Picture of author.

Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Author of Gerhard Richter: Panorama: A Retrospective

175+ Works 935 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Gerhard Richter: Panorama: A Retrospective (2009) 146 copies, 1 review
Gemäldegalerie : Berlin (1998) 72 copies
Gemaldegalerie, Berlin: 50 Masterpieces (2000) 40 copies, 1 review
Egyptian Museum Berlin (1990) 40 copies
Beyond compare: Art from Africa in the Bode Museum (2017) — Host Institute — 9 copies, 1 review
Tibet : Klöster öffnen ihre Schatzkammern (2006) — General Co-ordinator — 9 copies
The Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection Berlin (2008) 5 copies, 1 review
Das Museum fur Byzantinische Kunst im Bode-Museum (2006) — Corporate Author — 3 copies
Retrotopia : design for socialist spaces (2023) — Corporate author and Host Institute — 2 copies
Die Pferde von San Marco (1982) 2 copies
Fasziniert von der Natur / Fascinated by Nature (2013) — Editor — 2 copies
Neues Museum 2 copies
Nofretete. Echnaton (1976) 2 copies
Katalog 1 copy
Deutsche Volkskunst — Host Institute — 1 copy
Kunstausstellung der Volksrepublik China — Corporate Author and Host Institute — 1 copy
Die Papyri als Zeugen antiker Kultur — Corporate Author — 1 copy
Altes Museum 1 copy
Bode-Museum 1 copy
Schätze der Museen des Moskauer Kreml — Corporate Author — 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Berlin State Museums
Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz
Gender
n/a
Relationships
Alte Nationalgalerie (member)
Nationality
Germany
Places of residence
Berlin, Germany
Associated Place (for map)
Berlin, Germany

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
This is an excellent book in every respect: high quality photography and printing. Extremely good scholarship and writing. Based on a conceptually unique exhibition (at least to my knowledge) of fascinating and uniformly high quality pieces and - in the case of the African objects - of a tradition rarely seen in Western art galleries. The idea of juxtaposing African and European artistic objects - mainly "sculptures" but see below turns out to have been a stroke of genius.

The Introduction is show more extremely thought provoking across a range of topics, including: Euro-centric views of art history (and just history in toto); how the context in which objects are viewed influences our attitudes to and interpretations of them; how our biases about the originating cultures influence our attitudes to artistic objects.

Expanding on some of these, African art was long considered a largely irrelevant distraction from the main thread of artistic development, which is Western, because African art was deemed "primitive" like the African peoples themselves. A view imposed by Westerners with implicit assumptions of cultural and intellectual superiority. Such attitudes are only now being challenged in the context of art and of world history. In fact, this exhibition demonstrates that much African art has been created with as much skill and expressive talent as European masterworks. There is a yawning gulf in a really significant aspect, however: European art from at least the Mediaeval period to the invention of photography can be seen as a continuous quest for the most convincingly realistic representation of the chosen subject matter. African art simply could not care less about this. Absolutely none of the African items in this book are focused on realism. They are often highly abstract, though still clearly representational, and have a symbolic aspect and emotional impact that belie the idea of "primitiveness." These works aimed to achieve certain goals and strike their marks - but realism just isn't one of these goals. This seems to have been viewed as some kind of failure by Europeans at the same time as people were collecting spectacular objects because of their rarity and exoticism.

The context an object is seen in affects our perception of it: Most of the African items come from an "Ethnological" Museum, whilst most of the European ones are held by a Fine Art Museum. This radically affects our attitudes towards them but neither is the context intended by the artists: most of these objects were intended for religious or ceremonial use, not passive observation in any kind of musuem display, along with written contextualisation. There are, however numerous other points of comparison and contrast shown up by the juxtapositions and discussed in detail by the editors.

