw on Raleigh Ensemble Players files for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection (Artery)

Ira Glass is one of the most honest voices on the Radio, both literally and figuratively. Even with the Mike …

by Andrea Martinez on This American iPad: A Q&A with Ira Glass (Artery)

© 2012 Independent Weekly • 302 E. Pettigrew St., Suite 300, Durham, NC 27701 • phone 919 286 1972 • fax 919 286 4274
RSS Feeds | Powered by Foundation