Museums began as the private collections of wealthy types, shown off in wonder rooms or cabinets of curiosities. The finest of these grew into famous cultural and national establishments, whilst others remained on the periphery, revealing their quirky artefacts to the inquisitive visitor.
Some of these outsider museums still exist today and have inspired a whole genre of collections devoted to the weird, macabre or absurd. Many demonstrate a technical outlook as old as their exhibits, but there are some that embrace digital as an extension of their physical objects. In this vein, we invite you to discover the most noteworthy of these for yourself.
Be warned, some are not for the faint of heart!
Cancún, Mexico
A stunning series of galleries containing 500 submerged sculptures in the shallow waters of the Cancún National Marine Park. Not only are they eerily beautiful, they also serve as material for coral to collect and grow upon. Essentially it’s art as conservation, captured superbly in their online gallery.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
An informative medical museum packed full of anatomical oddities, eye-watering equipment and bizarre specimens. Most notably from Europe, Joseph Hyrtl’s 139 Caucasian skulls of varying shape, which he gathered to disprove a racial belief that cranial features were evidence of intelligence.
Yokohama, Japan
You read that correctly! For over a decade locals and visitors to Yokohama have enjoyed their favorite staple in a recreation of 1958 Tokyo, the year instant noodles were invented. The amusement park also houses branches of famous ramen restaurants with expert recipes available online.
London, UK
This medical museum, founded in 2007, originates from Henry Wellcome’s long-standing Trust, which is one of the world’s largest providers of scientific research funds. The collection and library is a “free destination for the incurably curious” with wonders that include this mummified Peruvian man.
Somerville, Massachusetts, USA
A hotchpotch of artwork spawned by the “deranged and deluded” (as one critic put it). MOBA has spent 20 years celebrating bad art in all its forms, qualifying them as more of a museum than a gallery. Their online collection is neatly categorised for ease of repulsion.
South Tyrol & Veneto, Italy
A central museum with five branches across north-east Italy comprises Reinhold Messner’s homage to the mountains, from the science of glaciers to rock climbing and local mythology. Not only are the locations breath-taking, but the website is also well worth a visit. Leave your crampons behind.
New Delhi, India
This social service NGO has been “meticulously” detailing five millennia of sanitation since 1992. Explore their three worlds: Ancient, Medieval and Modern, from the rudimentary to the high-tech. Their site, although dated, has a large virtual tour and video archive regarding the “smallest room”.
Bran, Romania
Dubbed Dracula’s Castle (although there’s no evidence of a connection), this idyllic fortress displays art and furniture collected by Romania’s much-loved Queen Marie, with a museum park below it exhibiting peasant structures. The website is slick, holds a vast array of content and is a pleasure to use.
Reykjavik, Iceland
From an island country known for its peculiarities, this museum takes some beating. Surround yourself with over 200 penises from a wide variety of animals within this genuine and sincere collection dedicated to the science of phallology. Get an eye-full in the online galleries. Exit via the gift shop.
Washington, District of Columbia, USA
Sitting immodestly in the US capital, several blocks east of the White House, this collection of global espionage artifacts sheds light on a shadowy world. The permanent, temporary and online exhibits show off government ingenuity and cunning employed in a never-ending race to supremacy.
Barcelona, Spain
As beautiful as they are macabre, this collection of horse-drawn and horseless carriages charts the growth of Catalonia’s population from the late 1700s. New cemeteries were hastily opened outside the city walls, requiring new rituals regarding the transportation of the wealthy deceased.
Toronto, Canada
There are plenty of shoe museums about, including Imelda Marcos’s now down-at-heel collection. But none of which have stepped into the online world as confidently as Bata. North America’s sole footwear history museum delivers a bold, immersive site, enhanced by large, colourful imagery.
St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Russia’s oldest museum houses artifacts of people and cultures that range from the bizarre to the morbid. If you enjoy pickled heads or deformities in large jars, get yourself over there. Although the website isn’t very graceful, it’s chock-full of interesting collections, saving you the cost of flights.
Chicago, Illinois, USA & Africa-wide
What’s so weird about Africa? Nothing, but the museum itself is unusual because it began digitally, with a mission to manifest physically. As they put it, “Museum Africa is more than a place; it is an idea”. Their hope is to make the study of ancient African civilisations more accessible. Watch this space.
Vienna, Austria
Known to the locals as the heftily-titled Heeresgeschichtliches Museum, this imposing building contains Austria’s military journey through empire, republic and dictatorship. It also houses the motorcar in which Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated – a moment that changed the world.
Rome, Italy
You’d be forgiven for thinking that this was a temporary hideaway for loot ‘liberated’ by an invading army, but the juxtapose of historic sculptures standing within a 1900s power plant has been carefully choreographed by the Capitoline Museums. The works can also be found on Google Art Project.
Bogotá, Colombia
All that glitters in this case is, in fact, gold. A collection of over 55,000 pieces fill the Banco de la Republica’s building, many of which are fashioned from the precious metal, sacred to Colombia’s indigenous cultures. The website also provides a thorough insight into gold across pre-Hispanic societies.
Montrose, South Dakota, USA
Time magazine considers Wayne Porter’s sheep-farm-turned-recycled-metal-structure park worthy of their “Things you don’t see every day” list. Whether they’re stretching their legs after a long drive on Route 90 or taking it all in online, the visitors are apparently kookier than the collection itself!
Zigong, People’s Republic of China
This dinosaur park has more going for it than most. Not only is it located in a temperate area that is perfect for the preservation of fossils, it even has its own dig site that visitors can observe. The website, when it runs properly, is as compacted with information as a seam of Triassic coal. Well worth a dig.
Cape Town, South Africa
This heritage centre stands as a monument to the Sixth Municipal District of Cape Town — a once vibrant and mixed area that saw its community forcibly removed and properties bulldozed in the name of racial segregation. The website is a trove of recollections and imagery that captures those dark days.
This article has been republished with permission from Bibblio.org.