Difference between revisions of "Idrija Municipal Museum"
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== Exhibitions on the Gewerkenegg Castle == | == Exhibitions on the Gewerkenegg Castle == | ||
− | The central museum exhibition | + | The central museum exhibition titled ''Five Centuries of the Mercury Mine and the Town of Idrija'' presents the development of the town of Idrija and 500 years of the second oldest and largest mercury mine in the world. While operating, the mine produced one-eighth of all mercury globally. |
− | The ''Collection of Rocks, Fossils, Mercury Ores and Minerals'', with nearly 3,000 different specimens is the | + | The ''Collection of Rocks, Fossils, Mercury Ores, and Minerals'', with nearly 3,000 different specimens, is the largest exhibited collection of its kind in Slovenia. ''Documents Tell the Story'' and ''View of the Town'' in the front tower of the castle showcase a selection of significant archival sources from all over Europe, along with documents from Idrija cartographers and mine maps from the 18th and 19th centuries. |
− | ''Mercury Tower'' | + | The ''Mercury Tower'' is the highlight of the exhibition, designed like a shaft with three levels. Each level presents different symbolic values in the life of the miner. The first level displays equipment, methods, and customs before entering the shaft; the second level showcases work conditions, tools, and miners in the 17th century; and the lowest part features a 320 kg transparent Plexiglass cube with drops of mercury hanging in the air on iron wires. |
− | ''Famous Personalities'' | + | ''Famous Personalities'' presents portraits and documents relating to the workers, intellectuals, and mining experts who influenced Slovenia's and Europe's science and culture. Notable figures include naturalists Scopoli, Hacquet, and Paracelsus, who lived in Idrija. |
− | The process of extracting mercury and cinnabar is illustrated in a room with a massive millstone used for grinding cinnabar, clay retorts for | + | The process of extracting mercury and cinnabar is illustrated in a room with a massive millstone used for grinding cinnabar, clay retorts for smelting ore, and original mercury scales from 1830. An important support industry for mining is forestry; Idrija is surrounded by hills and forests that were cut for centuries for shaft support and mining architecture. Wood was also exported, and the Idrijca River and its tributaries served as transport routes. Architectural and technical solutions are vividly presented through various models of water dams, barriers, and water rakes designed to pool incoming wood. The facilities shown in the models can still be visited in the town of Idrija and surrounding areas. |
− | '' | + | ''The Heartbeat of the Bourgeois Idrija'' highlights the vibrant social and cultural life in historical Idrija. The [[Idrija Brass Music Association]], with over 350 years of tradition, has a permanent tribute in the museum. Mining operations led to the establishment of several high-quality local schools and craft traditions such as lace-making. Bobbin lace-making was introduced into Slovenia from the Czech and German lands of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy over 300 years ago, with the first mention dating back to 1696. Idrija gradually developed its own techniques and design patterns, establishing a lace school in 1876, which achieved European dimensions. Lace, like mercury, was exported worldwide. |
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− | On display in the Idrija Municipal Museum is a relief model of the Partisan Hospital ''Bolnica Pavla'', | + | The Memorial Room of [[France Bevk]], a famous Slovene writer, was donated by his wife after his death in 1971. His study was moved from Ljubljana to the museum's permanent exhibition at [[Gewerkenegg Castle]] that same year. |
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+ | On display in the Idrija Municipal Museum is a relief model of the Partisan Hospital ''Bolnica Pavla'', a lesser-known but significant hospital where more than 1,600 Partisans were treated. | ||
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+ | ''The Flow of Knowledge and Goods; the Heritage of Mercury'' is one of the newest exhibitions. Since the 17th century, mercury from Idrija and Almadén primarily traveled across the Atlantic to the Spanish mines of the New World. From Idrija to America, mercury was transported in special steel bottles, traveling up to 10,000 kilometers and taking up to five months to reach its destination. In American mines, it was used in procedures for extracting gold and silver, which then returned to Europe in the form of bars or coins. Knowledge of metallurgy accompanied these goods. Unfortunately, the processes associated with mercury heavily polluted the environment; in the past 200 years, the rate of mercury in the atmosphere has tripled. In 2013, awareness of the serious environmental effects led to the creation of the Minamata Convention, a document aimed at protecting global health and the environment from mercury's effects. Since 2011, Europe has banned the use of mercury. | ||
