Space for the exhibition.We open the double doors on the second floor of the Kysucké Museum. It is not a hallway, but rather a sort of ante-space to the exhibition. Well-lit and through the new window and open doors, you can see directly into the exhibition. The floor flows from space to space. A few images are hanging here as well, but we are curious about the history of our town. We enter the exhibition.
The tectonically structured space and muted materiality truly allow the period objects, memories, and artworks to stand out. It does not compete with them. It does not try to show off. Instead, it gives them space. It does not distinguish by size, type, or method of presentation. Each exhibit has an optimal definition for presentation. The space is open, clearly defined, yet despite that, we do not know exactly what will happen around the corner, and that curiosity and the opportunity to explore delights us. It is a small land of artworks on the second floor of the museum. The feeling is heightened by the natural light. We are pleased that we can see the exhibition in natural light. Only a few partitions separate us from the direct sunlight. The exterior is so blurred, vague, and the feeling from the exhibition is all the more intimate.
Kilo/Honč
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