Bunnies, brains, breast implants: Welcome to LA's odder museums

Breast implants, a photo of the brain of John F. Kennedy, a cheerleader's outfit and the sketches of a serial killer: all are on display in some of Los Angeles's quirkiest museums

22 December 2016 - 12:51 By Javier Tovar
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Remnants of past relationships make up the quirky displays at LA's Museum of Broken Relationships.
Remnants of past relationships make up the quirky displays at LA's Museum of Broken Relationships.
Image: Ana Opalic/Museum of Broken Relationships

The cultural offerings in this city are immense, from highbrow museums featuring works by world renowned artists to others with a decidedly mass-market appeal -—  like the wax museum, with its likenesses of glaze-eyed celebrities.

But there are edgier and more extravagant establishments throughout the city, with some exhibits that wow and others that terrify.

There is, for example, The Museum of Broken Relationships, with displays about the heartsick and lovelorn.

One dealt with a divorcee who packed her wedding dress into a pickle jar: She did not want to toss it, let someone else wear it or allow moths to feast on it.

There is the cheerleader's uniform that another woman never got to wear because her boyfriend jilted her; or the partly used bottles of cologne of a man who died of cancer, kept as mementoes by his widow.

And among the displays not to be overlooked is a pair of breast implants housed in a glass case. Their former owner had had them implanted to please her partner, a "boob guy."

But for five years her body tried to reject them and in the end, she had to undergo repeated surgeries to remove them.

"I mutilated my body for a man I loved," she said poignantly. "At the time, I loved him more."

The Museum of Broken Relationships has had a nomadic history.

It got its start after the artists Olinka Vistica and Drazen Grubisic broke off their romance and founded the museum as a repository for the objects they had acquired during their relationship.

In 2010 they opened a venue in Zagreb, followed this year by one in Los Angeles.

"The pieces themselves aren't necessarily art," said museum director Alexis Hyde.

But "the museum itself is this very sophisticated piece of conceptual art that is really cutting to the heart of the matter of what it is to be human," Hyde said.

Then there is LA's Museum of Death, founded in 1995, with not-for-the-faint-of-heart exhibits on serial killers, group suicides, funerary displays, and other subjects related to death.

One display deals with the suicides of famous people like rock star Kurt Cobain and historical characters like Adolf Hitler. There is another on fatal automobile accidents and still another about celebrated murder cases — like that involving accused wife murderer and former football and movie star OJ Simpson.

"It's a way to quell the fear of death," said museum manager Ryan Lichten.

"It's going to happen to everyone. The closer you are to what scares you, the less scary it is."

The extensive collection includes the head of Henri Desire Landru, decapitated on the guillotine in Versailles in 1922 for murdering 11 women, although he might have killed hundreds.

Part of Lichten's work —  he is also a curator —  involves writing to convicted killers to ask them to send materials that can be used in exhibits. That is how he obtained drawings of the singer Rebecca Schaeffer sketched by her killer on death row.

On one wall are autopsy photos of John F. Kennedy performed just hours after his assassination in 1963 in Dallas, Texas: lifeless eyes, blood-matted hair, brains exposed.

The photos are accompanied by graphs, newspaper front pages and a copy of the controversial Warren Report, which concluded that accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone.

Most visitors seem fascinated by the bizarre and grotesque displays, though every week one or two of them faint, Lichten said.

For Valentine's Day 1993, Steve Lubanski gave girlfriend Candace Frazee a stuffed bunny with a huge heart on its chest that read "I love you." That Easter, she gave him a porcelain rabbit.

Thus was born a tradition, and eventually a museum.

Today visitors can see their 33,000 rabbit-related pieces on display in Lubanski's house, later converted to The Bunny Museum. Some 27,000 people have visited since 1998.

Frazee says it is the largest US museum other than the White House that is also serves as someone's home.

Next year they plan to move their vast collection to a former art gallery, including their four live rabbits and 22 stuffed ones. - AFP

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