Slovene Ethnographic Museum

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Slovenski etnografski muzej (SEM)
Metelkova 2, SI-1000 Ljubljana
Phone386 (0) 1 300 8700
Bojana Rogelj Škafar, Director



Phone386 (0) 1 300 8714
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The origins of the Slovene Ethnographic Museum (SEM) may be traced back to the ethnographic collections of the Provincial Museum of Carniola, established in 1821, although its immediate precursor was the Royal Ethnographic Museum, founded in 1923. It is situated in the new cultural centre in former barracks complex at Metelkova in Ljubljana, with the INDOK Cultural Heritage Centre, the Institute for the Protection of Cultural Heritage of Slovenia and the National Museum of Slovenia as its neighbours. Its rich ethnological collections are partly presented to the public also online.


History

The first collections incorporated in the Kranjska Provincial Museum were only partly relating to Slovene culture and were mainly non-European with items donated by Slovene seamen and missioners (Friderik Baraga, Ignacij Knoblehar, Franc Pirc, Janez Čebulj).

The ethnological collections were managed by the Institute of Ethnography since its establishment in 1921 at the then-called National Museum within the Rudolfinum building in Ljubljana. Two years later the Institute got independent as Royal Ethnographic Museum with Niko Županič as the head. In 1941 it was renamed into Ethnographic Museum and in 1964 into Slovene Ethnographic Museum. The collections were presented at some castles in Ljubljana surrounding, like Goričane Castle, which housed the non-European collections.

In 1997 the Museum moved to its current location, an ex-barracks at Metelkova, to which an additional modern museum building was built in 2004.

Programme

The SEM’s mission is to give present and future generations an insight into the traditional and contemporary (material, social and spiritual) culture of Slovenes living on the territory of Slovenia and in nearby countries (Italy, Austria and Hungary) and of Slovene immigrants and ethnic groups living in Slovenia. It also aims to foster knowledge about non-European cultures (American, African, Asian, and Australia & Oceania Collections).

The museum manages 2000 m2 depot, 2700 m2 for permanent exhibitions and three temporary exhibition halls. The ground floor houses multi-functional entrance hall, information part, cloak-room, museum shop and coffee room and ethno workshop. The museum courtyard is used as an extended living room for various events.

Departments

Museum has three departments and several curatorships. The Documentation with a photo studio, the Conservation Restoration Department, dealing with metal, wood and textiles, and the Library are important information centres.

Collections

The museum houses more than 40,000 objects in several collections at eleven curatorships: dwelling culture collection of Slovene ethnical territory consists of furniture, illuminants, building parts and wall decorations, cooking, heating, eating, storing, cleaning and personal care accessories; social culture collection of play toys, Easter eggs and bundles, pastry and inn inventory, tallies and measures, associations; spiritual culture collection of amulets, masks, folk instruments; ethnographic film collection, presenting the lifestyle of Slovenes and peoples of the world, is available online; rural economy, traffic and transport collection of items used at hunting, fishing, gathering, farming; stockbreeding, beekeeping, forestry, transport and travel; folk art and art sources collection of painted beehive front boards, signs, votive images and figurines, tombstones, crucifixes, boxes and plates, household altars, paintings on glass, wood and canvas, distaffs and bars, legacy of Šantel family, art sources by Oton Grebenc pupil, Maksim Gaspari, Peter Žmitek and others; costumes and textiles collection of clothes and accessories, underwear, lacework and embroideries; handicraft and trade collection of pottery, forge, wickerwork, timber industry, textile and footwear trade, dyeing, ropery, clockmaker's trade, lectar and candle making, painting crafts; ethnic minorities collection of Slovene migrants and of minorities and other ethnical communities in Slovenia; African and American collections from Old Egypt, Sudan, Eastern and Western Africa, Togo, South Africa, North and South America, Mexico, Bolivia; Asian, Oceania and Australian collections from China, Tibet, India, Japan, Indonesia, Nepal, Oceania.

A special collections to mention are: the Egyptian collection, donated in 1843 by Laurin; the Easter Sudan collection, donated in 1850 by Ignacij Knoblehar; the Codelli collection from Togo, Nigeria and Camerun brought in 1912–1914; the Pygmy collection donated by Paul Schebest; the Chinese collection collected by Peter Turk in 1912–1913; the Indonesian collection donated by Vera and Aleš Bebler in 1970 and the Mexican collection donated by Vera and Ignac Golob in 1978.

Exhibitions

The museum exhibits two permanent exhibitions. The first one Between Nature and Culture, presented to the public in 2006, has won a Valvasor recognition in 2007. The selection out of museum collections presents over 3000 items of every day and holiday life.

The second permanent exhibition I, Us and Others - Images of my World, staged in 2009, is an exhibition about the human being and its relation to the world.

A special educational expedient is Ethno AbcZ [Etno AbecedaŽ], a labyrinth room for discovering and play with and about the terms and items.

