Exhibition
Afterlife - Sealed (Hi)stories of Work and Migration
18 Apr 2024 – 23 Jun 2024
Regular hours
- Thursday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Friday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Saturday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Sunday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Tuesday
- 12:00 – 18:00
- Wednesday
- 12:00 – 18:00
Free admission
Address
- Freundeskreis Willy-Brandt-Haus e.V.
- Stresemannstr. 28
- Berlin
Berlin - 10963
- Germany
In a photography project about Stalag VII A, a former German prisoner-of-war camp from the Second World War, the change in the semiotics of a historic building is artistically explored.
About
History of the Stalag Buildings:
1939 to 1945: One of the largest German prisoner of war camps/forced labour camps
1945 to 1948: Allied internment camp for officials of the Third Reich
From 1948: Initial accommodation for displaced persons (“Heimatvertriebene”)
From the 1960s: Housing for „guest workers“ from Turkey, Italy and former Yugoslavia
Since 2017, the few remaining barracks have been uninhabited and are in danger of demolition
About the photography project:
In 2022 photographer Sandra Ratkovic had the opportunity to explore the sealed residential barracks on the site of the former prisoner of war camp and document the interiors photographically. In doing so, she came across astonishing overlapping uses. Her photographs reveal individual layers and at the same time ask: What remains? What is concealed under new layers?
The documented artefacts from the rooms in Moosburg bear witness to past life, especially the former accommodation for migrant workers from Turkey, Italy and the former Yugoslavia.
However, the artist not only presents this documentation, but also creates a multi-layered kaleidoscope of the various layers of time and meaning that are still associated with the place today. Based on historical black-and-white photographs, she creates various image conglomerates in which she not only integrates images of the artefacts and views of the current urban situation, but also includes family photos provided by the former migrant workers.
AFTERLIFE – SEALED (HI)STORIES OF WORK AND MIGRATION visualises how different population groups such as prisoners of war, displaced persons and “guest workers“ lived or had to live under the respective circumstances and premises of the time. The artist evokes these circumstances in a poetic and haunting way.
„The overlapping of the most diverse fates and the associated periods of German history can be seen in detail and selectively in the rooms of Stalag VII A. For example, prisoners of war and then interned National Socialists slept in the same rooms. The bathrooms in the barracks were used by German guards during the Second World War and later by the Turkish ‚guest workers‘ – some of the furniture was still completely unchanged”, says Sandra Ratkovic
About the photographer:
In her artistic work, Sandra Ratkovic deals with social upheavals and their visual impact on urban landscapes and people’s living environments. Her own family also has a background as labour migrants and displaced persons. Her father arrived in Munich in 1973 as a „guest worker“ from the former Yugoslavia. Her maternal grandmother had to flee Silesia during the Second World War as a so-called displaced person.
Artist Tours:
Saturday, 27. April, 3 pm
Sunday, 26. May, 4 pm