For me, the African art proved much more interesting and affecting than the European in the large majority of cases. I can identify several reasons for this: unfamiliarity (I've seen very little African art); avoidance of realism (making the human figures in particular much more emotionally expressive than their European counterparts); different beauty standards (e.g. deliberate scarifications for both men and women); a seemingly wider lexicon of iconography (Mediaeval European art strikes me as heavily bound up with a quite narrow range of basic Christian icons e.g. the Madonna and Child, that, due to endless repitition with little variation have turned into empty cliches. The much rarer imagery such as fantastical depictions of Hell and demons hold way more power.) In the case of the African objects shown here, obvious genres are still readilly identifiable but because of the lack of realism and the much broader range of basic icons (large numbers of different supernatural entities, rulers and ancestors) there is much greater scope even within a specific genre such as spiritual masks, power figures or ceremonial chairs.

Over all, the most challenging and rewarding art book I've ever read!
show less
This is an okay, not great, presentation of 50 masterpieces from Berlin's wonderful Gemaldegalerie painting museum. The works selected are masterpieces, well worth savoring. The texts, however, are pedestrian, with not as much historical / art-analysis insight as comparable guides from world-class museums. Exceptions prove the rule: The discussion of Lucas Cranach's The Fountain of Youth, where women enter as hags and trip out the other side as starlets, is excellent. The book makes a nice show more souvenir of a visit to the museum, but is not as useful to carry during a visit. It points out worthwhile works, but without in-depth discussion; just bringing, or using one of the museum's, highlights-lists serves that purpose, without lugging the book. show less
Spanning nearly five decades, and coinciding with the artist's 80th birthday, Gerhard Richter: Panorama is a major chronological retrospective that groups together significant moments of this remarkable painter's career. It includes portraits based on photographs such as the famous Betty 1988, abstractions, subtle landscapes, colour charts, works on paper, mirrors and three important glass constructions.
Gerhard Richter was one of the first German artists to reflect on the history of National show more Socialism, creating paintings of family members who had been members, as well as victims of, the Nazis, as well as canvases reminiscent of images of the bombing of Dresden. In 1988 he produced the 15-part work October 18 1977, a sequence of black and white paintings based on images of the Baader Meinhof group. Richter has continued to respond to significant moments in history. Gerhard Richter (born 1932) is widely regarded as one of the most important painters at work in the world today and has exhibited at many of the world's leading art institutions. He is as well known for his figurative works as he is for his abstract paintings, often combining elements of both in groundbreaking ways. On the occasion of a major, touring, retrospective exhibition, a collaboration between Tate Modern, London, Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin and Centre Pompidou, Paris, this important book encompasses Richter's entire career. With texts by leading international authorities on Richter's work, a new interview with the artist and over 300 illustrations, it will remain the most comprehensive survey of Richter's monumental achievements for many years to come. show less
This small book is intended as an affordable (for an art book) souvenir of a visit to the museum housing the Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection. It reproduces "highlights" of the Collection with a short commentary on each piece. Said Collection was a private collection of mainly Surrealist and related works, now held by a Foundation dedicated to making the art accessible to the public.

The two most notable results of my visit were discovery of Piranesi and for the firsst time appreciating works by show more Paul Klee. This book has two reproductions by the former and several by the latter. There's a lot of other interesting work, too, though. show less

