| Report from Germany by Barbara Weidle Berlins most special dinner invitation (for paying                     guests) during the last few weeks was definitely Alma Mahler-Werfels                     127th birthday party at Kronprinzenpalais (Crown Prince Palace)                     Unter den Linden. For twenty-five evenings, Alma Mahler (18791964),                     famous as the widow of the four arts, celebrated                     with her husbandscomposer Gustav Mahler, architect Walter                     Gropius, writer Franz Werfeland lovers like the painter                     Oskar Kokoschka as well as 200 other guests at the classicist                     palace where Germanys last emperor, Wilhelm II, was                     born in 1859. To experience Joshua Sobols polydrama Alma  A                     Show Biz ans Ende, about the life and work of one of the most                     famous femmes fatales of the 20th century, was very unusual,                     spectacular. No wonder most performances were sold out. The                     decoration, atmosphere, and acting were like a time trip to                     Vienna of nearly a hundred years ago; yet, even as you walk                     through the elegant palais, following one of the actors, you                     still experience recent German history, since the building                     was restored in 1968/69 and used as a guest house by the East                     German Government. Indira Ghandi and Fidel Castro stayed there.                     Back in the twenties, the Kronprinzenpalais was Germanys                     first museum for contemporary art. Paintings by Oskar Kokoschka,                     Lyonel Feininger, Franz Marc, Edvard Munch, Erich Heckel,                     Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Max Beckmann were shown there. Alfred                     Barr Jr. was impressed by the idea and used it as a model                     for the foundation of the MoMA in 1929. In 1990 the German                     reunification agreement was signed at this place. And now you can sit next to Gustav Mahler during his famous                     meeting with Sigmund Freud in Amsterdam; you can follow Franz                     Werfel on a trip to Palestine (by bus through the city of                     Berlin); you can watch a desperate and wild Oskar Kokoschka                     in Vienna trying to persuade Alma to have the baby she was                     expecting from him. Paulus Manker, actor (Oskar Kokoschka)                     and director, is somewhat obsessed by his subject, otherwise                     it would not have been possible for him to succeed in performing                     the play in Vienna, Venice, Lisbon, Los Angeles and Berlin                     with such power and energy. His performances are always in                     places that have something to do with Almas life, only                     in cities where she had lived. Next and last on the list would                     be New York City, where Alma Mahler died in 1964. PaulusManker is working on that.
 Stepping out of the Kronprinzenpalais, close to Bebelplatz                     where the books of German and Austrian Jewish writers went                     up in flames in 1933 (Werfels were among them), a huge                     silver-colored tower of books with the names of Friedrich                     Schiller, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Hermann Hesse, Thomas                     Mann, Bertolt Brecht, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe inscribed                     on their spines, a so-called sculpture, brings you back into                     the real Germany of 2006, where the soccer world championships                     start in June. Resembling a bad copy of a Claes Oldenburg,                     this object is part of a project in Berlin called The                     Walk of Ideas. It is supposed to inform tourists that                     a lot of inventions, like modern book printing, came from                     this country. A big Aspirin (Milestone of Medicine)                     and a Modern Football Shoe close to the Reichstag,                     The Automobile at the Brandenburg Gate, and musical                     notes that look like autoscooters (Masterpieces of Music)                     at the Gendarmenmarkt symbolize these milestonesthe                     richness of ideas and the spirit of invention which characterize                     Germanys composers, writers, scientists, engineers and                     perfectionists as the organizers write, in a rather                     simplistic way that reminds one of advertisement more than                     of art. And it is no surprise that it is impossible to find                     out who made these sculptures. The idea behind the project comes from an advertising agency,                     and a lot of corporations are supporting it. The socalled                     sculptures serve to present a new plastic material (Neopor)                     that is coated with a special new paint by one of Germanys                     biggest chemical enterprises (BASF), which of course is one                     of the projects partners. All the objects are very tall,                     up to 35 feet, and weigh as much as 20 tons, and they are                     displayed throughout the city more or less at random. They                     make you wonder where the spirit of invention has gone in                     Berlin. Public space in Germany is often treated very badly, without                     feeling for proportion or style. Another example is Bonn,                     where the Guggenheim Museum is part of a rather atrocious                     campaign that destroys the possibility of public space as                     an aesthetically satisfying experience: As the museum prepares                     to present a huge part of its collection from late July until                     January 2007 at the Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle and the Kunstmuseum                     in Bonn, the Guggenheim (together with its partner in Bonn)                     has already embarked upon a ridiculous brain-washing campaign:                     THE GUGGENHEIM IS A POINT OF VIEW, IMAGINE                     A MUSEUM WITH NO WALLS, THE GUGGENHEIM IS THE                     AGENT FOR POPULAR CULTURE (surprise, surprise), THE                     GUGGENHEIM IS NOT A PLACE, IMAGINE YOUR OWN MUSEUM,                     IMAGINE A MUSEUM IN CONSTANT MOTION. These trivial                     statements are written on banners (23 x 14) hanging                     between seven of the sixteen Corten-steel columns that are                     partly in front of Gustav Peichls Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle.                     Actually the columns symbolize the 16 German states, as the                     architect pointed out at the opening of the building in 1992.                     The banners visually lock up the space between the Kunsthalle                     and the Kunstmuseumthe airspace at the entrance of the                     piazzain a very rude way. The architect is afraid that                     water can get into the columns through the holes drilled to                     attach them. Of course he was not asked and is strictly against                     the banners. But this does not help. They are there and will                     stay until the show is over. At Bonns Rheinisches Landesmuseum the whole front wall                     (actually of glass) is decorated with a banner for Samurai                     Blue, the Japanese soccer team, with an advertisement                     for a well-known Japanese beer and an even better known German                     manufacturer of soccer shoes. World championship again. The                     Japanese team will be staying in Bonn for the duration of                     the championship. Soon one will be able to eat sushi at the                     museums restaurant, sit on the brand new wooden terrace                     and imagine a more sensible approach to public space. How                     about that? ABOUT THE AUTHORBarbara Weidle is an art critic and curator. She lives in                     Berlin and Bonn.
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