Would you put your slippers on display? The global coronavirus pandemic is still raging but museums are already gathering testimony and objects to remember life under lockdown.
"It's such an extraordinary experience," Beatrice Behlen, senior curator at the museum of London, told a section of the media.
"When we knew there was going to be a lockdown, we started straight away talking about what we needed to collect something for the future."
The museum, dedicated to the history of the British capital, launched an appeal for Londoners to donate items that reflect their lives during the COVID-19 outbreak.
"It could be something that gives you comfort -- one example mentioned often is maybe your favourite slippers, and you've been wearing them every day," she said.
It might also be evidence of a new skill someone has picked up, whether knitting or cooking or making masks for healthcare workers.
Among the items collected so far are a pot of homemade jam and a makeshift rattle used to accompany the weekly "clap for carers" across the country.
An old man sits in front of a painting.
'Collection of emotions'
Harder to curate are the emotions people feel while isolated at home, the feelings of loss and fear, but also safety, hope and love.
In response to an appeal by the museum of Home, also in London, one family has recorded how they set up a screen in front of their table so they could share a meal with relatives via videolink.
Another transformed their living room into a workshop to make gowns for healthcare staff.
The museum is also asking people to record how they feel about their homes, which are now used as offices, classrooms and gyms.
"What seems to be coming out time and again with some of the testimonies is people's resilience to the situation and how they're changing and adapting," said museum director Sonia Solicari.
In one recollection, a man known only as Amarjit describes how his Victorian house in east London has become "a palace" during lockdown, as "everything now happens here".
This image has been used for illustrative purpose.
By contrast Alex, who lives alone in a small flat with no outside space, says he feels like he is in "solitary confinement in prison."
Solicari says she has been surprised at how open people have been.
"It's really become a collection of feelings and emotions, as well as a collection of images and testimonies," she told AFP.
"So it documents feelings, which can be very hard for museums to collect actually."
Insta-museum
Curators around the world are making similar efforts to chronicle these historic times.
In Sweden, the Nordiska museet in Stockholm is currently collecting children's reflections of how their daily lives have changed and how they see the future.
In Vienna, a photo of a birthday in confinement and a kiss through a window pane are part of 1,800 contributions already collected by the city's museum.
Her site lists multiple initiatives such as mutual aid groups on Facebook or a virtual May Day party.
The lockdown has also inspired three young advertising executives in Barcelona to set up a virtual museum on Instagram.
More than 900 pieces of work have already been submitted to the Covid Art museum from around the world.
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For bricks-and-mortar institutions whose doors have closed during the lockdown, however, there is a worry that they may not be able to show their collections to real life visitors for months.
Some fear they may not survive at all, including the Florence Nightingale museum London, which is calling urgently for donations.
Dedicated to the pioneering nurse, the museum is situated in the grounds of St Thomas' Hospital, where Prime Minister Boris Johnson was recently treated for coronavirus.