Tactual Museum Athens

  • by XpatAthens
  • Thursday, 18 June 2015
Tactual Museum Athens
What is a Tactual Museum exactly? Read on to find out more.

When Dave Briggs drew the Tactual Museum of Athens as the next museum on his list to visit, he was excited. He'd heard of tactual museums, but had never visited one before. The basic concept is that they are set up as a way for sighted people to experience and understand to a small degree what it must be like to operate in a world without sight. The idea is to be led around a room blindfolded, and then to touch a series of objects in order to understand what they might be.

The Tactual Museum in Athens

The Museum does this with a difference. Rather than using ordinary objects, they instead display copies of artifacts from Ancient Greece. The idea behind this is twofold. Firstly, non-sighted people rarely, if ever, get to touch and feel the relics from an ancient past. These faithful replicas would allow them to do so. Secondly, it would give a chance for sighted people to approach ancient Greece from a new angle, and experience trying to work out what a new object is just by the sense of touch. People are given blindfolds to experience the museum as a non-sighted person would.

There were two rooms downstairs, and several larger rooms upstairs. Some of the smaller objects, such as the golden laurel leaf crown, were especially hard to work out what they were.

Location:
Visitors’ entrance via Lighthouse for The Blind of Greece
Athinas 17, Kallithea, 17673

Hours:
8:00 - 17:00

Museum Website: http://www.tactualmuseum.gr/indexe.htm

To read this article in full please visit: Dave's Travel Pages