+ | The exhibition ''Idrija Lace, A History Written in Thread'' traces the origins of bobbin lace in Europe and the development of Idrija lace. Most likely, the wives of German and Czech mining experts brought lacemaking knowledge to Idrija in the second half of the 17th century. Here, lacemaking spread rapidly and gained prominence both in the town and the countryside. Idrija lace features various techniques that have grown and improved over time. To help women create lace more efficiently and of better quality, trading companies encouraged the establishment of a lace school in Idrija. Operating continuously since 1876, the lace school preserves and develops lacemaking knowledge with around 400 students per year. In the second half of the 20th century, the role of lace began to transform, becoming increasingly popular as a highly respected ceremonial gift. One notable example is Jovanka’s tablecloth, intended for the wife of former Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito, which is on display. | ||
===Temporary exhibitions=== | ===Temporary exhibitions=== |
Revision as of 07:11, 30 September 2024
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31 Oct 2016
16 Dec 2016
The exhibition Idrija – Town of Lace and Unesco Heritage, curated by Ivana Leskovec and Mirjam Gnezda Bogataj and organised in cooperation with the Idrija Municipal Museum and Embassy of the Republic of Slovenia Washington,
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19 Jun 2015
A screening of Connected by Thread, directed by Matjaž Mrak and produced by Friendly Production for Idrija Municipal Museum, at the 14th RAI International Festival of Ethnographic Film
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7 Nov 2014
17 Dec 2014
Smuggling Anthologies, an exhibition and conference featuring Tanja Žigon, Božo Repe, Tomaž Pavšič, and Franc Trček, EU funded project led by Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMSU) in Rijeke, Trieste Contemporanea, and Idrija Municipal Museum
Exhibitions on the Gewerkenegg Castle
The central museum exhibition titled Five Centuries of the Mercury Mine and the Town of Idrija presents the development of the town of Idrija and 500 years of the second oldest and largest mercury mine in the world. While operating, the mine produced one-eighth of all mercury globally.
The Collection of Rocks, Fossils, Mercury Ores, and Minerals, with nearly 3,000 different specimens, is the largest exhibited collection of its kind in Slovenia. Documents Tell the Story and View of the Town in the front tower of the castle showcase a selection of significant archival sources from all over Europe, along with documents from Idrija cartographers and mine maps from the 18th and 19th centuries.
The Mercury Tower is the highlight of the exhibition, designed like a shaft with three levels. Each level presents different symbolic values in the life of the miner. The first level displays equipment, methods, and customs before entering the shaft; the second level showcases work conditions, tools, and miners in the 17th century; and the lowest part features a 320 kg transparent Plexiglass cube with drops of mercury hanging in the air on iron wires.
Famous Personalities presents portraits and documents relating to the workers, intellectuals, and mining experts who influenced Slovenia's and Europe's science and culture. Notable figures include naturalists Scopoli, Hacquet, and Paracelsus, who lived in Idrija.
The process of extracting mercury and cinnabar is illustrated in a room with a massive millstone used for grinding cinnabar, clay retorts for smelting ore, and original mercury scales from 1830. An important support industry for mining is forestry; Idrija is surrounded by hills and forests that were cut for centuries for shaft support and mining architecture. Wood was also exported, and the Idrijca River and its tributaries served as transport routes. Architectural and technical solutions are vividly presented through various models of water dams, barriers, and water rakes designed to pool incoming wood. The facilities shown in the models can still be visited in the town of Idrija and surrounding areas.
The Heartbeat of the Bourgeois Idrija highlights the vibrant social and cultural life in historical Idrija. The Idrija Brass Music Association, with over 350 years of tradition, has a permanent tribute in the museum. Mining operations led to the establishment of several high-quality local schools and craft traditions such as lace-making. Bobbin lace-making was introduced into Slovenia from the Czech and German lands of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy over 300 years ago, with the first mention dating back to 1696. Idrija gradually developed its own techniques and design patterns, establishing a lace school in 1876, which achieved European dimensions. Lace, like mercury, was exported worldwide.
