The exhibition “Old Novorossiysk” is dedicated to the life of the townspeople from the end of the 19th century to the 1980s.
The exhibition reflects the life of representatives of different classes of the pre-revolutionary city — petty bourgeois, merchants, and peasants; the spiritual needs of the intelligentsia of the early 20th century; the problems of creating a new architectural image of the city after the Great Patriotic War; the state of public education in the 1950s–1960s.
By using authentic pieces of furniture and interior, old photographs, postcards and drawings, the curators managed to recreate individual historical corners of the city.
The exhibition presents the interiors of the “Room of a young woman of the bourgeois class”, “Room of the peasant settlers”, and “Trading shop”.
The interiors of Varvara Alekseevna Popova’s photo studio, Larisa Vasilievna Kich’s musical salon, the writer Fyodor Vasilyevich Gladkov’s study and living room, and the architect Valentin Silvievich Danini’s office tell about interesting people who lived in Novorossiysk.
Exhibits are marked with AR stickers for identification purposes.
The exhibition reflects the life of representatives of different classes of the pre-revolutionary city — petty bourgeois, merchants, and peasants; the spiritual needs of the intelligentsia of the early 20th century; the problems of creating a new architectural image of the city after the Great Patriotic War; the state of public education in the 1950s–1960s.
By using authentic pieces of furniture and interior, old photographs, postcards and drawings, the curators managed to recreate individual historical corners of the city.
The exhibition presents the interiors of the “Room of a young woman of the bourgeois class”, “Room of the peasant settlers”, and “Trading shop”.
The interiors of Varvara Alekseevna Popova’s photo studio, Larisa Vasilievna Kich’s musical salon, the writer Fyodor Vasilyevich Gladkov’s study and living room, and the architect Valentin Silvievich Danini’s office tell about interesting people who lived in Novorossiysk.
Exhibits are marked with AR stickers for identification purposes.