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Mystic Seaport to Co-Host Special International Holocaust Remembrance Day Film Screening

Danish film “Across the Waters” tells the story of Jews fleeing Nazi-occupied Denmark by boat

Mystic, CT (Dec. 29, 2017) — To commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day on January 27, Mystic Seaport, the Jewish Federation of Eastern Connecticut, and the Museum of Jewish Heritage – A Living Memorial to the Holocaust, will co-host a special screening of the 2016 Danish film “Across the Waters,” which tells the story of a Jewish musician and his family who make a frantic escape from Nazi-occupied Denmark. The screening (Danish with English subtitles) begins at 2 p.m., Saturday, January 27, at Mystic Luxury Cinemas in Olde Mistick Village.

The story takes place in 1943, the same year that the Danish lighthouse tender Gerda III was smuggling Jews from Denmark to safety in Sweden. Gerda III belongs to the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York City and is on display at Mystic Seaport. In 1943, the boat was used by Henny Sinding, the 22-year old daughter of a Danish Navy Officer who commanded the country’s Lighthouse and Buoy Service, and a four-man crew, to rescue Jews. The refugees were brought to a warehouse along Copenhagen’s waterfront and smuggled aboard Gerda III, hiding in the cargo hold.

The little vessel then set out on her official lighthouse supply duties, but detoured to the coast of neutral Sweden. Although the vessel was regularly boarded and checked by German soldiers, the refugees were never discovered. Gerda III rescued approximately 300 Jews, in groups of 10 to 15. Of the 300 boats that participated in the evacuation, Gerda III is believed to be one of only three that remain afloat.

On Saturday, January 27, the event will start at 2 p.m. with an introduction and remembrance by Jerome E. Fischer, executive director of the Jewish Federation of Eastern Connecticut. That will be followed by a short presentation on Gerda III’s story by Howard Veisz, a Mystic Seaport volunteer who has exhaustively studied the boat’s history. Veisz is the author of “Henny and Her Boat,” the story of Gerda III and the rescue of 300 Jews. Tickets are $20 for Mystic Seaport members, and $22 for non-members. Tickets may be purchased in advance by calling the Museum’s Central Reservations at 860.572.5331, or at the door the day of the event at Mystic Luxury Cinemas.

About Mystic Seaport
Mystic Seaport is the nation’s leading maritime museum. Founded in 1929, the Museum is home to four National Historic Landmark vessels, including the Charles W. Morgan, America’s oldest commercial ship and the last wooden whaleship in the world. The Museum’s collection of more than two million artifacts includes more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography in the country. The Thompson Exhibition Building provides a state-of-the-art gallery to host compelling, world-class exhibitions, including the upcoming Murmur: Arctic Realitiesopening January 20, 2018. The Collections Research Center at Mystic Seaport provides scholars and researchers from around the world access to the Museum’s renowned archives. Mystic Seaport is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. Admission is $28.95 for adults ages 15 and older and $18.95 for children ages 4-14. Museum members and children three and younger are admitted free. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/  and follow Mystic Seaport on FacebookTwitterYouTube, and Instagram.

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Murmur: Arctic Realities Makes International Debut

[embedit snippet=”murmur-installation”]

On Saturday, January 20, Mystic Seaport will host the international debut of an exhibition that heralds in a new era for the Museum — the Era of Exhibitions. Murmur: Arctic Realities is the product of one of world’s leading contemporary artists, John Grade, and with it, Mystic Seaport becomes a leader in the introduction of mixed reality technology in a museum setting. This exhibition showcases the Museum’s vision for engaging visitor experiences, a vision that will only expand throughout 2018 and beyond.

Staged in the Collins Gallery in the Thompson Exhibition Building, visitors will encounter upon entering what appears to be a natural land form — a mound (15’ x 38’ x 42’) intricately carved from Alaskan yellow cedar. This vast sculpture represents a pingo, a hill of ice that grows over centuries in the Arctic’s highest latitudes, then collapses, pockmarking the tundra. Grade’s work replicates a pingo in Alaska’s Noatak National Preserve, mapped by the artist using photogrammetry. Visitors will not only witness the pingo’s impressive scale, but will also be able to enter inside the sculpture as its walls open and close, mimicking the pingo’s life cycle at a time when this is accelerating due to unprecedented environmental change.

