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Thursday, 25. August 2016 - 11:00 to Sunday, 9. October 2016 - 18:00
∇ SHOW ME WHERE YOU COME FROM
Children draw their homes, flight and dreamsΔ SHOW ME WHERE YOU COME FROMChildren draw their homes, flight and dreams
Since September 2015, artist Dieter Mammel paints together with refugee children in two of Berlin’s initial reception camps. He was moved to become involved not only by his encounters with the first refugees on the island of Kos in August 2015, but above all by his own family history. By recounting how his own parents and grandparents fled from the Balkans to Germany during the Second World War, he encouraged the children to tell their own stories. For Dieter Mammel as well as the children, drawing and painting offered a chance to communicate with each other intensively, even across language barriers. In this process, the children, aged five to fifteen, have created impressive personal drawings and group paintings. They recount the children’s origins in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan, their journeys to Germany, and their first impressions when they arrived. From the children’s perspective, they tell of tank deployments and shelling, dangerous sea crossings in unsafe boats, heavily guarded borders and fears – yet also of friendship, their future hopes and dreams.
At the Haus am Waldsee, a leading venue for international contemporary art in Berlin, Dieter Mammel and Director Katja Blomberg presented his project to the public for the first time. Afterwards, the works were also exhibited in the Berliner Dom, the Berlin Cathedral.
Frankfurt’s Weltkulturen Museum presents now a comprehensive selection of over 50 large-scale drawings and sketches related to the three overarching themes of home, flight, and arriving in Germany. In the first group of works, the children depict the homes they had to leave, war and their desire for peace, while the second focuses on their flight to Germany. The third group of works not only offers an insight into the children’s first impressions of Germany, but also their wishes and dreams for the future. The works are complemented by paintings and installations of the artist Dieter Mammel. In the accompanying film “Erzähl mir, woher Du kommst” (Tell me where you come from), produced together with Matthias Grübel, the children talk about their pictures. Their drawings help them to recount their experiences, and their body language also reveals just how deeply they are affected by their memories and hopes.
For the Weltkulturen Museum, the presentation of this project is also an experiment. How flexibly can a museum react to a current and sensitive issue? Which expectations can it meet, and how far? How do visitors react – and what debates does it trigger? We invite you to discuss these questions with us in the context of the education programme.
Lender: Stephanie and Wolfgang Bohn, Dieter Mammel (Gallery Hübner+Hübner Frankfurt)
Accompanying publication
The exhibition is accompanied by a publication in both German and English containing numerous illustrations. Supported by Strofhoff International School, Beate und Dr. Daniel Schmid, the companies Imtradex and Karl Kolb, Bettina and Franz Otto, Katja and Axel König, Ulrike and Peter Thoma.Weltkulturen Museum, Schaumainkai 29
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Thursday, 14. July 2016 - 11:00 to Sunday, 9. October 2016 - 18:00
∇ STORIES NARRATE HISTORY
Weltkulturen Labor and Green Room exhibitionΔ STORIES NARRATE HISTORY
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Dr. Mona Suhrbier in the exhibition STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Curators in the exhibition STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Exhibition view STORIES NARRATE HISTORY, Weltkulturen Museum 2016
Weltkulturen Labor and Green Room exhibition
How would a 1950s girl feel if she lived in a magnificent Wilhelminian villa, why are Tintin and Snowy important for the work in the Africa Collection, and why is a missing chocolate ear causing a big stir?
The Weltkulturen Museum was founded in 1904 by a group of citizens for citizens. For over a century it has been a place where stories have been created, collected and narrated, but also repeatedly discarded. Who tells what, what remains untold, and what is ultimately recorded?
STORIES NARRATE HISTORY focuses on untold personal perspectives of individuals connected to the Weltkulturen Museum. The stories are strange, formative, cheerful, or doubtful, revealing unfamiliar and almost intimate insights into life and work in the buildings at Schaumainkai 29–37. The aim is not to provide a comprehensive historiography or re-narrate the museum’s history, but instead to focus on the people who have inscribed their own histories into the institution.
The exhibition uses objects, historical documents, architectural plans, photographs and publications to show that there is more than one objective reality. This forum for polyphony and multiple perspectives provides space for subjective points of view, inviting visitors to examine the exhibits and the history of this museum from a range of standpoints.
The debates concerning insufficient exhibition space are also tightly interwoven with the museum’s history. For almost fifty years there has been talk of expanding the museum: models, designs, and extensive correspondence on the issue will also be on display in two rooms.
The discussion space initiated specially for this exhibition invites visitors to exchange opinions and undertake their own analysis of topics relating to the museum. In addition, visitors will be able to put together their own small history book from stories told in the exhibition.
Postcards spanning decades of museum history can be purchased from our small shop, as well as posters, bags, games and an edition of chocolate artworks by artist Minerva Cuevas (Mexico).
Weltkulturen Labor and Green Room, Schaumainkai 37
schließen
