Revolutionary romances? : global art histories in the GDR
TitleRevolutionary romances? : global art histories in the GDR
Author
Corporate author
PublisherSpector Books - Leipzig
Year of publication2024
Size175 p.: ill.: 24 x 17 cm
Materialpaperback
ISBN978-3-95905-782-0978-3-95905-784-4
LanguageEngels
Subjectgroepstentoonstellingen
Persons keyword Georges Adéagbo, Martin Angermann, Walter Arnold, Gerhard Bondzin, Hartwig Ebersbach, Carmelo Gónzalez, Lea Grundig, Mohamed Saleh Khalil, Frieder Heinze, Olaf Wegewitz, Sven Johne, Martha Ketsela, Hamlet Lavastida, Heinz Lohmar, Dana Lorenz, Mankew Valente Mahumana, César Olhagaray, Africa and Latin America) OSPAAAL (Organization of Solidarity with the People of Asia, Margarita Pellegrin, Matthias Rietschel, Sonya Schönberger, Eva Schulze-Knabe, Wenke Seemann, Sung Tieu, TONEL (Antonio Eligio Fernández), José Angel Toirac, Arlette Quynh-Anh Tran, Trinh Kim Vinh, Christoph Wetzel
Abstract
Revolutionary Romances? Global Art Histories in the GDR looks at East Germany’s relations — rooted in a spirit of friendship and revolution — with its socialist “sister” countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The concepts of “international solidarity” and “friendship between nations” had an inherent geopolitical agenda: as such, they not only determined East Germany’s foreign policy but also supported a multitude of transcultural contacts and became a key focus of propaganda and the visual arts in the GDR. The book accompanying the exhibition of the same name presents themes and motifs of actual and putative “revolutionary romances”, including the ideals and icons of socialist internationalism, artistic protests against war and violence, travel images, mail art, and works produced by foreign art students in East Germany.
Mathias Wagner is an art historian and conservator at the Albertinum, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden. Hilke Wagner is an art historian and director of the Albertinum, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden. Kerstin Schankweiler is a professor for visual studies in a global context in the Institute of Art and Music at TUD Dresden University of Technology. Kathleen Reinhardt is an art historian and director of the Georg Kolbe Museum, Berlin. (bron: website uitgever)