The Pitt Panther |
When I visit a city I often try to get to the neighborhood
near a college or university. If you want to find inexpensive food and good
small museums, this is the part of town to head for. This being true, the
Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh and its Oakland neighborhood have had a
particular draw on me.
When I was 19 I spent a summer in Pittsburgh. I had a chance
to explore much of the city, I spent most of my time in Oakland. I even had a
crappy phone sales job based in that area. When I returned ten years later it
was to bring a runner that I was coaching on a college visit to the University
of Pittsburgh. So, my visit to the Steel City this year of course brought
another chance to spend time in this neighborhood and to visit the Carnegie
Museums.
The University of Pittsburgh is one of the oldest state
colleges in the United States. It was founded in 1787 as the Pittsburgh
Academy, a preparatory school on what was then the far, western edge of the
United States. In 1819 it became the Western University at Pittsburgh. Today it
is home to 29,000 students among its 17 undergraduate and graduate schools. It
is also home to one of the premier medical facilities in the country – the
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. UPitt’s best known landmark is the 42
story (163m) tall Cathedral of Learning. Dedicated in 1937, this gothic
building is the tallest education related structure in the Western Hemisphere.
It was a snowy day |
Sitting between UPitt and the nearby Carnegie-Mellon
University are the Carnegie Museums of Art and Natural History. These museums
are run by the Carnegie Institute, which also directs the attached concert hall
and Carnegie Free Library, the Andy Warhol Museum, and the Carnegie Science
Center. The Museums of Art and Natural History are two buildings, one old and
one new, joined together to bridge the gap between these two categories of
museums. You can visit each separately, but if you have the time, it is worth
seeing both, and one ticket will get you into both.
The older building houses the Carnegie Museum of NaturalHistory. Founded in 1896, it is a fairly straight forward natural history
museum, with exhibits of local animal and plant life, and an ethnological
exhibit for Native Americans. But it is best known for its dinosaur collection
which dates back to 1899. Today the exhibit is called Dinosaurs in Their Time. It is the third largest collection in the
United States. Like several modern exhibits this one has gone beyond just
displaying bones and has put them into the context of the world in which they
lived.
In this exhibition dinosaurs and other Mesozoic animals are shown in extraordinary detailed reconstructions of their respective environments. Like the dinosaurs themselves, the habitats in Dinosaurs in Their Time are firmly grounded in scientific evidence. – Museum Website.
By daveynin from United States (Full skeleton body of T-RexUploaded by FunkMonk) [CC BY 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons |
Walk down the entrance hallway, to the modern building next
door, and you have arrived at the Carnegie Museum of Art. Founded in 1895, this
museum was inspired by Andrew Carnegie’s desire to exhibit the works of major
contemporary artists. While its collection has expanded to cover much of the
history of European art, it also includes decorative art, architecture and
photography. One gallery that grabbed my interest was the Hall of Sculpture.
This giant room is empty today, but tis balcony is lined with statues. Look at
the photo below to see how the curators break the wall of time and also show
their sense of humor.
Sculpture Gallery |
Post Office by David Gilmore Blythe |
Structure by Noguchi |
When you come to Pittsburgh the Oakland neighborhood offers a
wide variety of sights and activities. With a university at its heart and two
wonderful museums the investment of a day’s worth of time will bring back
wonderful rewards.
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