Pittsburgh Arts, Regional Theatre, New Work, Producing, Copyright, Labor Unions,
New Products, Coping Skills, J-O-Bs...
Theatre industry news, University & School of Drama Announcements, plus occasional course support for
Carnegie Mellon School of Drama Faculty, Staff, Students, and Alumni.
"This giant mouth with its airbag- size uvula (the soft tissue that hangs in the back of your throat) is a new attraction at Corpus, a combination amusement park and museum that opened last month outside Amsterdam."
3 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Oh boy this looks like so much fun. Like Chuck E Cheese's but for adults! This is actually very effective in putting in the mind set of how important one's body is and how it functions to keep you alive. I am just glad for the Bodies exhibit stationed here in Pittsburgh. We just get a piece of informative art too.
This is great. Who wouldn't want to get into a gigantic mouth and touch a big uvula. I would love to fly to Amsterdam just to see this piece. This seems like a really educational exhibition to make opportunities to go see something so informative.
I remember one time when I was a kid and my parents brought me to a museum where there was a gigantic heart. You got to go through veins and different parts of and there were sounds and speakers all throughout it. It was really interesting. I would love to see it again today when i could actually understand it. I wish they had something what they described in the article in the US.
3 comments:
Oh boy this looks like so much fun. Like Chuck E Cheese's but for adults! This is actually very effective in putting in the mind set of how important one's body is and how it functions to keep you alive. I am just glad for the Bodies exhibit stationed here in Pittsburgh. We just get a piece of informative art too.
This is great. Who wouldn't want to get into a gigantic mouth and touch a big uvula. I would love to fly to Amsterdam just to see this piece. This seems like a really educational exhibition to make opportunities to go see something so informative.
I remember one time when I was a kid and my parents brought me to a museum where there was a gigantic heart. You got to go through veins and different parts of and there were sounds and speakers all throughout it. It was really interesting. I would love to see it again today when i could actually understand it. I wish they had something what they described in the article in the US.
Post a Comment