I found this story on Morning Brew todayPlace to be: The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam
https://cdn.sanity.io/images/bl383u0v/production/6c12beb9e1d77ed29d6e2d8ab325281a760312ca-1240x992.png?w=1240&q=80&auto=format" style="max-width:100%;">Kelly Schenk/RijksmuseumIt’s a big world out there. In this section, we’ll teleport you to an interesting location—and hopefully give you travel ideas in the process.Attention, fellas: You know that condom you’ve had in your wallet since high school? Well, if you hold on to it for another two centuries, it might wind up in a museum.This week at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, a nearly 200-year-old unused condom was put on display as part of the “Safe Sex?” exhibition. It focuses on 19th-century prostitution and includes prints, drawings, and photographs, but the sheath de résistance is the nearly eight-inch prophylactic believed to have been a gift for patrons of a brothel in France.
- It’s made from a sheep’s appendix and, you won’t believe this, did little to prevent sexually transmitted diseases and pregnancy. Other makeshift condoms from the era before vulcanized rubber were fashioned from linen and even turtle shells.
- There’s an erotic etching on it as well, featuring a partially dressed nun pointing at three equally disrobed clergymen and the phrase, “Voila, mon choix,” which means, “There, that’s my choice.”
That NSFW drawing is a form of social commentary. Per the museum, it’s a “parody of both celibacy and the Judgement of Paris from Greek mythology,” the latter being the mythological story of a Trojan prince named Paris who had to decide which of three goddesses was the fairest.
This condom expires in November: Because that’s when it will no longer be on display at the museum.
—DLhttps://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#trash/FMfcgzQbffbDSBGmzjKGwBjfgKpBJsnB