When I started collecting minerals, I did not plan to build a museum.
What changed over time was not the size of the collection, but the way I looked at it. My focus gradually shifted away from completeness and toward aesthetics.
Today, I follow a simple principle: I select only what resonates with me visually.
From Collecting to Curating
At a certain point, the idea of a private museum emerged naturally.
The more selective the collection became, the less relevant categories and systematics were. Each specimen had to stand on its own — not as part of a group, but as an individual piece.
I stopped thinking in species and localities, and started thinking in composition: color, contrast, balance, and visual tension.
Minerals as Natural Artworks
I do not primarily see the specimens as geological objects.
They carry scientific meaning, of course. But that is not where the experience begins.
What matters first is their visual presence.
Some pieces immediately draw the eye and hold it. They create a focal point — much like a painting or sculpture. The fact that they are entirely natural only increases their impact.
A Deliberate Reduction
The collection is intentionally selective.
There is no attempt to represent all important minerals or localities. Many classic specimens are simply not present, because they do not meet the aesthetic criteria that guide my choices.
This is a conscious decision.
By reducing, I gain clarity. By excluding, I strengthen what remains.
The Museum as an Experience
Opening the collection to visitors was a logical next step.
If minerals are approached as artworks, they should also be presented that way: with space, focus, and careful staging.
The goal is not to educate first, but to engage.
Understanding can follow — but it is not required.
A Personal Perspective
This collection reflects a personal way of seeing.
It is shaped by years of looking, comparing, and refining my criteria. Others would make different choices — and that is perfectly valid.
For me, coherence comes from this subjectivity.
In the end, the collection is not only about minerals, but about perception — and about the idea that nature can create objects that stand comfortably alongside what we call art.
