Ivan Honchar Museum

Ivan Honchar Museum (National Centre of Folk Culture) is a museum in Kiev, Ukraine showcasing the culture of Ukraine and preserving Ukrainian folk art.

The museum was founded on a private collection of Ivan Makarovych Honchar shortly after his death in 1993. During the Soviet period, Ivan was accused of nationalism. Each individual showing an interest in his private collection was registered with the KGB.

The collection consists of over 15,000 items from the 16th to the early 20th centuries. A good example is a painting of the Ukrainian folklore hero Cossack Mamay. Other items include over 500 icons from the 16th century, 100 paintings by famous Ukrainian artists, an impressive collection of over 2,500 items of textiles from the 18th and 19th centuries, pottery, toys, Easter eggs, wood carvings and Ukrainian folk music instruments. Another part of the museum consists of Honchar's private library with books containing material that had the possessor sent to prison during Soviet times.

The Museum is a living institution, not only a collection of exhibits. There are folk art studios, shops, a theatre of folk songs and folklore, Ukrainian cuisine hands-on classes and other courses.

The musician Oleh Skrypka, (frontman of Vopli Vidopliassova) each year organizes vechornytsi (gatherings) at the centre, which include folklore singing, dances, customs etc.

Museums in Kiev, Ukraine
  • Ivan Honchar Museum
  • Kiev Fortress
  • Kiev Pechersk Lavra
  • Mamayeva Sloboda
  • Mikhail Bulgakov Museum
  • Museum of Soviet Occupation
  • Museum of the Great Patriotic War
  • Museum of Ukrainian folk art
  • Museum of Western and Oriental Art
  • National Art Museum of Ukraine
  • National Historical Museum of Ukraine
  • National Museum-Preserve "Battle for Kyiv 1943"
  • One Street Museum
  • Pyrohiv
  • St Andrew's Church
  • St Sophia Cathedral
  • St Cyril Church
  • St Nicholas Cathedral
  • Ukraine State Aviation Museum
  • Ukrainian National Chernobyl Museum

Famous quotes containing the word museum:

    The back meets the front.
    Hawaiian saying no. 2650, ‘lelo No’Eau, collected, translated, and annotated by Mary Kawena Pukui, Bishop Museum Press, Hawaii (1983)