00:00It's a personal interest, but it also has a connection to his research.
00:11Some of them have a much harder time figuring out what story they want to tell.
00:15But it's pretty good. And it's Mården Rudin who submitted it.
00:28I'm going to take some pictures.
00:32I hope not.
00:34Thank you very much.
01:08And the laureates get free hands, so they can tell any story they like through the objects they donate to us.
01:15So it's a beautiful tradition we have here at the museum.
01:39So this is the item we got donated from Han Kang, this year's Nobel Prize laureate in literature.
01:46And she donated this cup together with the notes.
01:49And this is the process of her writing for her latest book.
01:53And there were three steps.
01:55Number one was to wake up at 5.30 every morning.
01:58She did not always succeed.
02:00Number two was to always take a walk.
02:03And number three was to drink a cup of tea from this tea cup.
02:07And then afterwards she looked into the swirl of this cup and that became her universe while writing.
02:23But we have this beautiful paper crown from John Jumper.
02:26They were called the Origami Team before it became Alpha 2.
02:31And then they actually folded this crown in origami and passed it along through their team whenever someone did something great to encourage each other.
02:44So I think that's a really beautiful story too that we got in our collection this year.
03:00Music
03:10Music
03:25Music
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