The Memorial Room of France Bevk, a famous Slovene writer, was donated by his wife after his death in 1971. His study was moved from Ljubljana to the museum's permanent exhibition at Gewerkenegg Castle that same year.
On display in the Idrija Municipal Museum is a relief model of the Partisan Hospital Bolnica Pavla, a lesser-known but significant hospital where more than 1,600 Partisans were treated.
The Flow of Knowledge and Goods; the Heritage of Mercury is one of the newest exhibitions. Since the 17th century, mercury from Idrija and Almadén primarily traveled across the Atlantic to the Spanish mines of the New World. From Idrija to America, mercury was transported in special steel bottles, traveling up to 10,000 kilometers and taking up to five months to reach its destination. In American mines, it was used in procedures for extracting gold and silver, which then returned to Europe in the form of bars or coins. Knowledge of metallurgy accompanied these goods. Unfortunately, the processes associated with mercury heavily polluted the environment; in the past 200 years, the rate of mercury in the atmosphere has tripled. In 2013, awareness of the serious environmental effects led to the creation of the Minamata Convention, a document aimed at protecting global health and the environment from mercury's effects. Since 2011, Europe has banned the use of mercury. The exhibition Idrija Lace, A History Written in Thread traces the origins of bobbin lace in Europe and the development of Idrija lace. Most likely, the wives of German and Czech mining experts brought lacemaking knowledge to Idrija in the second half of the 17th century. Here, lacemaking spread rapidly and gained prominence both in the town and the countryside. Idrija lace features various techniques that have grown and improved over time. To help women create lace more efficiently and of better quality, trading companies encouraged the establishment of a lace school in Idrija. Operating continuously since 1876, the lace school preserves and develops lacemaking knowledge with around 400 students per year. In the second half of the 20th century, the role of lace began to transform, becoming increasingly popular as a highly respected ceremonial gift. One notable example is Jovanka’s tablecloth, intended for the wife of former Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito, which is on display.
Temporary exhibitions
On the castle the museum runs also two separate exhibition spaces, the Small Gallery [Mala galerija] and the Nikolaj Pirnat Exhibition Space [Razstavišče Nikolaja Pirnata]. Specific research projects such as The 50 years of Basketball in Idrija (2019) as well as contemporary artworks are exhibited there.
Satellite locations
The museum works closely with the Idrija Mine Museum and the Municipality of Idrija to run numerous sites (the theatre, a warehouse, the city hall, Gewerkenegg Castle, miners houses, the water barriers klavže, etc.). In 2007 the whole complex was added to the tentative list of the UNESCO world heritage sites under the title Idrija on the Mercury Route of the Intercontinental Camino Real, while in 2012 the nomination, this time as Heritage of Mercury by Idrija and Almadén, was successful.
The museum therefore oversees the activities of various satellites showing works which were necessary to maintain mine shafts, wood cutting and transport: the Flood Dams, Klavže in Idrija, built in 1772; Francis's Shaft, the museum's technical department, a mine shaft that has 15 of the most modern battery and steam machines for pumping water out of the mine from the 19th century to the early-20th century. It has the biggest water pump, known as Kley's Pump, made by the E. Škoda Pilsen factory (Plžen, Czech Republic) in 1893 and operated until 1948. After being repaired and renovated, the pump was opened again for the public in 2009. The Idrija Kamšt (from the German word Wasserkunst – "water art"), the largest wooden water wheel in Europe which pumped water from the mine from the time of the French Revolution all the way till 1948. It was restored and reopened for public viewing in September 2009. The Idrija Miner's House dating from the end of the 19th century was renovated in 1990.
The museum cares also for the World War II heritage, the Franja Partisan Hospital and the Slovenia Partisan Printing Shop in Vojsko. The Printing House operated from 1944 till the end of the war, and Partizanski dnevnik [The Partisan's Daily] was the only daily newspaper in occupied Europe printed by a resistance organisation.
See also
- Idrija Mine Museum
- Miner's House - Ethnological Collection, Idrija
- Idrija Kamšt
- Francis's Shaft
- Flood Dams, Klavže, Idrija
WWII monuments
External links
UNESCO World Heritage List