From Kahn to Kollwitz: Exploring the Significance of Art and Visual Culture in Babylon Berlin

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Abstract


Far from simply representing Weimar’s modernist inventions, art and visual culture—old and new, international and national, high and low—jostles for the viewer’s attention in Babylon Berlin. It shapes both the narrative action and mise-en-scène. Fritz Kahn’s infographics depicting machinist physiologies inspire the filmic resolution in “Dämonen der Leidenschaft,” whereas abstract prints by Bauhaus artist László Moholy-Nagy, and landscapes by German romantic painter, Carl Blechen, reveal the Weltanschauung of characters. In a republic that enshrined freedom and equality as basic rights of the individual, close analysis of posters by artists Josef Fenneker and Käthe Kollwitz, uncovers the conflicting realities with which protagonists Helga Rath and Charlotte Ritter are confronted.

The series demands that viewers look at artworks from this period not as socially detached objects in galleries and museums, but rather seek to reinsert them back into many of the lived, social spaces in which they would have been originally encountered.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationBabylon Berlin, German Visual Spectacle, and Global Media Culture
EditorsHester Baer, Jill Suzanne Smith
PublisherBloomsbury Publishing
Chapter6
Pages105-124
Number of pages20
Edition1st
ISBN (Electronic)9781350370098, 9781350370074 (Epub & Mobi), 9781350370081 (PDF)
ISBN (Print)9781350370067, 9781350370050
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Mar 2024

Publication series

NameVisual Cultures and German Contexts
PublisherBloomsbury

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