Just before the love month say ta-ta!, and while wondering about the number of ladies that flew to Dublin today, I stumbled upon an interesting article about love, upside down. Read on...
What becomes of a garden gnome hurled in fury at a car during a stormy breakup?
Or a teddy bear that was once a Valentine's Day present? A wedding dress from a marriage gone awry? An ax that smashed through household furnitures?
Or a teddy bear that was once a Valentine's Day present? A wedding dress from a marriage gone awry? An ax that smashed through household furnitures?
All are on display at the museum of Broken Relationships in the Croatian capital, each with written testimonies telling tales of passion, romance and heartbreak.
On Valentine's Day, the museum sees its visits almost double.
"The objects that are here represent all the stages of a breakup... and how people go through love," said Drazen Grubisic, a designer and artist who cofounded the museum in 2010 in the Croatian capital.
"We might say it's love museum, just upside down," he said.
"We might say it's love museum, just upside down," he said.
The mementos - collected from all over the world - are random and varied, ranging from fake rubber breasts to a cast from a broken leg. Each items come with dates and locations of the relationships, and notes by their anonymous donors.
Some are funny. The note next to a garter belt says: "I never put them on. The relationship might have lasted long if I had."
Some are bitter. The garden gnome flew over a car driven by a husband who turned "arrogant and heartless." It bounced on the asphalt, shattering its face.
Some are bitter. The garden gnome flew over a car driven by a husband who turned "arrogant and heartless." It bounced on the asphalt, shattering its face.
"It was a long loop, drawing an arc of time... that defined the end of love," the note from Slovenia said.
An ax from Berlin was used by a woman to smash every piece of furniture her girlfriend had left behind.
"The more the room filled with chopped furniture, (the more) I felt better."
The text by a blue frisbee reads: "Darling, should you ever get a ridiculous idea to walk into a cultural institution like a museum for the first time in your life, you'll remember me."
The museum, located just across from Zagreb's City Hall where couples get married, currently displays some 100 "relics" out of about 1,000 that have been collected from around the world.
Parts of the collection have traveled as far as Manila, London and Singapore to be put on display. In each city, the heartbroken can donate their stuff to the Zagreb museum.
A prosthetic leg currently showcased in England at the National Centre for Craft and Design , was donated by a war veteran who fell in love with his physical therapist.
A note says it lasted longer than the relationship because it was made of "sturdier material."
The museum itself is the brainchild of a breakup. When Grubisic and cofounder Olinka Vistica, a filmmaker, split up, they got stuck when it came to dividing their sentimental memorabilia. They didn't want to just get rid of it, so they created a museum.
"Maybe sometime in your life you will want to remember some of the good parts of the relationship," Grubisic said.
He said that donors of mementos find the giving therapeutic.
He said that donors of mementos find the giving therapeutic.
"They can move on," he said. "They also show there's something universal: We all have been brokenhearted at least once."
- AP, Philippine Daily Inquirer, February 15, 2012. Images from Google Image.
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