Mon opening at 21:00
Tue-Sat 11–20 / Sun 11–18
for free
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“Krulli Chapel” is an installation space, a memorial to the industrial revolution. A resting place for the past, where large machines whose time is coming to an end are "buried," commemorating heavy iron. The Krulli Quarter is awakening to new life: innovation is taking over, while industry iron is being returned to the ground. The new existence of the ground can only come hand in hand with newness, and, considering the future, it is better to arrange a marriage of convenience between resources and their use.
The creators of “Krulli Chapel” are Indrek Leht and Andri Luup, known from the “Future Cemetery" project, who this time are interpreting the cemetery “of the past” in a figurative sense. Raoul Kurvitz' new monumental work “Metamasin” will also be exhibited in the chapel garden.
Authors’ comment:
When we talk about the 15-minute city, where everything you need is within reach, then we should also be able to be born, baptized, educated, married, and even buried within 15 minutes. A temple, an urn wall, why not a tower or a hall church or a modern place of worship also belongs to the 15-minute city. Because without a vertical outlook, human life is just a horizontal small talk.
This sort of place is perhaps even more important than all the other spaces in this quarter. If the main purpose of the 15-minute city is convenience, an escape to a bakery or to a daily errand or into self-improvement in the form of exercise or work, then the environment must also include a truly "uncomfortable" space that does not rush, but forces us to ask fundamental questions and acts as a mirror. A person sitting face to face with the Entirety and themselves – this is essential, and it is our desire to draw attention to the necessity of this space.