While most of “Sky” focuses on the optimism of the era, a few ominous reminders of what happens when science stops playing nice and starts getting real smack hard at the very end: a sign from a fallout shelter, a lobby card from Atomic Monster and a wall-sized photo mural of a mushroom cloud from a Bikini Atoll detonation that vaporized whole islands and ships and the goats aboard them. Similarly, a companion exhibit located on CHF’s third floor titled “Beyond Imagination: A Selection of Atomic Age Books” features more than a dozen Red Scare bunkum novels, many of which were sold in pharmacies and supermarkets. One book jacket compares and contrasts photos of Hiroshima and Tokyo after a massive incendiary raid. “The point was, ‘See how much better we flattened Hiroshima? There’s nothing left here!’” notes Mangravite with a shake of the head.
After touring “Sky,” you can’t help but draw parallels between then and now. Is the military cranking out products in secret labs that’ll one day be in kitchens everywhere? Should we start making our wish lists for the post-War on Terror boom now? Will we ever again regard science or government with such unflagging trust?
“It’s really easy to engage people with kitsch/retro material. If the exhibit only allows people to smile at themselves and at science because of the way it was framed by industry through advertising, maybe that’s enough,” says Ragone. “But I think it’s great to allow the audience to reflect on bigger things as well. It’s a really different kind of world we live in today. We aren’t the Jetsons.”
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