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JTR Exhibition in Docklands

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  • Originally posted by caz View Post
    The relative 'significance' of any item, in the public domain or privately owned, is, with all due respect Dan, for the individual visitor to judge,
    I can pretty well state that anything in the exhibition that is of any significance whatsoever is in the public domain, legally, based upon age. Private ownership of physical objects does not by itself make something not be in the public domain.

    Originally posted by caz View Post
    It would be insufferable if one person decided for everyone else, for example, that the 'Dear Boss' letter was more or less significant than a witness statement.
    Both of those (as well as anything from the actual crimes are that general time period) are well in the public domain: free and clear for photo taking, discussion, reprinting and so forth.

    Originally posted by caz View Post
    But the paying public might well find the former more fascinating to see in the 'flesh' than the latter.
    And that was the entire point of the post from which you took the quote you responded to: Museums are for those people who want to see the actual physical objects, and photos of objects that people have the perfect right to post and share in no way takes away from those people who want to see the actual physical objects.

    Museums should be museums, not attempt to be intellectual property robber barons denying people the right to share images and information about items that international law says is a moral right to be shared.

    Dan Norder
    Ripper Notes: The International Journal for Ripper Studies
    Web site: www.RipperNotes.com - Email: dannorder@gmail.com

    Comment


    • Originally posted by caz View Post
      The relative 'significance' of any item, in the public domain or privately owned, is, with all due respect Dan, for the individual visitor to judge, when they have seen everything in situ. It would be insufferable if one person decided for everyone else, for example, that the 'Dear Boss' letter was more or less significant than a witness statement. But the paying public might well find the former more fascinating to see in the 'flesh' than the latter. One man's 'significant' is the next man's 'totally irrelevant'.
      I have to say that personally, I reckoned that the 'Dear Boss' letter was incredibly significant as it gave us the name we all use. And the name that the general public associate with the crimes and the myths and mysteries.

      The fact that it was shoved into a corner was somewhat disappointing and maybe more should have been made of it.

      That said, I'm bloody glad it was there, along with many other original documents and artefacts.

      JB

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      • I visited the Exhibition on Saturday with Debs and my opinion of it is slightly mixed. I enjoyed it, but I came away with the feeling there could have been more that could be done. And yes they could have gone into more details about the victims lives but that is true of the Police Officials and the Suspects, in fact I came away with the impression more was said about the victims then any of the other people involved. Personally I felt a bit sorry for some of the suspects on display, they all couldn’t have been Jack the Ripper and having there name slandered for little or no reason in a public exhibition wouldn’t be very nice for there descendents. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying the victims deserved what they got, some of them were certainly no angels, I’m just saying we should be a bit more sympathetic to some of the suspects as most of these are innocent victims as well.
        The best way to describe the exhibition is that it was all very basic and you were just given the basic facts of the tale, it would be like Sugden’s book condensed to about 10 pages.
        It was interesting seeing some of the original documents and the Dear Boss letter. I wasn’t as thrilled as I thought I would have been maybe because they were behind glass cabinets and while they were close they were still out of reach if you understand what I mean. The most interesting items I saw were Abberline’s scrapbook and cane and P.C. Watkins joining paper.
        The disappointing thing for me was that there were no photographs of the murder site, there was very little in the way of photographs or drawings of the area so the people who visited the exhibition couldn’t visualise the area. There were plenty of maps to see which helped a little. And maps were used to indicate where a victim’s body was found, and the spot was indicated by an arrow. These were way out in some cases and it was very sloppy research by the organisers. The Pinchin Street torso was a prime example as the map used was the 1873 O.S. Map with the colour codes used by Booth in 1887(as were all the victim‘s maps). The archway where the torso was found wasn’t even built when the map was done.
        Also I thought some of the lighting was very poor, some of the displays were quite dark and you had trouble reading the documents, in other cases some of the framed pictures were hard to see because of the reflections of the lights, Sickert’s painting of ‘Jack the Ripper’s bedroom’ being a prime example.
        I can’t comment on the visual displays as the screens were giving me serious eyestrain. I don’t think anyone else has mentioned it so it was probably just me.
        There was quite a lot of Victoriania which over shadowed the entire Jack the Ripper related stuff. I came away with the impression that the organisers only wanted to do an East End exhibition and they used the ‘Jack the Ripper’ to get the public in. And I think the book that accompanies the exhibition bares this out ‘Jack the Ripper and the East End’ is a great book but it’s not a Jack the Ripper book, it is a book about the East End. This is a shame really as it could be sold as a book on the East End on its own merits.
        While I was there I visited the main Museum in Docklands (in the same building) and I would recommend people seeing that. Two things I noticed there which the Jack the Ripper Exhibition could have benefited from. One was the recreation of old docklands itself in models. Some of the Murder sites could have been done this way and there was a recreation of the narrow alleys as they would have appeared several hundred years ago. A recreation of Victorian Street would I think have been a superb addition to the exhibition. I suppose the problem with the last two suggestions would be one of costs and the limited time in which they would be used and so they wouldn’t be cost effective anyway.
        In summing up, it was nice to see the exhibition and the original documents, but I didn’t (nor did I expect to) learn anything new. I felt there could have been more done at least visualising the East End and I think the organisers rather rushed it and they could have made better use of the experts out there. On the whole a missed opportunity in my opinion.
        On the plus side they did have copies of mine and Philips book. And they also had a comments board at the end of the exhibition which people can use if they want to, I certainly made good use of it.