Grade and New Media artist Reilly Donovan are collaborating on Murmur, as Donovan brings the use of Microsoft’s HoloLens Mixed Reality technology to the experience. They have mapped fragments of Noatak’s landscape into the gallery so that visitors wearing a wireless HoloLens headset will see themselves within a holographic representation – one using visual images and spatialized sound of a precise geographic location 80 miles north of the Arctic Circle.

“The opening of Murmur is a thrilling moment for this museum,” says Nicholas Bell, senior vice president for curatorial affairs. “The inclusion of giant steel and wood kinetic arms and a holographic experience immediately removes us from our comfort zone. But that’s exactly where we should be as we enter this new Era of Exhibitions – challenging the limit of how we engage with museum space, and what we can learn from such unexpected encounters. Murmur affirms the role of Mystic Seaport as a place to come together, not only to understand our past, but also to anticipate the future.”

The title Murmur evokes both the sound of Arctic wind and the shapes made by flocks of Arctic birds in flight. The installation will provide an experience in which people can virtually explore the interior of a pingo’s ice core and the unusual textures, flora and fauna of the land form. By allowing visitors to traverse an Alaskan marsh in Connecticut, Murmur will revolutionize the public’s grasp of what a museum experience can be.

Murmur: Arctic Realities is being staged in collaboration with Anchorage Museum. Grade has been working on the pingo project for three years, after Anchorage Museum invited him to spend time in the Arctic as part of its Polar Lab residency program. According to his website, “Inspired by changing geological and biological forms and systems in the natural world, John works with his studio team to create large-scale site-specific immersive sculptural installations. Impermanence and chance are often central to the work along with kinetics and relationships between the natural world and architecture.”

Museum President Steve White notes that the opening of Murmur: Arctic Realities kicks off a busy and exciting year. “John Grade’s work speaks to our vision for exhibitions at Mystic Seaport,” White says, “to bring exhibitions to the Mystic region for which people would ordinarily have to travel far to see, and to provide content that appeals to people accustomed to compelling museum shows.”

Murmur, which closes in late April, is followed by two major exhibitions both opening on May 19: The Vikings Begin: Treasures from Uppsala University, Sweden and The Vinland Map. The international debut of The Vikings Begin will bring one of the world’s finest early Viking-age collections to Mystic Seaport. This exhibition represents the first instance most of these artifacts will have ever left Sweden. For the Vinland Map exhibition, it will be the first time in more than 50 years that the document is on public display, allowing those who have followed the saga to see its primary evidence for the first time. Mystic Seaport will engage historians, archaeologists, scientists, and other leading experts to share the Map’s story, and discuss its out-sized role in modern American history.

In addition to the exhibition itself, there are scheduled talks by both Grade and Donovan, the opportunity to take a yoga class with renowned instructor Coral Brown within the exhibition, and other programs related to the piece. Visit our online calendar for the full schedule. Use #wearethemurmur #arcticrealities on Twitter and Instagram.

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Community Carol Sing is Sunday

The 70th annual Community Carol Sing at Mystic Seaport will be 3-4 p.m. Sunday, December 17. A new addition to this beloved seasonal tradition this year is a Holiday Hat Contest.

The Museum will be open to visitors from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and admission is free with the donation of a non-perishable food item or by cash donation. All contributions will be donated to and distributed by the Pawcatuck Neighborhood Center.

The Mystic Seaport Carolers will perform a holiday concert in the Greenmanville Church at 2 p.m. The carol sing will commence at 3 p.m. in the McGraw Quadrangle, led by Associate Professor of Music and Director of Choral Studies at the University of Connecticut Jamie Spillane (now in his 32nd year directing this event) and backed by the Museum Carolers and a brass quartet.

Guests at the Carol Sing are always in the holiday spirit, and often their headgear gives new meaning to “merry and bright.” This year, judges will be circulating through the crowd, and prizes will be awarded to the top hats! Winners will be announced during the concert.

Also that day, the Treworgy Planetarium’s 2 p.m., program, “The Star of Bethlehem,” explores the winter skies, merging science, mythology, religious observance, winter traditions, and music. A holiday craft workshop will be hosted in the Howell Classroom (lower level of Planetarium) from noon to 2 p.m.

