New exhibition at Newcastle's Discovery Museum celebrates 'offbeat' creations

The hands-on exhibition showcases a host of weird and wonderful inventions.
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A new exhibition has opened at Newcastle’s Discovery Museum, featuring incredible inventions from 1843-1884.

In partnership with The National Archives, Spirit of Invention: A world of creativity from Victorian Britain to the present day is a hands-on design exhibition exploring imaginative and offbeat creations.

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Spirit of Invention will run until June.Spirit of Invention will run until June.
Spirit of Invention will run until June.

The exhibition features some of the incredible inventions found in the Board of Trade design registers, kept at The National Archives. These huge cloth-bound volumes officially registered ‘useful designs’ or inventions from people between 1843 and 1884. Selected pages will form part of the exhibition. 

Visitors to the museum can get up close to exquisite hand-drawn designs for inventions like William Blackmore Pine’s ‘Flower Cornet’, a discreet hearing device that looks like a flower and a ‘Peach Protector’, a glass dome that protects a peach from being eaten by bugs. 

Keith Merrin, director of Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums (TWAM), said: “We are delighted to bring Spirit of Invention to Discovery Museum for the people of the region to enjoy. The stories of inventiveness and creativity chime with those told in the museum about the great North East inventions that have shaped the nation.

“It is the first time that The National Archives has worked with a museum in this way to create an exhibition away from its London base and is part of a longstanding relationship that we have for the benefit of the communities of our region.”  

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Spirit of Invention also features cutting-edge contemporary technology alongside these eye-catching inventions from the Victorian era – among them a ventilating top hat and a clean air necklace that monitors air pollution.

The exhibition also offers an interactive creative experience, encouraging visitors of all ages to try their hand at designing and inventing using a range of materials. 

Spirit of Invention is free to visit and will be accompanied by a programme of events including Discovery Museum’s Tiny Sparks under 5 programme and family inventor events. 

 Discovery Museum is open weekdays 10am - 4pm and weekends 11am – 4pm and has free entry.

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