Gallery Hours: Thursday and Friday 3 - 6 pm, Saturday and Sunday 12 - 6 pm, or by appointment
Located in a space adjacent to Proteus Gowanus, a gallery and reading room in Brooklyn, NY, The Museum of Matches is a permanent interdisciplinary installation that explores the Cold War, its antecedents and its legacy through visual art, documents, photographs, books, memorabilia, interviews and publications.
The project is modeled after "one-room museums" that are founded by an individual compelled to better understand a historical moment. Founded and developed by artist Sasha Chavchavadze, the project merges and matches Cold
The Museum of Matches was inspired by Vladimir Nabokov’s passion for symmetry and thematic designs, and by a match game described in his memoir, Speak, Memory. "After reading a description of a match game described by Vladimir Nabokov in his memoir Speak, Memory, I became interested in a match game invented by my father as a boy and played throughout his career as a CIA operative in the US and abroad during the Cold War. After many years of silence, my father and I began an email communication in which I asked him questions about the game. I made a recreation of the game, painting match tips to replicate the old Ohio Blue Tip matches he had used. During that time, my father found the paraphernalia of the original match game—old matches, flags, BBs, instructions, scoring notes, and a government-issued pen—stored in a Cuban cigar box. He presented it to me as a gift." An excerpt from "Game, Set, Match" by Sasha Chavchavadze, an essay with visual documentation commissioned by NYFA Current, the New York Foundation for the Arts online magazine, February 2007. To read more click here.
Publications The Play Book: "Nabokov's Match Game (or a better trick)," Fall 2007 DVDs Brooklyn Arts Council Newletter, Spring 2007, Featured Artist
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