topics
tools
Expatica countries
Index Last Var.(%)
BEL 20 2130.68 0.53
DAX 6407.21 1.06
IBEX 30 6502.1 -0.63
CAC 40 3073.75 0.85
FTSE 100 5399.33 0.89
AEX 295.68 1.00
DJIA 12454.83 -0.60
Nasdaq 2837.53 -0.07
FTSE MIB 13175.91 0.16
TSX Composite 11576.47 0.09
ASX 4120.2 0.96
Hang seng 18798.61 0.46
Straits Times 2792.63 0.72
ISEQ 20 502.38 0.29
You are here: Home News Community News Berlin Wall resurrected in Los Angeles
Enlarge font Decrease font Text size


02/11/2009Berlin Wall resurrected in Los Angeles

The wall sections were acquired by the Los Angeles-based Wende Museum, a non-profit organization dedicated to acquiring, preserving and enabling access to Cold War-era artifacts from Eastern Europe.

Los Angeles -- Twenty years after a seismic jolt of history sent it tumbling down, a section of the Berlin Wall has been rebuilt in Los Angeles, offering residents a glimpse of the brutal Cold War frontier that once divided Europe.

Since mid-October, 10 towering slabs of concrete that separated East and West Berlin until November 9 1989, have been installed along Wilshire Boulevard in front of Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).

The wall sections were acquired by the Los Angeles-based Wende Museum, a non-profit organization dedicated to acquiring, preserving and enabling access to Cold War-era artifacts from Eastern Europe.

The 2.6 ton slabs have been made available to artists, who have been given free rein to make their own statements on each block of concrete.

"The Wall is a blank canvas," said Wende Museum President Justinian Jampol. "The Berlin Wall is such an international symbol. And it's not even a wall any more. People have imposed their own ideas about what it means."

Jampol said visitors to the wall exhibit had different interpretations of what it represented.

"You have people coming by, they don't quite know whether they can touch it or not, if it's historical, if it's not, is it something we are allowed to interface with or not," he told AFP.

"It's amazing to see the diversity of those responses. Sometimes, it's the Mexican-American wall, sometimes it's the Israeli wall, sometimes, it's a psychological wall."

Artists who have been invited to use the wall as their canvas include Berlin-based Frenchman Thierry Noir, who was invited to help "maintain the memory" of the end of the Cold War.

Noir, a Berlin resident since 1982, has painted a large, stylized and lengthened facial profile composed of only three colors, a variation on an image he often painted on the wall in the years before its collapse.

The simplicity of the image's design was rooted in practicality, Noir explained. Artists painting on the wall often had to work quickly in order to avoid the attention of East German border guards.

Noir recalled being harangued with the command: "Citizen of West Berlin, return immediately to your zone."

"But in the last few months before the fall of the wall we got our revenge," Noir said. "We were able to go through holes in the wall in some places and paint on the eastern side, which enraged the soldiers because they'd been told they could no longer shoot on sight."

Los Angeles-based artist Farrah Karapetian meanwhile said the exhibit had relevance to city neighborhoods divided by large multi-lane freeways.

"LA has a horrible freeway system that kind of cuts through everything and make it possible to avoid certain neighborhoods if you want to," Karapetian said. "It's kind of a class wall."

The Wende Museum's "Wall Project" will culminate at midnight on November 8, when a graffiti-strewn replica of the Berlin Wall will be erected across Wilshire Boulevard, one of the city's main east-west transport routes, before being symbolically toppled.

AFP/Expatica



0 reactions to this article

0 reactions to this article

Discussion Forums

Technology in Spain

Sat phones/internet links

English in Spain

What is the best travel insurance cover to Spain?

American in Spain

U.S. citizens, plan to vote in 2012? Did you know...

Relocation to Spain

thinking of moving to madrid

Jobs in Spain

Job Agencies or how to find work.

participate in the forums

Inside Expatica
Editor's Guide: Getting Started in Spain

Editor's Guide: Getting Started in Spain

Expatica's Getting Started section will provide practical information on how you can open a bank account, exchange your driving licence, improve your Spanish, and more.

Groups and Clubs in Madrid

Groups and Clubs in Madrid

Here's a guide to an extensive list of groups and clubs in Madrid for expats, from sports groups to social and family gatherings.

Groups and Clubs around Spain

Groups and Clubs around Spain

A brief introduction to our Tax section for Spain, from help with inheritance tax to accounting advice.

Groups and Clubs in Barcelona

Groups and Clubs in Barcelona

Here's a short introduction to our Banking section for those living in Spain, from what to ask the experts to opening a Spanish bank account.