Roland-designs , Virginie's blog.

"Never lose an opportunity of seeing anything beautiful, for beauty is God's handwriting." - Ralph Waldo Emerson

Showing posts with label Museums. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Museums. Show all posts

Monday, 4 January 2021

Drammen museum

At the end of each year, I sort and save the photos from the previous 12 months on the pc and a separate memory device, I think it’s smart to save digital items in at least two separate places and naturally to print or make albums out of the best photos.

It was while I was moving photos from my phone to the 2020 folder that I noticed I still had pics from the little visit we took to the Drammen museum last summer, I had meant to share them on the blog but somehow never got around to it.

So here they are, some photos taken during the summer. It was a very interesting feeling to visit a museum during the pandemic as it was practically empty, I think that apart for the people working there my husband and I were the only people there at the time. In a way I kind of enjoyed that, it felt a little like a VIP tour where you get the whole place just for yourself without having to bump and nudge other visitors.

I can hardly wait until we return to a more ‘normal’ life with the possibility to travel, explore again.

Info about the museum in English is found here: http://drammens.museum.no/english/about-the-museum#


The Drammen museum

 

The museum has quite a lot of different things to see, from the usual collection of local antiques to modern Scandinavian furniture, an art gallery, old buildings, a Japanese garden, vegetable plot and ‘wild meadow’. I guess there is a little something for everyone and certainly worth a visit on a nice sunny day.






The 'meadow' near the older farm houses.



A little Hardanger cushion.

A little sampler, not dated but probably from the mid 1800’s and unlikely from Scandinavia. Note the missing letter J


Berlin woolwork embroidery - Again, I am not sure this was made in Norway.



I love this painting, the light and shadows, the details, the storm approaching and the sun on the other side.



Sunday, 14 April 2019

Visit to the Norwegian cultural heritage museum in Oslo (Norsk Folkemuseum)


Last Sunday we took a little family excursion to  the Norwegian cultural heritage museum in Oslo (Norsk folkemuseum). The museum is open most of the year and while it must be amazing to visit it during the summer, it was actually quite nice to go in early spring as there was almost nobody there; at least when we first arrived right when it opened at 11am. The 7th of April is still a little fresh so we only stayed about 3 hours, but by  the time we left the parking lot was already packed full with cars, so we were happy we had arrived extra early and this also gave me the chance to take some photos without tourists in the background.

The main attraction of the museum would be the stave church from the 1200’s, a  wooden church covered in dripping tar, with wooden engraving and a peculiar smell of old, very old wood…. Inside it’s small, dark and cold, you can feel it is very ancient and it makes you think about the lives of people so long ago who would have found comfort and solace but also firm rules and guidelines for their lives in the teaching and instruction of the church. 

Life then must have been hard with little comfort, as is seen in the other exhibitions and houses from the distant and near past that make up the rest of the open air museum. 

As you walk along the paths you can see and in some cases enter small timber houses, barns, stabburs and other farm buildings, then an Oslo building with eight apartments spanning over a century makes an interesting discussion point regarding how our style of living has changed. But what was special for me personally was entering the small homes of the average working family with low roofs, and tight living quarters from the beginning to middle of last century. It reminded me so much of the little red house from 1824 we lived in for 8 years when our children were small, and where Rosaline was born. 

Next time I would like to book a guided tour as some of the buildings are not open to the general public. Also on the wish list is to visit the gardens and the new exhibition about life in Finnmark during the great war; which will  open later on in the year.


Stave church from Gol, from circa the 1200's

Details of the entrance

You could see the thick layers of tar that preserve this old wooden church



Small timber house
Inside the timber house


Old Stabbur. These were small wooden houses which were traditionaly used on farms for storing food items.



Replica of a city street from the turn of the 1800's

Nostalgia - An old Beetle and gas station

Lot's of lovely liverwort (blÄveis) on the grounds at this time of year.