Our last day in Salt Lake was the best and not because we were leaving. We started the morning by missing a tour of the Capitol building (this was dissimilar to our first visit on Sunday where we caught a tour only to find that since we were not retirees from Florida we were excluded).
Onto the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, where we visited three exhibits. One featured videos of the novel art of "ironic" interviewing. Celebrities would respond in surprisingly varied ways to monotone questioning by an apparent artist pretending to have Aspergers. It was fascinating, especially how people who are rarely rattled squirmed under the blank expression of the host, who had a rule of not saying anything beyond his short, pre prepared questions. He met his match in Rick Reuben, who aware of the set up, responded in kind, never deviating beyond, "yes" or "no." An interview with almost nothing beyond awkward silence. Most of the segments were both intesting and funny. You learn more about the interviewee in how they handle the situation than the actual answers they give. Search Asitlays on YouTube to see some of the interviews.
Another exhibit spanned two rooms, both devoted solely to photos of a little, fluffy, white, stuffed animal dog dressed in different outfits and in different scenes from around the world. In each picture "Mr. Wrinkle" had it's tongue out and it's rear leg contorted into unnatural angles. The doll was perpetually oblivious of its wardrobe changes-a police uniform, a princess gown, a salesman suit, etc. We found out at the end, only by asking the receptionist, that the photos are of a real permanently disfigured dog, who the artist found on the side of the road. We are horrible people. We had laughed at the poor wreck of a dog through the whole gallery.
Next onto the planetarium. A two story building filled with all sorts of cool exhibits that redeems the small hike it takes to get there. The adjoining movie theatre is the only thing in the building with a price tag.
One of my favorite activities would have to be the intergalactic scale. On Jupiter I am enormous! Also noteworthy was the indoor cloud (not dry ice but actual condesated water droplets) that was touchable as much as a cloud is touchable. There was even a giant machine that was basically a game of Mouse Trap that stretched for two stories.
Our last adventure for the day and the entire reason we stayed so long in SLUT (see reference from Sunday's Blog) was to see the world renowned Mormon Tabernacle choir. Every Thursday the choir practices for the public. We managed to be towards the front of a well organized line, with hundreds filing in behind us. Everyone got in, but in the the busier tourist seasons not even the arena sized sanctuary can hold all the hopefuls. The choir was excellent, but gigantic. How bad can it sound with 400 singers, drowning out a few weak links? In all seriousness, it was incredible. This brings up an interesting thought. Would I be more or less likely to vomit if 359 Nickleback cover bands were playing simultaneously?
You be the judge: Does Mr. Wrinkle look like a real dog?
Touching a cloud
Not really sure what I am doing here....
Moon Walk, as if you couldn't tell