        Hi Caz,

        Looking at the alleged Maybrick Diary again, I can’t see any difference in the ink now as I did 10 years ago. There are still very dark areas where the ink had just been dipped in the inkwell and this fades as the writing continues and then it starts all over again when the nib is dipped in the ink again. The pages I looked at now and the page I looked at 10 years back are different but the ink looks the same.

        Rob

        Comment


        • Thanks Rob.

          Hi Dan,

          Your last post to me was really not necessary. I got the point you were making the first time about your 'significant' items in the public domain, that have already been photographed time and time again.

          My point about the public judging the relative significance of everything on display (not just the public domain stuff which you already know is there) was separate from the issue of posting photos here. I'm sorry I did not make that clearer.

          Love,

          Caz
          X
          "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


          Comment


          • Originally posted by John Bennett View Post

            The fact that it was shoved into a corner was somewhat disappointing and maybe more should have been made of it.
            Agreed, John. Hubby was surprised that 'Dear Boss' was not given a more prominent position. It is, after all is said and done, just about the most famous artefact in the case, if not in the entire history of crime.

            But as I was trying to get across to Dan with my remark about one man's 'significant' being the next man's 'totally irrelevant', many people on these very boards (the majority I would think) are quick to dismiss this letter as an early attempt to gull the public, which has nothing whatsoever to do with the real killer or the murders. While that may very well be true, it makes the point for me that the whole subject of significance is highly - well - subjective.

            Love,

            Caz
            X
            "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


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            • Rob Clack, any pictures?






















              just kidding.

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              • Originally posted by AdamWalsh View Post
                Rob Clack, any pictures?




                just kidding.
                Funnily enough I did, just a couple of the maps and P.C. Watkins joining document to save me writing the stuff down but they all came out a bit blurred which is a bit of a bugger. And do you know I didn't see one sign that said no photography is allowed. I'm not saying there wasn't one, just that I didn't notice.

                Rob

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Rob Clack View Post
                  Funnily enough I did, just a couple of the maps and P.C. Watkins joining document to save me writing the stuff down but they all came out a bit blurred which is a bit of a bugger. And do you know I didn't see one sign that said no photography is allowed. I'm not saying there wasn't one, just that I didn't notice.

                  Rob
                  it says it on the ticket.

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                  • And on a post before you actually go in.

                    Once inside it says 'no lithographs'.

                    PHILIP
                    Tour guides do it loudly in front of a crowd.

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                    • All those signs passed me by too!

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                      • Rob, if you see a sign saying "no photographs," take a photo of it.

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                        • Originally posted by Robert View Post
                          Rob, if you see a sign saying "no photographs," take a photo of it.

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                          • Hi All,

                            There used to be a sign on Hampstead Heath which read—

                            "Do Not Throw Stones At This Notice".

                            And guess what . . ?

                            Regards,

                            Simon
                            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
                              There used to be a sign on Hampstead Heath which read—

                              "Do Not Throw Stones At This Notice".
                              There was another famous (genuine) sign which bore the legend "This is not a sign".

                              Shades of Magritte?
                              Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                              "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                              Comment


                              • Wasn't there a sign somewhere saying "Keep off the grass," but which necessitated that you walk across 200 yds of grass before you were near enough to be able to read it?

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