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Montag, 27. Oktober 2014

My very subjective view on the Arp Museum


Have you ever been to the Arp Museum Bahnhof Rolandseck???
No?

Welcome! Please get closer!


Aron Demetz. 

I am

Current special exhibit with many interesting human-like sculptures from 22. August 2014 to 11. January 2015


The Arp Museum Bahnhof Rolandseck at Remagen in the Rhine Valley south of Bonn is composed of two main buildings: the entrance and restaurant area is in the old railway station Bahnhof Rolandseck, completely refurbished in 2002. 

 
And a second, very modern building behind and above it - the actual main museum, called the 'Richard Meier Bau' / Richard Meier building with most of the exhibition rooms and artworks of Hans Arp.


Hans Arp, also known as Jean Arp in France, (16 September 1886 – 7 June 1966) was a German-French (Alsatian) sculptor, painter, poet and abstract artist in other media such as torn and pasted paper.

He's known as one of the founders of the Dada movement, he broke with the Surrealist movement to found Abstraction-Création.


One of my museum's favourites was the connecting tunnel between the older part and the 'Richard Meier building", where you can find that great light sculpture. (I love light sculptures!)

Generally speaking I was more impressed by the museum's architecture then by most of the exhibited artworks! Sorry, Hans! ;-)

In a second (= next) post I want to display my photographic interpretation of that light sculpture tunnel!



Here's my photographic interpretation of the building's elevator to the 'Richard Meier Bau' at the end of the tunnel.

The museum's architecture gives ambitious photographers many options to work creatively as well and to find their metaphorical language of this great place (in my humble opinion).

Fortunately it was not forbidden to take photos in most of the exhibition spaces of the museum - only in one part of the current exhibition with Old Masters taking photos was not allowed.







Most (all?!) of Hans Arp's artwork is really reduced to the minimum - like the sculptures above
or the grafic sculpture at a white wall below.


But when I saw and took this photograph of a female bodybuilder displayed in a different part of the museum...  


... I felt the need to fuse both artworks to a result of its own in my subsequent picture editing... ;-)



= Fusion Art ;-)


So: Stand up - now it's your move!


The Arp Museum Bahnhof Rolandseck is waiting for you.

And it's really worth visiting! 

And: try to find your own very subjective view on the museum and its great artworks!



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.