[Note: You can click on any of these photos to see a larger image]
Yesterday, while on a walk in Mala Strana, we noticed that the Czech Museum of Music has an exhibition called BEATLEMÁNIE! After we bought our tickets, I paid the 40-crown fee so that I would be able to take photos.
Before we entered the exhibition, we paused to look around the museum space, which is very atmospheric (see my 2009 post), as the sounds of Beatles' music filled the high-ceilinged entrance hall.
Though BEATLEMÁNIE! does contain Beatles memorabilia, its focus is on the ways that the Beatles influenced the Czech Republic (and vice versa -- did you know that one of George Harrison's first guitars was Czech-made?).
I'm a Beatles fan, but I've seen many pictures of the Fab Four, so I focused on the elements of Czech design I was seeing. (All the while, Beatles songs were playing, and A Hard Days Night was being screened in the middle room.) Here are some Czech record covers from the period:
I especially liked the two tables that accompanied this Beatles collage:
These guitars were made in Czechoslovakia in the 1950s:
Czech musicians in the 60s performed music that was influenced by the Beatles. Karel Gott did the first successful cover version of one of the Beatles' songs:
The point of this beauty-parlor-themed room was that long hair wasn't always socially acceptable in Czechoslovakia (though the same was true in the West):
As you might expect, the Beatles and the hippies inspired hair and clothing styles in Czechoslovakia, too:
The exhibit devotes an entire room to John Lennon, who became a cult figure in Czechoslovakia after his death.
We left the exhibit smiling. Greg took this great picture from the sidewalk outside the museum; that's Hard Days Night playing in the background and a cool yellow submarine sculpture on the left.
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Looks like an interesting exhibit. The beauty-parlor themed room is especially intriguing!
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