The Virtual Litmuseum is an exact copy of the reconstruction project created by the architectural firm Drozdov & Partners. Reconstruction has not yet begun, but you already have the opportunity to visit the future premises of the museum.
The main feature of our application is the ability not only to view exhibitions but also to interact with them. We use audio, video, animation, and computer game elements to design online exhibitions.
You will have the opportunity to:
- walk the 3D space of the future museum;
- visit exhibitions;
- zoom in and out the elements of the exposition, touch them;
- listen to the audio accompaniment of expositions;
- join a curatorial online tour;
learn more in additional materials.
About online exhibitions
Now there are two exhibitions in the application: "How did we get learned to this" and "Bonadr's Workshop". Bondarstyle ».
"How did we get learned to this" is an exposition of how the school curriculum in Ukrainian literature has affected our cultural memory and how "traumatized" we are by teaching this discipline. We decided to investigate whether the approaches to compiling the school curriculum have changed and how it hides from us and why in our matrix of perception of Ukrainian literature only "sorrow".
“Bonadr's Workshop. Bondarstyle "is an exhibition dedicated to the artist Valer Bondar, who united the creative elite in Kharkiv and beyond. It was in Bondar's studio in the Litmuseum that the Ukrainian informal community of the early 1990s emerged. The visual and semantic content of the exhibition combines acquaintance with the work and personality of the artist. The exhibition consists of three cycles of paintings, audio accompaniment by the wife of the artist Olga Bondar and writer Sergei Zhadan, who considers Valer his "guru and teacher." Also in the exhibition, there are additional articles and photos.
About the Litmuseum
Kharkiv Litmuseum was established in April 1988 on the initiative of Kharkiv writers. The museum's collection includes more than 30,000 museum items of the main fund and about 17,000 items of the research and support fund. As there were unique periods of extraordinary artistic activity in the history of our region, the collection of literature of the Red Renaissance of the 1920s and the Sixties and the Ukrainian resistance movement of the 1960s and 1980s is of all-Ukrainian significance.
The core of the collection consists of exhibits from the 1910s and 1930s from the archives of Ivan Dniprovsky and Maria Pylynska and Andriy Chernyshov. These are books with autographs of Mykola Khvylovy, Mike Johansen, Mykola Kulish, and others, unique correspondence of writers, periodicals with comments, photographs, personal belongings (Ostap Vyshny's pen, Yuri Shevelyov's typewriter, Pavel Tychyna's pince-nez), copies and originals of documents Lesya Kurbas), memorial exhibits (VAPLITE seal, doors from the Vasyl Blakytny House of Writers), paintings by Kharkiv artists (works by Valery Bondar), etc.
The museum also has unpublished archives of writers Hnat Khotkevych, Ivan Dniprovsky, Vasyl Mysyk, Volodymyr Svidzynsky, many photographs, manuscripts, art magazines published by the aforementioned and other writers.
For the last three years, the Litmuseum and its partners have been developing the Kharkiv Literary Residence - an opportunity to receive Ukrainian and foreign authors throughout the year in one of the apartments in the Slovo building.
litme.com.ua
litmuzej@gmail.com
The main feature of our application is the ability not only to view exhibitions but also to interact with them. We use audio, video, animation, and computer game elements to design online exhibitions.
You will have the opportunity to:
- walk the 3D space of the future museum;
- visit exhibitions;
- zoom in and out the elements of the exposition, touch them;
- listen to the audio accompaniment of expositions;
- join a curatorial online tour;
learn more in additional materials.
About online exhibitions
Now there are two exhibitions in the application: "How did we get learned to this" and "Bonadr's Workshop". Bondarstyle ».
"How did we get learned to this" is an exposition of how the school curriculum in Ukrainian literature has affected our cultural memory and how "traumatized" we are by teaching this discipline. We decided to investigate whether the approaches to compiling the school curriculum have changed and how it hides from us and why in our matrix of perception of Ukrainian literature only "sorrow".
“Bonadr's Workshop. Bondarstyle "is an exhibition dedicated to the artist Valer Bondar, who united the creative elite in Kharkiv and beyond. It was in Bondar's studio in the Litmuseum that the Ukrainian informal community of the early 1990s emerged. The visual and semantic content of the exhibition combines acquaintance with the work and personality of the artist. The exhibition consists of three cycles of paintings, audio accompaniment by the wife of the artist Olga Bondar and writer Sergei Zhadan, who considers Valer his "guru and teacher." Also in the exhibition, there are additional articles and photos.
About the Litmuseum
Kharkiv Litmuseum was established in April 1988 on the initiative of Kharkiv writers. The museum's collection includes more than 30,000 museum items of the main fund and about 17,000 items of the research and support fund. As there were unique periods of extraordinary artistic activity in the history of our region, the collection of literature of the Red Renaissance of the 1920s and the Sixties and the Ukrainian resistance movement of the 1960s and 1980s is of all-Ukrainian significance.
The core of the collection consists of exhibits from the 1910s and 1930s from the archives of Ivan Dniprovsky and Maria Pylynska and Andriy Chernyshov. These are books with autographs of Mykola Khvylovy, Mike Johansen, Mykola Kulish, and others, unique correspondence of writers, periodicals with comments, photographs, personal belongings (Ostap Vyshny's pen, Yuri Shevelyov's typewriter, Pavel Tychyna's pince-nez), copies and originals of documents Lesya Kurbas), memorial exhibits (VAPLITE seal, doors from the Vasyl Blakytny House of Writers), paintings by Kharkiv artists (works by Valery Bondar), etc.
The museum also has unpublished archives of writers Hnat Khotkevych, Ivan Dniprovsky, Vasyl Mysyk, Volodymyr Svidzynsky, many photographs, manuscripts, art magazines published by the aforementioned and other writers.
For the last three years, the Litmuseum and its partners have been developing the Kharkiv Literary Residence - an opportunity to receive Ukrainian and foreign authors throughout the year in one of the apartments in the Slovo building.
litme.com.ua
litmuzej@gmail.com
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