Saturday 31 March 2018

Wandelism: old garage turned into street art exhibition


Remember The Haus? Well this year it's not a house, it's a garage and it's about to be torn down. For two weeks only (initially one week), an old car repair garage has been taken over by 90 local and international street artists and transformed into an urban art gallery. 


The title of the exhibition, Wandelism, is a play on the words Wandel (which means change in German) and vandalism. The aim is to show that Berlin is still colourful and wild. In a city that is slowly becoming too expensive for artists, Berlin's artists need to find their own spaces. 

Spread over 2000 square metres, 15 rooms, 2 halls and a basement, the art-work is certainly very colourful and varied. Just don't forget to look inside the toilets!

Tuesday 13 March 2018

A feast for the eyes: if you enjoy photography head for City West

Helmut Newton Foundation
For many tourists and Berliners alike, the area next to Zoo Station is most readily associated with the eponymous zoo, the aquarium, the Bikini shopping mall and the Gedächtniskirche (or Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church if you prefer). However, over the past three years this has become Berlin’s temple of photography. In 2014, the C/O Berlin gallery moved from its location in Mitte to Amerika Haus, on Hardenbergstraße, just around the corner from Jebensstraße, the location of the Museum of Photography. The latter houses the Kunstbibliothek’s Collection of Photography and the Helmut Newton Foundation. In December, these venues opened their doors to two exhibitions showcasing vintage prints from the pre-digital and pre-Photoshop era of the 1960s and 1970s. While Joel Meyerowitz was a pioneer of colour photography, Guy Bourdin and Helmut Newton broke the conventions of fashion photography.

Fashion Revolution

The exhibition showcased by the Helmut Newton Foundation is called Guy Bourdin. Image Maker / Helmut Newton. A Gun For Hire / Angelo Marino. Another Story. For the first time ever, the iconic images of the two revolutionary fashion photographers, Guy Bourdin and Helmut Newton, are presented side by side. Bourdin and Newton were the star photographers of French Vogue and worked for the most prestigious fashion houses. With their provocative and ironic images, they transformed fashion photography in the 1960s and 1970s. In the words of Shelly Verthime, curator of the Guy Bourdin Estate: “For the first time it was about the image – it was beyond the fashion”. The advertising images for Charles Jourdan shoes are particularly intriguing. Finally, the snap-shot images recently taken by Newton’s former assistant, Angelo Marino on an iPhone, should be seen as complementary to the exhibition and present a view on contemporary photography. 

Colour revolution
Joel Meyerowitz
The exhibition featured by C/O Berlin from December 2017 until March 2018 was dedicated to legendary street photographer Joel Meyerowitz. In the 1960s, when artistic photography was exclusively conceived in black and white, Meyerowitz was one of the first photographers to recognise the power of colour. At the press tour of the Joel Meyerowitz . Why Color? Retrospective, the photographer explained: “Colour added content and a richness of detail to an image that could not be found in a black and white photograph”. The C/O exhibition is focussed primarily on the vintage prints in black and white and colour from the 1960s and 1970s, leading up to the present day. Starting from scenes of New York street life, the exhibition included pictures from the European car journey, which Meyerowitz defines as the time he “came of age” and the Cape Cod studies on light. As the only photographer to be granted access to Ground Zero, the pictures of the aftermath of 9/11 are particularly striking. The exhibition ends with a series of portraits and Still Lifes, Meyerowitz’s latest endeavour. In case you missed the Berlin retrospective, the autobiographical photography book Joel Meyerowitz: Where I Find Myself has just been released.

Thursday 21 September 2017

Trying to make sense of the German election


If you happen to be in Germany at the moment you will no doubt be aware that an election is imminent. Wherever you look there is an election poster. The placards are everywhere, literally everywhere. There are around 200,000 posters in Berlin alone.  

Satirical party "Die Partei" and the Linke
Now if you spend most of your time in a child friendly, environmentally friendly, organic loving, tolerant, multicultural neighbourhood like Prenzlauer Berg in Berlin, you might be mistaken in thinking that this election is business as usual. Wherever you look you see SPD (social democrats), Grüne (greens) and Linke (left) placards. There are a few CDU (centre right) posters and even fewer FDP (free democrats, i.e. free-enterprise, pro-business) ones. But if you look closer you will spot some very disturbing AfD (extreme right) posters, some ridiculous ones of Die Partei (a satirical party) and many other smaller parties, such as the Pirates, the Marxist–Leninist Party or the Ecological Democratic Party


Workers of all nations, unite!
The truth is that in Germany the SPD is expected to get only 22% of the vote. Frau Merkel's party is expected to gain just under 40%, while the openly racist, anti-immigrant, anti-EU and anti-islam AfD could become the third biggest party, with a 10% share of the vote.


Martin Schulz. Time for what? 
Let's start with the SPD.
Martin Schulz was initially hailed as the candidate that could seriously challenge Angela Merkel, but now nobody in Germany expects him to win. Is it because his ideas are too similar to Merkel's or because nobody knows what he stands for? Or is it simply because nobody can challenge Mutti Merkel?
Mutti
This brings me to Angela Merkel.
I still struggle to comprehend why so many Germans love Angela Merkel. Even traditional SPD voters are considering voting for her. I assume its is because she is seen as a reasonable and sensible figure who will grant stability and prosperity. After all, the message is clear: "Successful for Germany" and "For a Germany in which we live well and gladly". Even my five-year-old wants Angela Merkel to win because in his words "she's done some good things and made some good decisions". Although he could't give me any concrete examples, it made me wonder where he'd heard such statements. In the Kindergarten? At the playground? From his German family members?  

AfD not so popular in Prenzlauer Berg
Finally, the AfD: where do I start? Has anyone seen the posters? How can they be allowed to voice such racist slogans? All their posters are nationalist and in bad taste, but the worst one in my opinion shows a pregnant woman with the slogan: "New Germans? We'll make them ourselves." This party is expected to enter the German Parliament and could be the third biggest party in Germany on Sunday. This is a scary prospect. I sincerely hope that once again (as has happened in recent elections elsewhere) the opinion polls are wrong.