Across Moldova, hundreds of vibrant Soviet-era mosaics — depicting harvest scenes, cosmonauts, and city builders — have been quietly crumbling on bus stops, banks, and building facades, victims of neglect and sometimes deliberate destruction. Since 2020, a small group of digital activists led by political cartoonist Alex Buretz has been racing to document over 500 of these forgotten artworks, using photogrammetry to preserve them and lobbying authorities who had let them decay. Their citizen-led campaign has already shifted policy: Chisinau City Hall now officially protects 22 mosaic panels, and the Ministry of Culture is conducting a nationwide inventory. What began as a grassroots documentation project has become something larger — a reminder that cultural memory, even when tied to complicated histories, belongs to the people willing to fight for it. “These intricate works of art are not mere decorations,” reads their exhibition notes, and the activists’ persistence proves that sometimes ordinary citizens must step in to save what institutions have abandoned.
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Moldova’s Secret Mosaic Masterpieces | DailyGood
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