Difference between revisions of "Keys to Understanding Russia and Vermont"
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— Большое спасибо, from the Main Street Museum! | — Большое спасибо, from the Main Street Museum! | ||
| − | [[Call for Entries for Keys, 2011|Our Poster can be downloaded Here! | + | [[Call for Entries for Keys, 2011|Learn More here and See Pics!]] |
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| + | [Our Poster can be downloaded Here! http://www.flickr.com/photos/mainstreetmuseum/] | ||
[[category:Keys]] | [[category:Keys]] | ||
Revision as of 14:37, 23 April 2011
We all have Keys. Keys in our pockets. Keys in a drawer in our rooms. Keys in an old coat that we haven’t worn in years. They may open doors—somewhere. Some open locks that are long gone. Some start cars that have been sold—cars that have been crushed and turned into new cars. We don’t remember the locks, but we may remember the car, the lover’s apartment, the best friend’s borrowed bike. The trigger to our memories can be a key. Now is the time to do something with the keys, and with the stories behind them. Main Street Museum invites you to bring us your keys. An exhibition is scheduled at the Anna Akhmatova Museum in the Sheremetev Palace, St. Petersburg, Russia. We will exhibit these keys in May, 2011 alongside other Russian cultural artifacts. Ordinary or rare, they all will have some story to tell. Then we will accession them into the permanent collection and exhibit them in a special exhibition in Vermont during the summer months. To be a part of this, simply bring us your old keys, and we will record their stories. These need not be specific—“keys of mystery” are sometimes the best of all! (And you are welcome to submit keys anonymously.) — Большое спасибо, from the Main Street Museum!
[Our Poster can be downloaded Here! http://www.flickr.com/photos/mainstreetmuseum/]