London show tackles German cliches

Published October 17, 2014
London: The Strasbourg clock, made by Isaac Habrecht in 1589, on display at an exhibition about Germany at the British Museum.—AFP
London: The Strasbourg clock, made by Isaac Habrecht in 1589, on display at an exhibition about Germany at the British Museum.—AFP

LONDON: From a copy of the mediaeval Gutenberg bible to Karl Marx’s Capital, an exhibition opening at the British Museum in London explores 600 years of German history frequently overshadowed by Nazi horrors.

The show “Germany, memories of a nation” runs until January, with an iconic 1953 Volkswagen Beetle car gracing the museum’s entrance hall.

The post-war vehicle serves as a symbol for a show that seeks to get beyond tired World War II cliches about Germany that have proved particularly persistent in Britain.

“There is this focus especially on the period of the Third Reich, and any section of German history books in Britain will be overwhelmingly dominated by the World War II,” Barrie Cook, one of the exhibition’s curators, said.

“That is a very strong focus of how we think about Germany’s history and the modern German has to deal with that immediate legacy,” he said.

The exhibition confronts that period head on, displaying a replica of the sign outside the Buchenwald concentration camp with the chilling slogan “Jedem das Seine” (To Each His Own).

But its 200 exhibits draw from very varied periods of German history and include a hat lost by Napoleon in the Battle of Waterloo and a famous portrait of the poet Goethe.

Timed to coincide with the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989, the exhibition aims to reflect “a history full of triumphs and tragedies”.

There is no chronological order to the show, which begins with a video of the fall of the Wall projected onto a map of a country whose contours have changed vastly over the centuries.Among the assembled objects is a gold clock built by the watchmaker Isaac Habrecht like the one he made for Strasbourg cathedral; a porcelain rhinoceros as a reminder of the city of Meissen’s famous craft tradition and a wooden cradle designed by the 20th century Bauhaus school.

Published in Dawn, October 17th, 2014

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