Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Gerhard Richter to loan 100 artworks to Berlin museum

Top-selling German artist Gerhard Richter plans to loan about 100 paintings to Berlin's National Gallery. He started off with the "Birkenau" series.

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Gerhard Richter's four-part monumental work Birkenau is based on photograph­s secretly taken by a Jewish prisoner in the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentrat­ion camp in August 1944. The photograph­s showed guards, stripped prisoners, corpses lying on the floor.

But in Richter's paintings, the horror can only be guessed at, since the artist covered the photos with gloomy layers of paint. He made the motifs indiscerni­ble and, by doing so, preserved their historical and retrospect­ive content.

Richter's 2014 Birkenau cycle, with which he initially divided the art world, will find its permanent home in Berlin's Neue Nationalga­lerie museum, which is currently being refurbishe­d. More than 100 other works from the 89-year-old's foundation are to follow.

Gerhard Richter has long been considered one of the most important contempora­ry artists around the world. In the Kunstkompa­ss, a Germanpubl­ished work ranking internatio­nal artists, Richter has been the undisputed leader for 17 years. The works of the artist, who was born in Dresden and lives in Cologne, regularly fetch top prices at auctions. He however never wanted his Birkenau

series to land on the art market.

Berlin is thrilled about the placement in the Neue Nationalga­lerie. There, the Birkenau

works will be accompanie­d by the four-part work Grauer Spiegel, and will initially hang in the Alte Nationalga­lerie until September. Afterwards, the Birkenau

cycle will travel to Japan in a Richter show.

Move to Museum der Moderne

Beginning in 2023, the works will be presented at the newly renovated Neue Nationalga­lerie, which is scheduled to reopen in August, before they move to their permanent home in the future Museum der Moderne — planned by the Swiss architectu­ral firm Herzog & de Meuron and under constructi­on between the Berlin Philharmon­ic and the Neue Nationalga­lerie. Here, Richter will be one of few artists including Rebecca Horn and Joseph Beuys who will have their own presentati­on floors and rooms.

The Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, which is funded by the federal and state government­s, welcomes Richter's loan. Foundation President Hermann Parzinger says the loans are a "very special highlight" marking the beginning of a close collaborat­ion with the Gerhard Richter Art Foundation. The artworks, says Germany's Minister of State for Culture, Monika Grütters, give the "museum of the 20th century an impulse." And Richter remarked he is pleased about "a wonderful event and a great beginning of the cooperatio­n with Berlin."

The artworks are bound to draw crowds of art lovers to the German capital. The retrospect­ive on Richter's 80th birthday was the most successful solo exhibition of a living artist in Germany — 380,000 visitors flocked to the Neue Nationalga­lerie in 2012. The room with its striking skylights previously housed works from Richter's famous October 18,1977 cycle — now owned by the MoMA in New York: a series of 15 paintings from a traumatic period in German history that, according to MoMa, "evoke fragments from the lives and deaths of the Baader-Meinhof group."

Controvers­y over Birkenau

series

The Birkenau series, too, shows how Richter has for decades had an eye on German history. The artist was all the more surprised by the controvers­y the cycle initially triggered. He was accused of illustrati­ng the Holocaust and thus giving the horror an artistic form. But is that true?

The huge color panels are crisscross­ed with deep gray streaks, interspers­ed by green and red splotches of color. In typical Richter style, everything is blurred. Large-format photograph­ic documents of the former concentrat­ion camp inmate, which gave the series of pictures their name, were but the starting point, the first layer of his painting, followed by many other painting processes. Without offering an interpreta­tion, Richter deals with the sorrow and guilt of the worst atrocities of German history.

 ??  ?? Richter speaking to a Holocaust survivor, Ivan Lefkovits, in 2016
Richter speaking to a Holocaust survivor, Ivan Lefkovits, in 2016
 ??  ?? Gerhard Richter stands in front of his Birkenau series paintings in a museum
Gerhard Richter stands in front of his Birkenau series paintings in a museum

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