True Northwest: The Seattle Journey MOHAI's core exhibit rings most of the building's second floor and provides a chronological history of Seattle and its environs. The exhibit winds through a series of 22 different sections that each focus on a distinct event or era in Seattle history ranging from pre-Pioneer settlements up to the modern day. MOHAI Creative Director Ann Farrington, who previously worked on Seattle's
Experience Music Project and the
National Holocaust Museum, has said that it is, "not a timeline, but a series of stories strung like pearls" in order to reveal how Seattle's past, present, and future are interconnected. Along with numerous artifacts and photographs, the exhibit incorporates a significant amount of interactive media that allow visitors to touch screens or play games that explore different parts of Seattle history and culture. The core exhibit also includes the Great Fire Theatre, a "Gilbert and Sullivan-style opera" that involves artifacts from the 1889
Great Seattle Fire singing the story of the event over a film of historic images, and the Joshua Green Foundation Theater which plays a 7-minute film about Seattle culture on two large screens.
Faye G. Allen Grand Atrium on display in the museum's Grand Atrium, with the
Rainier Brewing Company logo sign behind.|The
Boeing B-1 on display in the museum's Grand Atrium, with the
Rainier Brewing Company logo sign behind. The first floor of the museum is an expansive open room named the Faye G. Allen Grand Atrium. Both the original floor and ceiling of the
Naval Reserve Building are visible from the Grand Atrium. Hanging in the center of the space is the 1919
Boeing B-1, the first commercial plane built by
Bill Boeing. The plane is displayed to illustrate a typical flight path onto Lake Union, where the plane took off and landed during its tenure. On the south end of the Grand Atrium is a three-story tall-grid filled with Seattle cultural icons, including the neon Rainier "R" sign, a clam costume from Seattle seafood chain
Ivar's, and a stuffed cougar donated by
Eddie Bauer, founder of the namesake clothing store. The north end of the Grand Atrium features a 64-foot-tall sculpture called
Wawona by local artist John Grade. Wood and other materials for the sculpture were salvaged from the 1897 schooner
Wawona, which was dismantled in 2009 due to a lack of funding for restoration.
Walker Special Exhibits Gallery The Walker Gallery is MOHAI's main space for displaying temporary and traveling exhibits. It takes up the entire southern side of the museum's second floor. When the museum initially opened at Lake Union Park, the Walker Gallery showcased an exhibit about Seattle's relationship with film called
Celluloid Seattle: A City at the Movies. In 2015, the Walker Gallery hosted
American Spirits: The Rise & Fall of Prohibition travelling from the
National Constitution Center.
Linda and Ted Johnson Family Community Gallery Another temporary gallery that occupies the third floor space of the museum. Much smaller than the Walker Gallery, the space is designed "to promote community ownership and stewardship of MOHAI" by showcasing collaborative projects with community partners. The first exhibit in the gallery was a partnership with leading Seattle arts group
Arts Corps, that worked with Seattle high school students to produce poetry and spoken word related to photos from MOHAI's historic photographic collection.
McCurdy Family Maritime Gallery On the top floor of the museum is a small gallery dedicated to Seattle's maritime history. The space was originally designed as a replica of a ship's bridge in order to train naval recruits during World War II and features a set of south facing windows overlooking
Lake Union. One of the most popular artifacts in the gallery is a working World War II-era TANG periscope from a naval submarine which offers a 360-degree view of Lake Union and downtown Seattle. The gallery is curated by the
Puget Sound Maritime Historical Society which has maintained a close partnership with MOHAI since the early 1950s.
Bezos Center for Innovation The museum opened a major museum addition on October 11, 2013 called the
Bezos Center for Innovation. The project is funded by a $10 million gift from Amazon founder and CEO
Jeff Bezos. The project was designed by Seattle-based
Olson Kundig Architects and occupies a portion of the museum's Grand Atrium. ==See also==