Muzeum Komunismu | |
Established | 26 December 2001 |
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Location | V Celnici 1031/4, Prague 1, Czech Republic, 118 00 |
Public transit access | Náměstí Republiky Metro |
Website | http://muzeumkomunismu.cz/en |
The Museum of Communism (Czech: Muzeum komunismu), located at V Celnici 4 in Prague, Czech Republic, is a museum dedicated to presenting an account of the post–World War II Communist regime in Czechoslovakia in general and Prague in particular.[1] The Museum of Communism offers an immersive look at life behind the Iron Curtain. Genuine artifacts, interviews, archive photographs, artworks, historical documents and large scale installations that bring an entire chapter of history to life.
History
The museum was founded by Glenn Spicker, an American businessman and former student of politics, who spent $28,000 on buying 1000 artifacts and commissioned documentary filmmaker Jan Kaplan to design the museum. According to Kaplan, he created a three-act tragedy in displays of the ideals of communism, the reality of poor life under the regime, and the nightmare of a police state. It includes rooms depicting a schoolroom, a shop with limited supplies and a secret police interrogation room.[2][3]
The gallery is devoted to providing a timeline of the communist regime in Czechoslovakia, the main medium is the use of colors, the excessive use of white, black, and red provide the museum a perfect communist ambiance, written descriptions in Czech and English language supported by red, and black artwork is there to explain to the audience what it was to live under communism regime, communist law and order, education system, trade and business all has been provided in written and pictorial form.
Gallery
- Entrance from Náměstí republiky (2022)
- Entrance within the Savarin Palace (2016)
- Schoolroom display, with child in Pioneer outfit (state youth movement)
- Grocery shop with limited goods
- Posters showing the good life
- Lenin statue and the Soviet Union flag
- various artifacts
References
- ↑ Rose Smith: An American's Museum of Communism in Prague. In: WerkstattGeschichte (2022), 83, p. 121-124 (pdf).
- ↑ Krosnar, Katka (2 February 2002). "A Tribute to Barren Shops". Newsweek. p 61. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
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: CS1 maint: location (link) - ↑ "Red revival", The Guardian