The No Art Collection is a part of the Anti-Museum founded by Vladimir Dodig Trokut. It consists of characteristic avant-garde and post-avant-garde artefacts. The Anti-Museum’s No Art Collection was established during the many years of Trokut’s activity as a member of the informal cultural opposition, which was supported by prominent individuals and public personalities, such as artists and politicians like Koča Popović and Jure Kaštelan.
-
Vieta:
-
Zagreb Ulica Nikole Tomašića, Croatia 10000
-
Temos:
-
Įkūrimo data:
-
Charakteringi eksponatai:
Ferenc Bodor’s
Nomad Dossiers is a collection representing a unique component of cultural opposition in Eastern Europe: materials related to ethno-folk revival and its Hungarian manifestation, the so-called “dance-house movement”. This collection also contains material regarding the Studio of Young Folk Artists, which was formed in the 1970s. Communist authorities considered the movement to be suspicious. They feared that it might increase nationalism among young people and, furthermore, that it might generate a powerful rival to the official youth organization.
-
Vieta:
-
Budapest Miklós tér 1, Hungary 1033
-
Temos:
-
Įkūrimo data:
-
Charakteringi eksponatai:
The Oral History Collection at CNSAS is a unique collection of this kind as it includes only interviews with individuals who are the subjects of personal files in the CNSAS Archives, and who after studying these personal files created by the Securitate agreed to narrate their own experience of entanglement with the secret police. The interviewees include not only individuals who were under surveillance and thus victims of the Securitate, but also individuals who collaborated with the secret police to provide information on others: family, friends, and colleagues. Both types of interviews represent the response of the interviewees to the narrative created about them by the Securitate.
-
Vieta:
-
București Strada Matei Basarab 55, Romania 030167
-
Temos:
-
Įkūrimo data:
-
Charakteringi eksponatai:
The private collection created and owned by Piotr ‘Pietia’ Wierzbicki contains hardcore punk fanzines, articles, and papers from the 1980s, including the original matrices of ‘QQRYQ’ fanzine edited and published by Wierzbicki from 1985. ‘QQRYQ’ was the leading Polish magazine about the underground punk scene and Wierzbicki became an influential author and promoter on that scene.
-
Vieta:
-
Temos:
-
Įkūrimo data:
-
Charakteringi eksponatai:
Polish Rock Granary in Jarocin, a branch of the Regional Museum, possesses a unique collection of photographs, documents, and films related to the history of Polish rock music, dated from 1959 until today. The most interesting exhibits are presented at a permanent exhibition, available also on-line. The history of Polish rock is not only the evolution of the genre and styles, bands, albums, concerts, and festivals; it is also the dissent against the dominant culture and the search for an alternative. The location of Polish Rock Granary is by no means coincidental. In the 1980s the small town of Jarocin hosted the Rock Musicians’ Festival that attracted rock music fans and alternative culture participants from all over Poland, and even from Czechoslovakia and GDR.
-
Vieta:
-
Jarocin Poznańska 2, Poland 63-200
-
Temos:
-
Įkūrimo data:
-
Charakteringi eksponatai: