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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowOn the positive side, the exhibition doesn’t monopolize any existing galleries. Instead, it fills previously underused spaces near the planetarium, making it a nice discovery rather than a plan-a-visit show.
Of course, a trip to the Children’s Museum is never wasted. There’s always plenty going on, including, this time, a live production of “Sleeping Beauty” in the Lilly Theater. The 40-minute show managed to be playful without being smirky, and innocent without being cloying. Nothing groundbreaking, but as a free addition, it should meet or exceed most expectations. Some nifty lighting and sound effects are a plus.
I also spent quality time at “Lego Castle Adventure,” which offers yet more proof that parental attention span is much shorter than kids. There are impressively massive Lego sculptures, a dress-up area, some instructional sessions on castle construction, and a few computer-screened areas, but the centerpiece of the exhibition is exactly what it should be: bins of Lego pieces and tables
to build on.My objection to Lego over its more recent history has been its push toward marketing pre-packaged kits that lead to a specific product, making them more like models and less about imaginative creation. This exhibit space, with its open-ended structure-less structure, encourages experimentation, without any instructions or finished photos telling you whether you got it “right.”
If parents find themselves bored, my advice is to just do what I did: Join in the construction fun. Just don’t hog all the cool pieces. •
This column appears weekly. Send information on upcoming events to lharry@IBJ.com. Visit IBJ.com/artsfor additional reviews, previews and arts discussion.
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