The Morning Call (Sunday)

Silly UK crab museum has serious things to say

Irreverent exhibits educate visitors on climate, capitalism

- By Alex Marshall

MARGATE, England — At the Crab Museum in the seaside town of Margate, England, Tereza Hynkova, 24, stopped in front of a display case and started to giggle.

Inside was a diorama featuring models of nine crustacean­s, including a coconut crab, usually found on tropical islands; a decorator crab, which covers its body with algae for camouflage; and the knobbly elbow crab. The models were anatomical­ly accurate, but the realism ended there. One of the crabs held a pint of beer between its claws. Another clutched a cricket bat. A third was dressed as a suffragist with a “Votes for Women” sash draped across its shell.

A sign above the diorama explained: The species live in different parts of the world so “it would be misleading to depict them in a realistic natural setting.” Instead, the museum’s staff had put the models into a diorama resembling a 1920s English town.

At a time when museums around the world are grappling with how to attract new audiences, with visitor numbers still flagging since the pandemic began, the 2-year-old Crab Museum’s use of silly humor in its exhibits and wall texts is proving to be a success. It now attracts around 80,000 visitors a year and recently won an award for its social media presence, which it uses to sell jokey T-shirts and tote bags.

Much of the humor is childish and aimed at young visitors.

A section on mating habits, for instance, features a photo of crabs midcoitus, emblazoned with the word “censored.” Other elements are more involved. To illustrate how the animals “molt” — a process in which a crab pulls its body out of its shell so that it can then grow a larger exoskeleto­n — the museum has a bizarre video of Ned Suesat-Williams, one of its founders, struggling to crawl out of a suit of armor backward, without using his hands.

The museum’s exhibits try to teach visitors about crab anatomy, mating habits and the importance of decapods to marine ecosystems, but also use crabs as ways into discussing bigger issues, including environmen­tal threats and the inequities of capitalism and colonialis­m.

The more serious displays include postage stamps from former British colonies that featured depictions of crabs, displayed next to wall text discussing imperialis­m, and a cupboard labeled “Truth Inside! Do Not Open!” that contains text asserting that capitalism has warmed the planet and is threatenin­g ecosystems.

Suesat-Williams said making a museum funny was a “risky business” — visitors might not get the jokes, after all — but that “everyone learns better when they’re laughing.” Humor provides “a breathing space, where you can talk about difficult topics like climate change without making visitors think the world’s about to end,” he said.

Staff at some of Britain’s more renowned scientific institutio­ns are paying attention to the Crab Museum’s approach. Chris Stringer, of the Natural History Museum in London, said in an email that the museum’s silly approach leads to learning “by stealth.” It “teaches more in a small space and short time than many others with far larger budgets,” he added.

Laura Pye, the director of National Museums Liverpool — a body that includes major art and history institutio­ns — said the museum was one of the funniest she’d seen “in a long time” and a good example of how to make “fairly heavy scientific material accessible.”

In 2019, Suesat-Williams, 30, and his brother Bertie, 33 — who both have a background working for children’s magazines — plus their friend Chase Coley,

32, decided to create a museum that could discuss political issues that they were concerned about, while still engaging young people. They eventually settled on crabs as the museum’s focus because of Margate’s seaside location. Plus, Bertie Suesat-Williams said, crabs were “funny and weird.”

The founders — who had no previous profession­al museum, or crab, experience — devoured books and documentar­ies on decapods, then developed the exhibits based on what they found most interestin­g.

 ?? SAM BUSH/ THE NEW YORK TIMES 2023 ?? Visitors look at a diorama that puts crustacean­s in a miniature 1920s English town at the Crab Museum in Margate, England.
SAM BUSH/ THE NEW YORK TIMES 2023 Visitors look at a diorama that puts crustacean­s in a miniature 1920s English town at the Crab Museum in Margate, England.

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