Posts mit dem Label Berlin werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Berlin werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Sonntag, 9. November 2014

25 years ago - the fall of the Berlin Wall 9.11.1989


Welcome to an interesting chapter of German history.

The fall of the Berlin Wall 25 years ago.

Unfortunately I was not directly on site in Berlin to witness this dramatic historic event of the younger German history. I was sitting in front of the TV screen to trace the fall of the Wall.

But shortly afterwards (January '90) of that event we were able to visit Berlin and see the Wall riddled with holes already.
And we traveled the first time in our live to East Berlin, the border was already open, but you were still able to see and feel all the "original" Eastern Berlin aura (?) / flair (??)

I still have strong memories of the moment when I tried to took a photo in a pub and the innkeeper verbally abused me and asked me for my permission to take photos... ;-)


Most of the pictures I post here I took in the "Haus der Geschichte der Bundesrepublik Deutschland" at Bonn some weeks ago. There you find many interesting testimonia of the German history of the last 80 years.

But  the following photo of the wall remains I took two years ago on the Podsdamer Platz in Berlin.


The start of the construction of the Wall was in August 1961.

Hans Conrad Schumann (March 28, 1942 – June 20, 1998) was an East German soldier who famously defected to West Germany during the construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961.


On 15 August 1961, the 19-year-old Schumann was sent to the corner of Ruppiner Straße and Bernauer Straße to guard the Berlin Wall on its third day of construction. At that time, the wall was only a low barbed wire fence. From the other side, West Germans shouted to him, "Komm' rüber!" ("Come over!"), and a police car pulled up to wait for him. Schumann jumped over the barbed wire fence and was promptly driven away from the scene by the West Berlin police. West German photographer Peter Leibing photographed Schumann's escape.


Between 1961 and 1989 everybody had to pass the rough and restrective cross-border controls between West Berlin (BRD) and East Berlin (GDR).


Here are some impressions of a narrow original border control cabin between West and East Berlin.




*   ***   ***   ****   *****   ****   ***   **   *


Walter Ulbricht,  leader of East Germany from 1950 to 1971, and Erich Honecker, who replaced Ulbricht 1971.

By 1961, 1.65 million people had fled to the west.

Fearful of the possible consequences of this continued outflow of refugees, and aware of the dangers an East German collapse would present to the Soviet Union’s Communist satellite empire, Ulbricht pressured Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in early 1961 to stop the outflow and resolve the status of Berlin.

When Khrushchev approved the building of a wall as a means to resolve this situation, Ulbricht threw himself into the project with abandon.


"Tear down this wall!" was the challenge issued by United States President Roland Reagan to Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev to destroy the Berlin Wall, in a speech at the Brandenburg Gate near the Berlin Wall on June 12, 1987, commemorating the 750th anniversary of Berlin.


Hans-Dietrich Genscher, Mikkail Gorbachev und Helmut Kohl 14. July 1990 in the Caucasus
talking about the future of the reunified Germany.



Good bye, DDR (GDR) ...





... welcome united Germany!






Montag, 7. Mai 2012

Holocaust Memorial in Berlin


My photographic interpretation of:

The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe (German:  Denkmal für die ermordeten Juden Europas), also known as the Holocaust Memorial (German: Holocaust-Mahnmal), a memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, designed by architect Peter Eisenman and engineer Buro Happold.

Taken April 13, 2012.










Donnerstag, 26. April 2012

Potsdamer Platz - sunset boulevard!?



Twilight of the gods or just sunset in Germany's capital Berlin?


Bahnhof Potsdamer Platz - variations from one of Berlin's most prominent places close to the Sony Center.



Mittwoch, 25. April 2012

It's not a trick, it's a...


...Sony Center!

Berlin, Potsdamer Platz.


Multicoloured, exciting, different, photogenic.

The illumination of the Sony Center roof was implemented by the Parisian Lighting Artist Yann Kersalé. 

















His idea was to underline the spectacular roof construction of steel, glass and fabric.




Kersale’s vision was to have clear glass and translucent fabric reflecting the daylight as well as the moonlight in a very extraordinary way.



Samstag, 21. April 2012

Berlin street art


 

April 14, 2012...

...Kastanienallee...

...Prenzlauer Berg...

...Berlin...

...Germany...

...Europe...

...northern hemisphere...

...Planet Earth...

...solar system...

...solar insterstellar neighborhood...

...milky way galaxy...

...local galactic group...

...virgo supercluster...

...local superclusters...

...observable univers...

...summertime.



*** WARNING! ***

This  property is secured by graffiti and street art!

*** WE ARE WATCHING YOU ***


KAPITALISMUS
normiert
zerstört
tötet

Famous "Tuntenhaus", Kastanienallee 86, with the lettering

CAPITALISM
normalizes
destroys
kills

that was fixed on the house front in 2004 to demonstrate against rent increase and a change of living conditions.



Did you see the Black-Red-Gold colours (we have on our federal flag), accidentally created by the black light bulb holder, the goldish yellow bulb and the red light? That was certainly NOT the intention of the street artist to create such a context... ;-)


Street art meets narrow-minded smugness...
...two sides of the same coin nowadays???


Name of a fish & chips stall at Prenzlauer Berg, Berlin.


No idea how many great street art motifs already disappeared for ever when a building is fully renovated.
So I'm really curious how many of my motifs I'm going to find again the next time I will visit Berlin.


top and bottom: two of my favourite motifs I found:

John Lennon in interaction with the two guys busily engaged in writing text messages with their mobiles

and

never-to-be-forgotten Rick (Humphrey Bogart) and Ilsa (Ingrid Bergmann) in
Michael Curtiz romantic drama film Casablanca.



You find Little Lucy in nearly all variations (the one I took is one of the most harmless motifs) everywhere on Berlin's walls...


Street art motif and the ravages of time


Two different interpretations of womanhood I found in the streets of the Prenzlauer Berg locality.