The Hamilton Spectator

American Museum of Natural History to host Cuba exhibit

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NEW YORK — The American Museum of Natural History is presenting a bilingual exhibit that explores Cuba’s biodiversi­ty and culture.

The exhibition is called “¡Cuba!” and opens Nov. 21. It was developed in collaborat­ion with Cuba’s National Museum of Natural History under an agreement signed in the summer in Havana.

The wide-ranging exhibition includes photograph­s and quotes from Cubans, a display on the cultivatio­n of tobacco, a film about Cuba’s history and lifelike models representi­ng the island’s wildlife.

“What we wanted with this exhibit is to take people beyond the headlines to what they may not know or expect about Cuba,” said curator Ana Luz Porzecansk­i, director of the museum’s Center for Biodiversi­ty and Conservati­on. “Cuba is much more than its wonderful music or Cuban cigars or old cars. Cuba is also a fascinatin­g nation of remarkable biodiversi­ty.”

The exhibit discusses a shrewlike mammal called an almiqui, which secretes venomous saliva through a groove in its front teeth, and the bee hummingbir­d, considered the smallest bird in the world, among other creatures.

The United States and Cuba, a Caribbean island nation, are just 90 miles apart but had frigid relations for decades. They announced in December 2014 that they were restoring diplomatic ties, which were broken in 1961 after Fidel Castro took power in Cuba and installed a communist government.

Porzecansk­i said the exhibit is not necessaril­y a result of the re-establishm­ent of diplomatic relations between the nations although “that was helpful to our joint work.” The museum, she said, has been collaborat­ing with Cuban colleagues for more than 100 years.

Esther Perez Lorenzo, director of the Cuban museum, said that co-operation will continue.

The exhibit will run through Aug. 13, 2017.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Visitors to the American Museum of Natural History view a diorama of a shark swimming above a coral reef in the exhibit “Cuba!,” Tuesday, in New York. The show of Cuban biodiversi­ty, people and culture was produced with the cooperatio­n of the Cuban...
MARK LENNIHAN, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Visitors to the American Museum of Natural History view a diorama of a shark swimming above a coral reef in the exhibit “Cuba!,” Tuesday, in New York. The show of Cuban biodiversi­ty, people and culture was produced with the cooperatio­n of the Cuban...

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