loupgarou said:any planned outings? anyone knows if photography is allowed?
skyflash said:I thought they replaced some parts with plastic?
Royce said:No photography?!! No fair!! ;(
Prismatic said:Why not?
They are copyrighted works of art. No reproduction or transmission of any kind without prior permission. Permission to view does automatically grant you the permission to take pictures.
SMM said:I had went to London to visit this exhibition when it was there last year. Very intriguing and, no doubt, certain "items" on exhibit are very controversial too. I thought this exhibition would never have made it to Singapore.
The parts are not replaced by plastic! The body and parts are preserved by a method called plastination. You can read more from here
http://www.bodyworlds.com/en/pages/plastination.asp
jnifur said:ermm....plastination is a process whereby the body fluids and fats are replaced by plastic.
Not the parts...so naturally they look plastic.
Imagine instead of blood flowing thru the blood vessels...inside are plastic.
loupgarou said:yeah, I certainly would like to learn how to preserve bodies too...(ok: fish bodies..hahah)
Wolfgang said:Anyone know the admission charge? :dunno:
SMM said:I had went to London to visit this exhibition when it was there last year. Very intriguing and, no doubt, certain "items" on exhibit are very controversial too. I thought this exhibition would never have made it to Singapore.
The parts are not replaced by plastic! The body and parts are preserved by a method called plastination. You can read more from here
http://www.bodyworlds.com/en/pages/plastination.asp
WrongWay said:Its 18bucks for adult....think for student theres a concession price of 12bucks....
oh entry for kids under 6 is free i think....
only sure that adult is 18bucks!
-Cheers!
I'm going for sure!! :bsmilie: