Haha! 🤝
Posts by Agata Tumiłowicz-Mazur
Haha! 🙌🏻
An old German container with inscription „Zimmt” - cinnamon, holding a jade plant cutting.
What am I up to? Still misusing old German objects.
This is certainly not cinnamon.
Thank you very much! Your perspective means a lot. And yes, this is precisely what drives me to those objects, their persistence and inevitable doubling. Thank you for reading!
Yes! Great find. Sometimes they pop up, totally unexpectedly.
Metal gate bearing the marks of gunfire from the 1944 Warsaw Uprising.
A reminder that war, any war, leaves traces far beyond our lifetimes.
This gate stopped me in my tracks today. It still bears the marks of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, as if it just happened.
Lucky me - I got magically cured. My office was right about this restaurant (NYU Prague) for a full year. Truth be told though, I had to look at it everyday until it lost its implicit meaning. I’m only here to give testimony that it is possible!
Muzeum Przyrodnicze w Cieplicach (biura)
Every Monday I dream of an office like this one 🥲 Two realities merging in plain sight.
This last photo? Is from Wojanów (formerly Schildau), number 27.
wait, what is going onnnnn!
The duality of public memory (from the past) and private property (of the moment) so a memorial for the local German soldiers fallen in World War I in a Polish private backyard.
Another convo, another gem. He says “you know what, I don’t believe in the Internet.”
He’s a 100 and a half but he’s got a point, doesn’t he?
Was it Zamek Czocha? 🥲 Lower Silesia represent!
(But also, no complimentary drunkard? Something is off.)
The life cycle of a three-spined stickleback, in German, waiting for better days in a Polish high school.
A very old sea urchin in the wild.
If you’re doom scrolling, hello👋, I’m doom posting, and continuing on my journey to this uncanny, unintentional archive of old German creatures. Possibly the only time I stumbled upon the life cycle of a three-spined stickleback and a random sea urchin. They’re all circa 100 years old now.
Old and peeling visual material depicting different kinds of fish.
Amerikanischer Kopalbaum / locust tree - an old visual material depicting it.
Creepy fish and locust tree from the past, nevertheless, I appreciate the tenacity of this old visual material.
Holy smokes…☠️ Thank you for alerting me to this. See, I don’t think the school even knows exactly what they have there and weirdly continues to store it, not knowing what to do with it (some stuff is too old to even touch). That’s why it looks like frozen in time…I will let them know.
That is so strange! I am completely transfixed by the stubborn persistence of those things…
Ummm I’m pretty sure this belonged to an actual human being, but I would love to be wrong. After all, where were the educational skeletons coming from in the 1920s? This one has been progressively losing bones over time. My mom learned anatomy from the same set... They named him Stefan.
Old slides
A bio book from 1928.
The world in images - 1895
Hello old slides, books and all 👋
A bunch of archival eggs in a drawer.
How Spielberg’s “Jurassic Park” started 🤣
Early 20th century sunchoke flower.
Early 20th century cherry laurel.
Among my favorite finds, for instance, these prewar dried plants, sunchoke flower and cherry laurel.
I don’t even know what’s going on here 🤷🏼♀️
Super old larvae & co.
Some more German samples from 80+ years ago.
So many of them are still bearing German inscriptions…and are 80 years +!
More taxidermied animals locked in school shelves.
Different stages of life as evinced by some tiny specimens.
I wasn’t quite prepared for what I found. A variety of taxidermied animals, hundreds of specimens, herbaria and science books from the 19th and early 20th centuries. As if someone had pressed pause on nature and stored it all in a small school archive for students to see and use.
A cabinet filled with taxidermied birds.
Built in 1913 as an Oberrealschule for boys, my school became a Polish high school in 1945. I returned for unrelated research and rediscovered a room untouched by time - still filled with animal and plant specimens.
An old shelf filled with animal specimens from pre-1945.
In my series “German things you didn’t know survived the war and are still in use by Poles” I want to give you a glimpse of an amazing research day I had some time ago.
Let me take you on the most unexpected journey through artefacts that survived the 1945 border change.
🧵
Petition to give this contract to České dráhy 🙏🏻
I appreciate this attitude 🤝
Precisely! 🤣 Some choices are made preventatively 😅😉
In the world of doubles and layers…make sure to check what hides underneath.
Here: a Prussian eagle under a mundane tapestry in a Polish local gov building 🫢