Guangdong Provincial Museum: It's... Complicated. 🫠
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Hello everyone, I'm an academic (with a Master's degree and a few minor papers published!) who has spent quite some time studying museums. Today, I would like to be bold and share my honest thoughts on the Guangdong Museum. Feel free to take these as a point of reference.
To be honest, my experience at the Guangdong Museum ("Guang Bo" as some insiders call it) was somewhat hard to describe.
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Regarding the overall feel inside the museum:
- Get ready for a business-heavy vibe. There are plenty of souvenir shops on each floor but they seem to lack design taste to some extent.
- Automatic vending machines line every corridor, everywhere you look.
- There is even a restaurant which feels reminiscent of the typical street dining establishment (that bustling, open-air canteen along the sidewalk).
- A Special Note: Considering Guangzhou's typically hot and humid weather, combined with the greasy, smoky ambiance emanating from the restaurant, it makes the entire environment feel a bit greasy and less fresh as I imagined a museum to be.
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Regarding the exhibition setup, particularly the fourth-floor "Guangdong Cultural History Exhibition":
- This exhibit's design level left me, an experienced tourist observer, feeling urgent about their situation.
- Potential problems with visiting the exhibit include:
- Confusing timeline: The historical development sequence is not clear, making it easy to get confused by the exhibit display.
- Display Item Quality: Some exhibits seem poor in quality, almost like reproductions or overly plasticy.
- Visitor Route: Is there a clear path to smoothly navigate through the whole exhibit? The route guidance is rather vague, leading the visitor to go around in circles.
- Overall impression: It feels like a rushed, improvised exhibition put together by an inexperienced company – the quality leaves something to be desired.
No more complaints! After all, this is my personal experience and take.
#Guangzhou #GuangdongMuseum -
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Honestly, the Guangdong Provincial Museum really doesn't do a good job of explaining Guangdong's history clearly.
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Does anyone know a museum that actually explains Guangzhou's history well? I'm planning a visit at the end of the month.
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The overall quality of museums in Guangdong isn't great. For one, the exhibits are pretty ordinary, and secondly, the curation and layout are subpar. This applies to the Provincial Museum, Shenzhen Museum, and the Nanyue King Museum.
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I visited a museum, and honestly, most of the exhibits just looked like a pile of scrap metal. You'd be lucky to find one or two truly exquisite pieces, sometimes not even that. It made me realize the Hubei Museum, which I used to underestimate, is actually much better.
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In my opinion, the Guangdong Provincial Museum is the worst one I've ever visited.
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It was historically a place of exile, so what do you expect?
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It's the lamest museum I've ever been to. With hardly any decent exhibits, they might as well just close it down.
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I actually think the Shisan Hang Museum (Thirteen Factories Museum) is pretty good, even though it's not very large.
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I just went yesterday and couldn't agree more. Getting through the ticket check is a detour, the layout inside is confusing with all sorts of stairs and mezzanines, there are way too many souvenir shops, the restaurant food is terrible, and the exhibits aren't much to look at – often just one or two items displayed awkwardly behind frames or up several flights of stairs. Plus, many halls were under construction when I was there.
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I went today and found it really lacking in substance. It definitely doesn't live up to the reputation of a major provincial museum for Guangdong.
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Out of the hundred-plus museums I've visited, the Guangdong Provincial Museum is genuinely the worst...
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Can you recommend some good ones? I haven't been to many, but I thought the Nanjing Museum (Nanbo) and the Hong Kong Palace Museum were pretty decent.
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Probably the most boring provincial museum in the entire country. I was in and out in less than 20 minutes.
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If you're interested in historical artifacts and the like, you might want to check out the Shisan Hang Museum or the Nanyue King Mausoleum Museum.