Since 1990 this new Germany has had to think about its relation to the history of East and West Germany and all the Germanies before that, the country's identity has been shaped not only by modern history but by a rich narrative stretching back over the past 600 years. Throughout its history, Germany has been notable for internal political and religious complexity and loose and ever changing frontiers. Germany's history is one of the most complex and important in Europe and has had a profound effect on the past, our present and future.
Sponsored by Betsy and Jack Ryan, Germany: memories of a nation features 200 objects selected to reflect on a number of key themes: floating frontiers; empire and nation; arts and achievement; crisis and memory. The result is necessarily impressionistic and focusses on a key period of 600 years, from the 15th century to the present day.
Rare loans from venues across Germany are displayed, most of which have never been seen in the UK before. From the most famous and iconic portrait of any German in history, the huge portrait Goethe in der Campagna by Tischbein, generously lent by the Städel Museum in Frankfurt, to an early edition of Grimms Fairy tales, to a home–made banner from the demonstrations of late 1989 cut in the shape of a united Germany and carrying the inscription Wir sind ein Volk – ‘we are one people’, this exhibition tells diverse and fascinating stories through objects which embody the memories shared by all Germans. German cultural achievement cannot be overestimated, in the creation of objects of both beauty and purpose.
The production of the Gutenberg Bible in the early 1450s marked the creation of modern Europe, the imperial cities of Nuremberg and Augsburg have been home to an enduring metalworking tradition. Germany's contribution to printmaking and in particular the genius of Albrecht Dürer, the first great artist in a mass-produced medium, the rediscovery of porcelain technique by the Meissen factory and the work of the Bauhaus changed the world and are witness to Germany’s enduring impact in the cultural world.
The devastating and tragic events of the first half of the 20th century inevitably shape modern perceptions of German history and culture. The exhibition reflects these events through the works of witnessing artists and evocative objects of the time. Otto Dix prints reflect on World War I, banknotes issued during the period of hyperinflation to financial crisis in the 1920s and works by Käthe Kollwitz’s memorialise of the political chaos that followed 1918. A loan from the Buchenwald concentration camp, the camp’s replica gate with its inscription in elegant Bauhaus lettering stating ‘to each his own’ is a powerful reminder of how established legal precepts can be utterly debased and flouted; a simple refugee cart is testimony to the largest organised deportation in history as Germans from across Europe were forced to return to the re-drawn borders of East and West Germany after 1945. When a once more divided Germany had to engage with this past and create a present that could accommodate it, a process that modern Germany continues.
The end of the exhibition is dominated by the hovering figure of Ernst Barlach’s Der Schwebende, a mourning figure in solid bronze designed for Güstrow Cathedral initially as a memorial to those who died in World War I. Its subsequent fate has meant it has become a distillation of Germany’s 20th century history and a powerful symbol of the strength of reconciliation. It is being generously lent by the Evangelisch Lutherische Domgemeinde Güstrow for the first time.
An accompanying radio series ‘Germany: Memories of a Nation’ on BBC Radio 4 will broadcast, Mon-Fri at 9:45am, beginning on 29 September. The series will examine the key moments that have defined Germany’s past, it’s great, world-changing achievements and its devastating tragedies, and explore the profound influence that Germany’s history, culture and inventiveness have had across Europe.
‘Germany: Memories of a Nation’ by Neil MacGregor will be published in hardback by Allen Lane on 6th November price: £25.00
Notes to Editors:
The exhibition runs from 16 October 2014 – 25 January 2015. Opening hours 10.00–17.30 Saturday to Thursday and 10.00–20.30 Fridays.
Admission charge £10 plus a range of concessions. Members and children under 16 go free. Tickets can be booked online at britishmuseum.org or on 020 7323 8181.
Follow updates on the exhibition via Twitter on #MemoriesOfANation and the Museum’s Twitter account @britishmuseum
An extensive public programme will accompany the exhibition including: an event on Anglo-German relations on 31 October featuring Rudiger Gorner, Philip Oltermann, and Rosemary Ashton; an event on 17 November with Chatham House; an evening of ‘Perspectives on 1989’ with Timothy Garton-Ash on 28 November and activity around ‘Germany Today’ in January 2015 in association with the London Review of Books. More information is available from the press office.
The exhibition runs concurrently with The other side of the medal: how Germany saw the First World War in room 69a. This display will examine a selection of medals made by artists who lived and worked in Germany between 1914 and 1919. Challenging and at times deliberately provocative, many of the medals were intended to influence popular opinion against Germany’s enemies. Others provide a more universal criticism about the futility of war and waste of human life. Ends 23 November 2014.
For further information
please contact the Press Office on 020 7323 8583 / 8394 or communications@britishmuseum.org
High resolution images and caption sheet available here.
For public information please visit britishmuseum.org or 020 7323 8181
fonte: @edisonmariotti #edisonmariotti http://www.britishmuseum.org/about_us/news_and_press/press_releases/2014/germany_memories_of_a_nation.aspx
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