Examples of Dime Museums in the following topics:
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- Dime museums were institutions that were briefly popular at the end of the nineteenth century in the United States.
- In urban centers such as New York City, where many immigrants settled, dime museums were popular and cheap entertainment.
- The dime museum social trend reached its peak during the Progressive Era.
- Barnum founded the first dime museum called the "American Museum."
- Vaudeville had many influences, including the concert saloon, minstrelsy, freak shows, dime museums, and literary burlesque.
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- Vaudeville had many influences, including the concert saloon, minstrelsy, freak shows, dime museums, and literary burlesque.
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- Barnum purchased the American Museum in the Manhattan borough of New York.
- Barnum's museum was for entertainment, not education, and featured oddities like ventriloquists, midgets, and albinos.
- Although that store eventually closed down, Woolworth succeeded with a similar store in Lancaster, PA, extending the prices to a dime.
- Woolworth's "five-and-ten" or "five-and-dime" stores were a huge success.
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- This is a tradition started in the old five and dime stores in which everything cost either 5 cents or 10 cents .
- Traditional five and dime stores followed a line pricing strategy, where all goods were either 5 cents or 10 cents.
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- Museums and private collections are engaged in both the collection and display of works of art.
- Museums and private collections are both engaged in the collection and display of works of art.
- Early museums began as the private collections of wealthy families and individuals.
- Numerous art works in museums today were in fact donations from private collections.
- Discuss the history and role of museums and private collections in the consumption of art
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- Dollar General is a general store or "five and dime" store that sets price points only at even amounts, such as exactly one, two, three, five, or ten dollars (among others).
- For example, Dollar General is a general store or "five and dime" store that sets price points only at even amounts, such as exactly one, two, three, five, or ten dollars (among others).
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- Since the 1970s a number of social commentators have pointed to the political implications of art museums and social relations.
- Examples of this trend include the Guggenheim Museum in New York City by Frank Lloyd Wright, the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao by Frank Gehry, Centre Pompidou-Metz by Shigeru Ban, and the redesign of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art by Mario Botta.
- Instead, a dedicated print study room located within the museum provides public access to these materials.
- Most museum and large art galleries own more works than they have room to display.
- The Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art has a sculpture Garden adjacent to Tehran's Laleh Park.
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- Issues regarding the non-preservation of ritual objects became widespread in the expansion of museums in the 19th century.
- Preservation of meaning in library, archival, and museum collections involves understanding spiritual, ritual, or cultural perceptions of value for specific objects, and ensuring these values are maintained and respected.
- With the founding of museums and scholarly studies of various cultures and religions, and the growth of anthropology and archaeology as disciplines, private collectors, museums, and universities competed to acquire artifacts.
- Cultural integrity can be compromised or wrongfully preserved through improper association in a museum context.
- For example, when books are piled on top of a Qur'an in a museum display the spiritual integrity is compromised or destroyed completely, leaving the physical object devoid of cultural meaning .
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- Today, the Mathura museum is an archaeological museum in Mathura, Uttar Pradesh.
- The museum was founded by then collector of the Mathura district, Sir F.S Growse, in 1874.
- The museum is famous for ancient sculptures of the Mathura school dating from 3rd century BC to 12th century AD.
- Today, the Mathura museum is an archaeological museum in Mathura, Uttar Pradesh.
- The museum was founded by then collector of the Mathura district, Sir F.S Growse, in 1874.
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- A collection of Akkadian pottery on display at the Oriental Institute Museum, University of Chicago.
- A collection of pottery from the Ur III period on display at the Oriental Institute Museum, University of Chicago.
- A pottery jar from the Late Ubaid Period on display in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
- A collection of old Babylonian pottery on display at the Oriental Institute Museum, University of Chicago.
- A collection of administrative texts in cuneiform writing on display at the Oriental Institute Museum, University of Chicago.