
Forlag:
Sternberg Press
ISBN:
9781933128603
Utgivelsesår:
2009
Hovedkategori:
Kunst
Språk:
Engelsk/Tysk
Sider:
216
Innbinding:
Heftet
Texts by Alfred Gottwaldt, Nikolaus Hirsch, Susanne Kill, Wolfgang Lorch, Jorge Otero-Pailos, Diana Schulle, Andrea Wandel, Harald Welzer
“Crimes against humanity,” especially genocide, have been excluded from amnesty since the Nuremburg Trials. On a cultural level, oblivion by decree becomes an obligation to remember. This reversal is well-intended, but it opens up critical questions: Can memory be permanently established? Is it possible to maintain it in a monument?
The intervention at Track 17 at Berlin-Grunewald station, a work by architects Nikolaus Hirsch, Wolfgang Lorch, and Andrea Wandel on the site of the deportations from Berlin between 1941 and 1945, is an attempt that aims at a structural connection between memory and oblivion. Referring to Alois Riegl’s (the founder of the “Modern Cult of Monuments”) differentiation between the specific, highly controlled documentary value, and the generic, always changing “age value,” the authors introduce a strategy that negotiates between stable and instable parameters: presumably permanent data, shifting vegetal successions, material durations and decay. This approach investigates whether it is possible to build ambivalence or even doubt into a monument. Thus, the uncertain status of the material memory becomes the focus of the intervention at Track 17.
The editors’ work includes the Dresden Synagogue, the Hinzert Document Center, a high-rise building in the geopolitical hotspot of Tbilisi (Georgia), and the highly debated Archeological Zone / Jewish Museum in Cologne.
Photos by Gerald Domenig and Lukas Roth
Design by Surface, Frankfurt am Main/Berlin
Markus Miessen (red.), Nikolaus Hirsch (red.), Philipp Misselwitz (red.)
This book presents a study that conceptualizes, tests, and practically applies the spatial strategy for the European Kunsthalle. The investigation is...
Nikolaus Hirsch (red.) og Shveta Sarda (red.)
Contributions by Can Altay, Cybermohalla Ensemble, Rana Dasgupta, Hu Fang, Naeem Mohaiemen, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Jacques Rancière, Raqs Media...
Nikolaus Hirsch (red.) og Sophie von Olfers (red.)
Contributions by Thomas Bayrle, Christian Egger, Nikolaus Hirsch, Sophie von Olfers. Emerging from the eponymous exhibition at Portikus in...
Nikolaus Hirsch (red.), Daniel Birnbaum (red.), Isabelle Graw (red.)
Texts by Ina Blom, Oliver Brokel, Caroline Busta, Stefan Deines, Hal Foster, Stefanie Heraeus, Jutta Koether, Magdalena Nieslony, Michael...