Warsaw’s Neon Museum sparks revival of interest in cold war signs and aesthetic
After fall of communism, signs were left to rust until museum founders began to collect and restore themAs they struggled through the decades of cold war gloom and repression, Warsaw’s...
By Kim Willsher in Warsaw · The Guardian Culture
After fall of communism, signs were left to rust until museum founders began to collect and restore them As they struggled through the decades of cold war gloom and repression, Warsaw’s neon signs became symbols of light, colour and hope of brighter days for the people of the city. What had started as a form of Soviet propaganda sparked a wave of creativity in the Polish capital that even the Communist authorities could not crush. But after communism ended in the late 1980s, many of the signs lost their purpose and began to disappear, left to rust where they hung or removed and taken to the scrapyard. Continue reading...