The SEM staged between three and eight guest exhibitions each year, from Belgium, Poland, Macedonia, the Czech Republic, China, Japan, Italy and Bulgaria, and since 1995 the museum has toured its exhibitions (for example, You See Me, I See You: Cultural Diversity through the Roma Eyes toured in 2009 to Palais de l'Europe in Strasbourg, Love is in the air: Love gifts in Slovene traditional culture toured to Finland and Hungary). Some staged temporary exhibitions are: Sublime Taiwan – Its Natural and Cultural Sightseeing (2010), Beauty of Chinese Painting: Reprodictions from National Museum Tajpej Collections (2010). The SEM temporary exhibition Sudan Mission 1848–1858 in 2009 presented the oldest collection of African objects Nilotic people in Europe, which were collected by missionar and researcher of White Nil Ignacij Knoblehar.

Two web exhibitions are available online. The Shareholding in Slovenia was prepared in cooperation with Telekom Slovenia. The second web exhibition Ročnadela.org is Slovene migrants’ handcrafts archives, prepared in cooperation with the Institute for Slovenian Studies of Victoria (Austria).

Education

Its premises with a reading room are open to the public for educational purposes. The education department organises guided tours, thematic workshops for children and adults and a range of other educational events such as video screenings, lectures and monthly museum workshops.

Its educational programme includes three workshops: pottery and weaving workshop are operating as an intangible cultural heritage, while the photographic workshop exists only as a museum presentation of Photo Studio Holinsky.

Projects

The museum collaborates in the project Carnival king of Europe II in order to research the carnival tradition in Europe. The project is a continuation of the project Carnival king of Europe I and is carried by Museo degli Usi e Costumi della Gente Trentina (Italia) with project participators from Spain, Bulgaria, Croatia, Polland, Romania, Macedonia and Slovenia. It is co-financed by the Culture Department of European Union since 2010.

Slovene Ethnographic Museum is a partner in a project European Route of Roma Culture and Heritage since 2009, which is a project of networking and communications. Among partners are the Council of Europe, the Office for National Minorities and Romano Pejtaušago Kamenci (Slovenia) and others from Luxembourg, Greece, Germany, Great Britain, Spain, France and Romania.

It also takes part in the project Virtual Collection of Masterpieces to collect around 1000 masterpieces from European and Asian museums to present it online.

Publications

The museum publishes the Etnolog (Ethnologist) Journal since 1926, the SEMnovice newsletter, and a variety of other works, including at least one study work each year dealing with museum collections.

Since 1991 the museum publishes the Slovene Ethnographic Museum Library collection, where its collections from the depots are presented to the public. From the 4th volume on the contents are bilingual (Slovene and English).

Another serial publication Art Trails [Likovne sledi] presents art works stored in the museum. The youngest serial publication Collections from This or That Side? presents the ethnographical collections outside the museum, basically referring to Slovene ethnical territory. The volumes are bilingual (in Slovene and in the language of the state, where the collection is presented).

Safeguarding the intangible culture

In 2011 the Slovene Ethnographic Museum took over the national coordination of intangible culture in Slovenia, which was previously entrusted to the Institute of Slovene Ethnology. While the methodological issues and criteria for the inclusion of particular intangible culture items in the register have been set in the initial phase, the basic task of the new coordinator's working group of experts is to maintain and develop the national database and make suggestions for the inclusion in the UNESCO representative list of the world's intangible heritage.

International cooperation

Some foreign museums also borrow objects (toys, old skis) from the SEM. The museum also cooperates in a number of research projects, including in 1998 in the Raphael project 'Linen on Net: The Common Roots of European Linen Patterns', and in 1999-2001 the Virtual European Textile Heritage Site Itineraries, a three-year Raphael project with partners in the UK, Finland, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Austria and Russia.

Since 1999 the SEM has been a 'client' in the MUSEUMS programme Energy Efficiency and Sustainability in Retrofitted and New Museum Buildings (Framework 5). It has also cooperated in the MATRA programme and hosted an intern from Russia.

Exchange of international experts and studies abroad is common. Since 1997 the museum has organised and hosted several conferences: in 1998 a symposium on 'Ethnological and Anthropological Approaches to the Study of Death', and in 2000 a conference on 'Food and Celebration, from Fasting to Feasting', the first meeting of Music and Minorities group and a conference of three ICOM committees: CIMUSET, ICTOP, MPT.

The Slovene Ethnographic Museum is a member of the Network of European Ethnographic Museums (NET) and since 2002 it has also been a member of the Association of European Migration Institutions (AEMI), itself also a member of ICOM and ICOM-CIDOC.

See also

Awards

Publications

Other ethnographic collections in Slovenia

Related collections

External links

SEM virtual exhibitions

Slovene Intangible Cultural Heritage, national coordination

Gallery

Slovenski etnografski muzej (SEM) +
Bojana Rogelj Škafar +
46.055 +
Slovenski etnografski muzej (SEM) +
14.516 +
SI-1000 Ljubljana +
Director +
Metelkova 2 +
The origins of the Slovene Ethnographic Museum (SEM) may be traced back to the ethnographic collections of the Provincial Museum of Carniola, established in 1821, although its immediate precursor was the Royal Ethnographic Museum, founded in 1923. +
The origins of the Slovene Ethnographic Museum (SEM) may be traced back to the ethnographic collections of the Provincial Museum of Carniola, established in 1821, although its immediate precursor was the Royal Ethnographic Museum, founded in 1923. +
+386 / 1 300 8700 +
Ljubljana +
SI-1000 +
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