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Mystic Seaport to Host 70th Community Carol Sing

Free admission Sunday, Dec. 17, with a non-perishable food item

Mystic, Conn. (December 7, 2017) — The 70th annual Community Carol Sing at Mystic Seaport will be 3-4 p.m. Sunday, December 17. A new addition to this beloved seasonal tradition this year is a Holiday Hat Contest.

The Museum will be open to visitors from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and admission is free with the donation of a non-perishable food item or by cash donation. All contributions will be donated to and distributed by the Pawcatuck Neighborhood Center.

The Mystic Seaport Carolers will perform a holiday concert in the Greenmanville Church at 2 p.m. The carol sing will commence at 3 p.m. in the McGraw Quadrangle, led by Associate Professor of Music and Director of Choral Studies at the University of Connecticut Jamie Spillane (now in his 32nd year directing this event) and backed by the Museum Carolers and a brass quartet.

Guests at the Carol Sing are always in the holiday spirit, and often their headgear gives new meaning to “merry and bright.” This year, judges will be circulating through the crowd, and prizes will be awarded to the top hats! Winners will be announced during the concert.

Also that day, the Treworgy Planetarium’s 2 p.m., program, “The Star of Bethlehem,” explores the winter skies, merging science, mythology, religious observance, winter traditions, and music. A holiday craft workshop will be hosted in the Howell Classroom (lower level of Planetarium) from noon to 2 p.m.

For more information, visit mysticseaport.org/carolsing.

About Mystic Seaport
Mystic Seaport is the nation’s leading maritime museum. Founded in 1929, the Museum is home to four National Historic Landmark vessels, including the Charles W. Morgan, America’s oldest commercial ship and the last wooden whaleship in the world. The Museum’s collection of more than two million artifacts includes more than 500 historic vessels and one of the largest collections of maritime photography in the country. The Thompson Exhibition Building provides a state-of-the-art gallery to host compelling, world-class exhibitions, including the upcoming Murmur: Arctic Realities opening January 20, 2018. The Collections Research Center at Mystic Seaport provides scholars and researchers from around the world access to the Museum’s renowned archives. Mystic Seaport is located one mile south of Exit 90 off I-95 in Mystic, CT. Admission is $28.95 for adults ages 15 and older and $18.95 for children ages 4-14. Museum members and children three and younger are admitted free. For more information, please visit https://mysticseaport.wpengine.com/  and follow Mystic Seaport on FacebookTwitterYouTube, and Instagram.

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News

5 Things You Love On A Lantern Light Tour

Perfect ginger cookies waiting for Lantern Light Tour patrons to eat them.
Perfect ginger cookies waiting for Lantern Light Tour patrons to eat them. Click this photo to see a photo gallery.

Lantern Light Tours at Mystic Seaport has become a beloved seasonal tradition for thousands of people. Now in its 38th year, the traveling play that brings visitors back to Christmas Eve 1876 has created its own traditions as well.

In fact, notes Denise Kegler, the program manager for Lantern Light Tours, there are five things you always get with a Lantern Light Tour:

  1. A horse and carriage ride through lantern-lined streets.
  2. Time aboard a historic vessel.
  3. Santa Claus.
  4. Participating in a traditional circle dance.
  5. Eating a delicious ginger cookie.

Let’s talk about these ginger cookies for a minute. First, they are made from scratch in the Museum’s Bake Shop. The shop turns out more than 7,000 cookies for the month of December, both to stock the Lantern Light Tours baskets and to sell in the store.

The dough is made from a secret and closely guarded Mystic Seaport recipe, fine-tuned over the years by shop manager Chanel Champagne and her staff. (One fun fact about the recipe, a single batch of 6 dozen calls for 15 eggs and 20 cups of flour.)

They start making the dough about a month before the tours start. Each cookie must be identical, and so they are weighed as they are rolled. Each cookie weighs a half-ounce before baking. The dough is hand-rolled in the bake shop, and then frozen until the tours start. The cookies are baked fresh for each tour. The reservations office sends the bake shop the advance ticket sales numbers, and then extras are baked for walk-ins. An extra batch is also made and packaged for sale in the Bake Shop. They spend two to three hours a day on the cookies when the Tours are running.

During this year’s production visitors receive their cookie while visiting the charismatic and enchanting Sprague sisters.

During the Lantern Light Tours, the Bake Shop stays open until 8 p.m.

To see the Lantern Light Tours schedule and buy tickets, click here.

 

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