Global Times

Thinking creatively

Germany strives to kickstart culture in a world blighted by virus

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Musician Cristina Gomez Godoy casts an excited glance toward the leafy stage where she is about to perform in front of an audience for the first time in three months.

“I’m actually nervous,” said the oboist, 30, a member of Berlin’s Staatskape­lle orchestra, which has been unable to perform live since concert halls were shut in March to control the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Gomez and four colleagues are tuning up for a short concert in the courtyard of an apartment building in Berlin, accompanie­d by the buzzing of bees and against a backdrop of ivy tumbling down the walls.

The show illustrate­s how arts organizati­ons across Germany are having to think creatively as they strive to get up and running again in a world where they must coexist with the coronaviru­s.

“It is a pleasure for us as musicians to play together again, despite the smaller format, and I think the audience will enjoy it too,” Gomez said.

The courtyard has space for only a handful of socially distanced audience members, while those who live on the upper floors enjoy the best seats lounging on window ledges, beers in hands.

Ursula Dyckhoff, 77, lives in an apartment on the first floor.

“It was wonderful, the acoustic and the view too,” she said after the concert.

Limited audiences

Libraries, museums and art galleries were allowed to reopen in Germany in April and the government published guidelines in May aimed at getting the rest of the cultural sector back to work, at least in some form.

But many challenges remain, especially for theaters, concert halls, opera houses and cinemas.

The guidelines include limiting numbers and ensuring 1.5 meters of space between all, meaning auditorium­s will have room for only a fraction of their normal audiences.

Berlin’s Volksbuehn­e launched its 2020/21 season in mid-June with the caveat that capacity in the auditorium will be cut to just 130, from the usual 800.

In neighborin­g Austria, the Vienna State Opera has resumed performanc­es to audiences of just 100 at a time, compared to 1,700 on a normal night.

The Salzburg Festival will also go ahead this summer with the repertoire reduced by about half and limited to a select few venues.

Performers, too, must remain socially distanced, meaning fewer of them on stage – bad news for freelancer­s in particular, who have already seen their income fall off a cliff during the pandemic.

The Berlin Philharmon­ic offered a first glimpse in early May of what indoor orchestral concerts might look like in a post-lockdown world with a socially distanced concert featuring just 15 musicians.

Thanks to generous state funding, German arts organizati­ons are better placed to cope with reduced income from ticket sales than many of their European and internatio­nal peers.

But even they say there is only so long that they can survive like this.

Rescue package

The government has announced a 1 billion euro ($1.1 billion) rescue package for the culture sector, with targeted help for venues such as theaters and cinemas that rely more heavily on earned income.

But critics say this package is a drop in the ocean.

“This... shows the value of culture, for example in comparison to the 9 billion euro subsidy for an airline,” Berlin’s pointman on culture Klaus Lederer said, referring to a state aid deal on the table for Germany’s Lufthansa.

Some orchestras and theater companies, such as the Deutsches Theater and Berliner Ensemble, have for now resorted to performanc­es outdoors.

The Deutsche Opera has performed in a car park, and the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin has even played on the top deck of a bus.

But they are looking ahead to an uncertain future when winter follows summer.

As with the lifting of other lockdown measures, specific rules and dates for the reopening of arts venues will vary across federal states, which have the final say on what is allowed and when.

The German Orchestras Union (DOV) is calling for concerts to resume swiftly across the whole of Germany.

“For freelance musicians especially, this is... about sheer survival,” said DOV head Gerald Mertens.

“Smaller formations, especially in churches, smaller venues and in the open air, should be able to perform again as soon as possible.”

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 ?? Photos: AFP ?? Residents listen to a backyard concert by members of Berlin’s Staatskape­lle orchestra on June 9.
Photos: AFP Residents listen to a backyard concert by members of Berlin’s Staatskape­lle orchestra on June 9.
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