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Last spring,
the editors of The New York Times Magazine launched an
international competition to design a time capsule. Participants
received a simple set of guidelines: devise a means of preserving
information until A.D. 3000 that takes the concept of a time
capsule in new directions. In the end, almost 50 designers,
architects, and engineers from 15 countries submitted entries that
ranged from the practical to the whimsical, and a jury of
Times editors and critics winnowed the entries to a select
group.
The American
Museum of Natural History exhibition coincides with publication of
the sixth and final Millennium issue of The New York Times
Magazine series that has explored the last 1,000 years. The
Times Capsule was featured in the final issue of this series. This
final issue showcases many of the items to be sealed inside and
also explains the process by which the editors made their
choices.
Capturing
Time: The New York Times Capsule includes samples of the
contents of the Times Capsule; some of the nearly 50 design
proposals received in the competition to create the Times Capsule;
and a more than 500-year-old Aztec artifact from the Museum's
collection that evokes the Aztecs' conception of time. The
exhibition also examines concepts of time such as biological time,
cosmological time, and cultural time.
The
exhibition was designed and executed by the American Museum of
Natural History's Department of Exhibition, under the direction of
David Harvey, vice president for Exhibition; key exhibition and
design services were provided by Gerhard Schlanzky, Eric Janssen,
Jayne Hertko, Lauri Halderman, Robert Vinci, Nancy Falkin, Frank
Rasor, Deborah Barral and Steve Warsavage.
introduction | what is
time? | notable entries
winning design | contents of times capsule | visitor information
the new york times
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