MEMO Museum of good Memories is a street art installation in Pula City Centre in Pula. This place has 52 reviews and an average rating of 4.8 of 5. This is a superb rating!
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Reviews from visitors:
Very cool museum filled with nostalgia. We had so much fun and felt entirely at home. It's very interactive which was wonderful. The best host ever! Thanks Filip
Located near the The Park of King Peter Krešimir in the Istrian town of Pula, Croatia is the MEMO Museum, which dubs itself as the “Museum of Good Memories”. Opened not that long ago in 2018 by the Institut Mediterran cultural group, this novel museum allows visitors to learn about how daily life was experienced in Pula during the booming ‘Golden Era’ of Yugoslavia. Exhibits here are dedicated to each of the decades between the 50s and the 80s, while also being split up into sections which show off street scenes, town square scenes, and apartment life. As you explore the exhibits at the MEMO Museum, you also have the ability to interact with them all as well. Feel free to jump inside of their yellow Zastava 750, play some Yugoslav rock records, sit under the hairdresser's "hauba", or pound on the vintage 80s computer games. In addition, the museum also hosts and provides educational workshops for those looking to learn more about the music, interior design, sports, history, etc of the Pula during the Yugoslav-era.
The museum is small, but there are plenty items you can admire or pick up and "play with" . We popped in on a cloudy day and weren't disappointed. Great for taking interesting photos as you interact with items from the past.
Great hospitality, we had lots of fun by interacting with the vintage camera,tv and pc. My girlfriend enjoyed it a lot :)
This is a cool new museum about the recent past (1950s-1980s) just blocks from relics of the ancient past. It’s set up like a Pula home including a vintage family car, classic video games consoles, a screen playing old pop stars and TV commercials, and Istrian, religious and political influences competing with Western pop culture as it seeped in via Radio Luxembourg. This was fun for both adults and teenagers and we could touch and talk about the objects freely. Turns out, tech savvy teens don’t know how to use a rotary dial phone. It’s a refreshing alternative to ancient historical sites and interesting to see what life was like here under Tito instead of Zara and IKEA.
2 Zerostrasse
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3 Contemporary Art Museum of Istria
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