Since its opening to the public on September 23, 1989, and until 2016, the Heleneum was the seat of MUSEC. The Heleneum is a villa on the shores of
Lake Lugano built between 1930 and 1934 on the architectural model of the "
Petit Trianon" in
Versailles by Hélène Bieber, a strong-willed cosmopolitan lady who wanted to transform it into a centre for social and cultural entertainment and who lived there until 1967. Especially because of the economic crisis of the 1930s, Hélène Bieber failed in her intentions and the Heleneum remained a sparsely inhabited dwelling until, in 1969, it was bought by the Municipality of
Castagnola, now a district of the City of Lugano. From 1969 to 1971 the Heleneum was the venue for the piano courses held by
Carlo Florindo Semini,
Franco Ferrara and
Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli. From 1971 to 1973, the villa hosted the summer courses and seminars of the
Ticino Institute of High Studies, directed by
Elémire Zolla, which brought together important scholars of different disciplines on the themes of religious knowledge. Later, until 1976, the Heleneum was the seat of the Centre for Semantic and Cognitive Studies of the Dalle Molle Institute, which operated in the field of artificial intelligence, at that time in its early days, and which organized various seminars attended by scholars and researchers from all over the world. The villa was finally the kindergarten of Castagnola and was used as a set for film productions in which
Bruno Ganz and
Aldo Fabrizi, among others, took part. The Museo delle Culture conserves most of the ethnic art that Serge Brignoni collected between 1930 and 1985. The collection shows the link between the creative forms of the "South Seas" culture and the artistic
Avant-Garde of the 19th century that were inspired by those objects. The collection reflects Brignoni's selection of well-crafted objects that show an appreciation of art forms from a very different culture. The genres and the geographical origins of the Brignoni collection works are similar to those found in leading European, North American and Australian collections from the first half of the 20th century. Moreover, the collection includes all of the areas that are considered fundamental for a contemporary collection of the time. ==Collection==