Bakelite Museum
The Bakelite Museum is a collection of Bakelite and other articles belonging to Patrick Cook that currently is without a home.
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![]() ![]() Location within Somerset and the United Kingdom | |
Location | Williton, Somerset (former location) |
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Coordinates | 51.15702°N 3.32714°W |
Website | Bakelite Museum |
History
It began as an art installation in London galleries in the 1970s and was opened as a museum in Greenwich in 1983. It includes vintage plastics such as radios, cameras, telephones, Bayko play bricks and a Bakelite coffin. The Bakelite era is also represented by non-plastic objects from the early 20th century – fridges, cookers, washing-machines, toasters and comptometers.[1][2] An additional feature is the contents of one of the first, pioneering Bakelite factories in Britain, with presses, moulding machines and original steel moulds.
The collection is currently without a home. After 25 years in an 18th century watermill in Williton, Somerset, England. It is hoped it will re-open as a new more modern building in an urban location accessible to all and will address the future of plastics by learning from the past.
- Interior
- Vacuum cleaners with Bakelite bodies
- Bakelite radio
- Picnic basket
- Clock
- Disused water wheel
See also
- Leo Baekeland, inventor of Bakelite
References
- Campbell, Sophie (23 June 2007). "This is Bakelite, do not adjust your dial". Telegraph. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
- "Bakelite Museum". Culture 24. Retrieved 20 November 2010.
External links
- Article about the museum with photos
- Article about the museum with photos
- Bakelite! (youtube)
- Other Bakelite museums