Gerhard Richter: Post-remembering the Holocaust in German contemporary art
[nb-NO]Title[nb-NO]Gerhard Richter: Post-remembering the Holocaust in German contemporary art
[nb-NO]Author[nb-NO]
Call number940.5318/0479
[nb-NO]Object number[nb-NO]09176m
[nb-NO]Place of publication[nb-NO]Warsaw, Poland
[nb-NO]Publisher[nb-NO]European Network Remembrance and Solidarity
[nb-NO]Year of publication[nb-NO]
2016
[nb-NO]Pagination[nb-NO]pp271-280
[nb-NO]Material[nb-NO]Article
[nb-NO]Series title[nb-NO]R&S Studies No. 5
NotesArticle from the book 'Remembrance and solidarity : studies in 20th century European history'. pp271-280
[nb-NO]Description[nb-NO]
Dresden-born artist Gerhard Richter (b. 1932) was aged between nine and thirteen years old during the Holocaust. Nonetheless, it had a formative and conflicting influence on him. His black-and-white photopaintings from 1965 raise questions about the role of photography as a means of remembering, forgetting, recontextualizing and expressing the traumatic acts committed to and by his own family members, even, on each other. This paper studies exemplary photopaintings as a manifestation of Richters expression of a German postmemory condition. In sum, this is a story about remembering, forgetting and denial and photography as an agent exploring those phenomena.