The exposition of the Museum of Prison Life introduces visitors to the aesthetic side of life in the zone - sculptures, paintings and installations made by prisoners. Here you can see wooden and metal crafts, sculpted from bread statues, generously decorated with salt and pepper, homemade guitar, oil paintings (literally) on the sheet, installation of stone crumbs and metal shavings and even the Sistine Madonna burned on a sheet of plywood.
A separate exposition presents the original letters of prisoners to relatives and friends and makes you think I'm talking about the value of living in freedom. The museum also recreates the real prison cell in every detail, and it is offered to look at it from the outside, through the peephole. Simple furniture - bunks and a table - and two wax figures of prisoners in striped robes - that's the whole interior of the camera.
You can also try on a convict's robe and take pictures on the bunks, as well as buy literature that helps to understand the tattoos and jargon of prisoners. @