Lithuanian Railway Museum Transformed into a Christmas Village

Vilnius is using its Railway Station and the adjacent Lithuanian Railway Museum to host an ‘Independent Christmas Village’, and the city is making a statement about the hyper-consumerism that tends to take over the holiday season, encouraging a more local and authentic approach to Christmas instead.

Their centrepiece is a Christmas tree that looks nothing like the shiny decorated trees usually associated with the holiday. Instead it is wrapped in a giant plastic bag.

“We wanted to express the idea of excessive consumerism with our Christmas tree, which we have done with a modern art project,” said one of its creators, Dominykas Čečkauskas, who is also behind the famous street mural in Vilnius depicting presidents Trump and Putin embracing each other. “We have wrapped the tree in an Off-White-inspired plastic bag and attached clinical breathing masks – we would really like to show the world how we perceive problems with the economy of manufactured demand and hype culture”

Along with the tree, over a dozen pop-ups representing Vilnius’ flourishing street food and craft beer scene, as well as a slew of performance artists, fashion designers, and industrial techno musicians have taken over the Railway Museum and station area to create a Christmas village unlike any other.

Local street food pioneers Turgus 2.0, together with Lithuanian Railways, the Municipality of Vilnius, and the city’s development agency Go Vilnius, have combined forces to bring this market to life. The initiative, which will run until 2 January, is an experimental Christmas Market aimed at promoting the best of Vilnius’ youth culture, and providing an alternative to the malls and traditional-style Christmas Markets that are commonplace across the world. This Independent Christmas Village also serves to support local artists, electronic musicians, and the best of the city’s art, street-food, and micro brewing scenes.


“The Independent Christmas Village is an initiative that looks to the future instead of past traditions,” continues Čečkauskas. “The festive season has too long been about unreasonable levels of consumerism. This is why we are promoting more conscious Christmas presents by urging visitors to buy unique gifts from local street artists, designers, and second-hand merchants.”

Vilnius Mayor Remigijus Šimašius has granted this next-generation Christmas village freedom, saying, “The Independent Christmas Village represents the values of liberty, tolerance, and openness that Vilnius is built upon. Thanks to this initiative, our city’s most exciting artists will be able to come together and hopefully show other creatives from across the world that Vilnius is open to their talents and that they are welcome during Christmas or any other time of year.”

Traditional market stalls have been traded for the old train cars, including the market’s main bar, which is specialising in local festive hot chocolate and chocolate beer. Other cars have been transformed into places to relax with family and friends. Moreover, an original past century dining car has been renovated to its original style, and is housing several pop-up food shacks, including an experimental fondue bar.

During the evenings, the train cars are being used as nightlife venues, playing the best in techno and industrial sounds from Vilnius. These beats also serve as the backing tracks to a series of Christmas-inspired theatre pieces put on by local performance artists of all ages.

Good to see a railway museum extending its remit a little!

(Photos courtesy of Go Vilnius)

 

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