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Dietrich Wildung Contributor
Olivia Zorn Contributor, Editor, Editorial
Fabian Reiter Contributor
Matthias Wemhoff Contributor, Editor
Jonathan Fine Editor, Contributor
Paola Ivanov Editor, Contributor
Ethnologisches Museum Berlin., Collection, Host Institute
David A. King Contributor
Manuel Keene Contributor
Marilyn Jenkins Contributor
Andreas Kretschmar Contributor, Glossary and Scientific editing
Christine Seidel Author and Editorial Support
Marit Kretschmar Scientific editing
Martin-Gropius-Bau Host Institute
Johannes Laurentius Photographer
Giulia Fogoliari Contributor
Anna Guidi Toniato Contributor
Kunstbuch Berlin Herausgeber
Walter A. Oddy Contributor
Günter Schade Contributor, Foreword
Marilyn Perry Contributor
Norbert D. Meeks Contributor
Guido Perocco Contributor
Bruno Visentini Contributor
Augusto Azzaroli Contributor
Massimiliano Pavan Contributor
Massimo Leoni Contributor
Gerhard Zimmer Contributor
Christiane Keisch Contributor
Bernhard Zepernick Contributor
Humboldt Forum (Berlin) Corporate Author
Peter Masson Contributor
Lore Börner Contributor
Renate Strelow Contributor
Horst Kienzle Collector
Alexander Hofmann Contributor
Manuela Fischer Contributor
Hannelore Becker Contributor
Bruno Voigt Contributor
Kurt Wernike Contributor
Rolf Ibscher Foreword
Birgitta Augustin Contributor
Burkhardt Göres Contributor
Wolfgang Henning Contributor
Gudrun Zögner Contributor
Renate Löschner Contributor
Renée Violet Translator
Paul Nedo Author
Julia Binter Contributor
Albrecht Weidmann Contributor
Golda Ha-Eiros Contributor
Martina Stoye Contributor
Anna Weinreich Contributor
Peter Junge Contributor
Peter Bolz Editor
Jörg Steiner Contributor
Chisaburo Yamada Translator
Dorothea Deterts Contributor
Heinrich Müller Contributor
Klaas Ruitenbeek Contributor
Werner Schulz Editor and Curator
Dirk Böndel Contributor
Richard Haas Contributor
Maria Gaida Contributor
Karl Lenz Contributor
Richard Kelly Contributor
Lothar Zögner Contributor
Enlin Yang Translator
Prestel Author
Jörg P. Anders Photographer
Peter-Klaus Schuster Foreword, Expression of thanks
Frauke Berchtig Editorial direction, Project editor and management
Christophe Schmidt Photographer
Christopher Wynne Editor, Copyediting
Maja Thorn Designer
Marion Bertram Contributor
Verena Lepper Contributor
Manfred Nawroth Contributor
Simone Zeeb Production
Almut Hoffmann Contributor
Zilly Clotz Art direction
Heino Neumayer Contributor
Barbara Delius Project management
Alix Hänsel Contributor, Editor
Marianne Yaldiz Contributor
Renate Sander Cartographer, Cartographer and Grafics
Michele Schons Manuscript Editor
Dieter Honisch Contributor
Gerhard Murza Photographer
Reinhard Friedrich Photographer
Fritz Jacobi Contributor
Werner Zellien Photographer
Jens Ziehe Photographer
Stuart Cary Welch Introduction
Paphen Contributor
Te'u Chen Dragpa Contributor
Yan Zhongyi Photographer
Amy Heller Contributor
Sönam Wangden Contributor
Heather Stoddard Contributor
Petra Maurer Contributor
Klaus-Dieter Lehmann Expression of thanks
Michael Henss Contributor
Georges Dreyfus Contributor
Uwe Bräutigam Contributor
Toni Huber Contributor
Nyima Tshering Salutations
Lo Bue Erberto Contributor
Khanh Trinh Contributor
Rajeshwari Ghose Contributor
Willibald Veit Contributor
Regina Hickmann Contributor
Herbert Butz Contributor
Friedericke Weis Contributor
Julietta Scharf Contributor
Sigrid Hauser Editorial Staff
Oliver Craske Prject manager
Andrea Mogwitz Design and layout
Susanne Huber Editorial assistance
Karl Carstens Greetings
Peter Kiezle-Hardt Contributor
Gisela Holan Curator
Alice Michael Translator
Helmut Körner Photographer
M.P. Zukanow Foreword
Sabine Müller Cover designer
Paul Wandel Preface
Werner Knopp Geleitwort
Franz Franke Illustrator and Designer
Otto Kümmel Geleitwort
Alexander Ambusch Freude und Dank
Michael Robinson Translator
Chris Murray Copyediting
Jane Milosch Copy-editor
Martin Chalmers Translator
Jane Michael Translator
Ann Drummond Translator
Klaus Brisch Introduction
Bram Opstelten Translator
Cynthia Hall Translator
Katrin Wiethege Copy editor
Stefan Barmann Translator
Ruth Klumpp Copy editor
Penelope Crowe Translator
Stephen Telfer Translator
Gerd Woll Author
Robert McInnes Translator
Douglas KLINE Translator

Statistics

Works
175
Also by
16
Members
935
Popularity
#27,473
Rating
4.1
Reviews
7
ISBNs
116
Languages
4

Charts & Graphs