When a relationship ends, what do you do with the things that meant something to both of you? Do you hold dear to the things both of you shared? Do you know you could donate them to the Museum of Broken Relationships in Zagreb, Croatia?
The Museum of Broken Relationships (Croatian: Muzej prekinutih veza) is a museum in Zagreb, Croatia, dedicated to failed love relationships. Its exhibits include personal objects left over from former lovers, accompanied by brief descriptions.Â
The unifying power of heartbreak has had such a draw that the exhibition has toured across the world, and a second permanent branch was opened in Los Angeles in 2016.Â
The Museum of Broken Relationships lies between Saint Markâs Church and Saint Catherineâs in Zagrebâs Upper Town.Â
On Saturdays in the Croatian capital, brides and grooms rotate for portraits against these spiritual backdrops, while wedding guests refuel during the happy day with coffee on the terrace of the museumâs well-positioned cafe.Â
Behind the patrons, this innovative exhibition space puts heartache on display. The idea to gather personal leftovers from breakups came to a former couple of Croatian artistsâOlinka ViĆĄtica, a film producer, a
nd DraĆŸen GrubiĆĄiÄ, a sculptorâupon ending their four-year union.Â
âItâs a metaphorical space to put things behind you but still leave a trace this relationship existed, that it mattered to me,â explains ViĆĄtica of the collection which opened in its current home in 2010, becoming the first private museum in Zagreb.Â
The foundersâ contribution to the globally-crowdsourced supply of woe is a lifeless wind-up toy rabbit standing in front of his vacation snapshot in a desert near Tehran. It now poses under the placard: âThe bunny was supposed to travel the world but never got further than Iran.â
Seemingly mundane objects fill the rooms, but the accompanying original words of the worldâs broken-hearted delve deep: A garden gnome squats under the description of its angry flight through the air on the da
y marking divorce of a 20-year marriage.Â
The last checkbook with both partnersâ names sits on a pedestal near a stiletto heel representing a clandestine but memorable encounter between prostitute and client.Â
A letter from first loves parting ways
in Sarajevo on the brink of the war that dissolved Yugoslavia memorializes yet another romance that never stood a chance.Â
A tattered flag missing its bottom half-waves in the entrance, while the small gift shop offers commissioned work from local designers like bad memory erasers and jewelry stringing shards of broken china.Â
Pieced together from people around the world, the curated collection reflects diverse perspectives from coming-of-age to family bonds that failed. âWe transformed the concept of a museum from that temple about historic things.Â
Museums can be about you and about me. We added some sort of democratic value and introduced love as a tool to learn about the world,â says ViĆĄtica, who knew the perfect locationâinside the former palace of early 20th-century Croatian abstract painter Count Kulmer, right where todayâs funicular re
aches from Lower Town to the top of the hill surrounded by other city cultural sites.
Yet visiting here touches a uniquely personal but universal level, as ViĆĄtica describes: âItâs an intimate experience in a public space, and thatâs so rare.âÂ
Around one hundred thousand people visited last year, not including traveling exhibitions that juxtaposed the objects against church aisles in Amsterdam or helped the Sami people of remote arctic Norway open up in atypical ways.Â
With stories considered private, the Museum of Broken Relationships provides a much-needed place to heal. Research under an MRI scanner found that the brains of the heartsick can resemble the brains of those experiencing cocaine withdrawal.Â
Another study, monitoring coping methods of various heartbreak-afflicted foci groups, found that while long-term wallowing is never a great idea, reflecting upon a recent breakup can help speed the healing process.Â
Honking cars in procession merrily pass by the museum on the way to the next wedd
ing event, while cafe guests come and go.Â
After considering the varied stories insideâfrom humorous to distraught, romantic, or familialâanyone can rehabilitate by leaving a message in the museum guest book, propped in front of a mirror so a person must face oneself. As ViĆĄtica says, âYou can always make something of your broken relatio
nship.â