At Corpus Museum located in the Netherlands, you can visually learn about the human body in a fun and interactive way. Whether you're a curious child or an adult, Corpus offers something for everyone.
ROCHESTER, N.Y. — The Strong National Museum of Play’s next short-term exhibit has officially opened. The exhibit, ...
Tourist spots don’t usually start at the knee and end in the brain, but this one does. The Corpus Museum in the Netherlands ...
RICHMOND, Va. — "BODY WORLDS: The Anatomy of Happiness," which is now open at the Science Museum of Virginia, explores how contentment impacts the human body. "Happiness is not just mental health.
RICHMOND, Va. — What makes you happy? Is it the rich taste of chocolate, the serenity of a long walk on the beach or the rush of skateboarding? No matter what brings you joy, the impact of happiness ...
Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) and A+ Architecture have been announced winner of the international design competition for the new Cité du Corps Humain (Museum of the Human Body) in Montpellier, France. The ...
The Franklin Institute is demystifying the organs and vessels that make our bodies tick with an $8.5 million exhibit opening Saturday. The "Body Odyssey" features interactive stations that invite kids ...
Dario Robleto, "The Aorta of an Archivist" (2020–2021), video still, UHD video, 5.1 surround sound installation, 53 minutes, in collaboration with Skye Ashbrook and Bill Haddad (image courtesy the ...
OKLAHOMA CITY — Visitors will have the chance to explore why the human body produces mushy, oozy, crusty, scaly and stinky gunk at “Grossology: The (Impolite) Science of the Human Body,” the new ...
REAL BODIES: The Exhibition at Horseshoe Las Vegas is set to take guests on a Journey to Wellness this January, highlighting moments to achieve ones New Year’s Resolutions through its ...
Editor’s note: This story is available as a result of a content partnership between WFTV and the Orlando Business Journal. A new medical office building and a museum dedicated to the human body will ...
When Anna Dhody was growing up in Philadelphia, in the nineteen-eighties, her mother used the city’s museums as a kind of babysitter. “She would just drop me off at the Penn Museum and be, like, ...
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