Four people are engaged in lively conversation, whilst others sit in deckchairs in the background reading

Others have a suitcase; Weimar has a whole room in Berlin

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Berlin isn’t the centre of the universe – there are exciting exhibition projects in other federal states too, for example in Thuringia. To introduce these to Berliners, the ‘Weimar Room’ has now been officially opened at the State Library on Unter den Linden

A room of its own – since 10 July 2024, the Weimar Classic Foundation has had one in the German capital, Berlin, and in no less a venue than the State Library on Unter den Linden. Although the term ‘room’ is to be understood in a more conceptual sense, the ‘Weimar Room’ consists of a pop-up installation, a bench-shelf brimming with information on the Klassik Stiftung’s annual exhibition ‘Auf/Bruch. Bauhaus and National Socialism”, and seating for reading the accompanying magazine Klassisch Modern in the form of deckchairs in the rear foyer of the imposing and newly renovated library building.

Ulrike Lorenz, President of the Weimar Klassik Foundation, even speaks of a “window and telescope in one”, a constantly changing communication object designed to showcase one of the impressive cultural activities in the Thuringian capital, or rather to direct Berliners’ gaze from their own, thoroughly eventful cultural daily life towards Weimar, ideally crowned with a visit to the site.  One might think that the phrase “Ich tanze auf allen Wegen” printed on the pop-up object subtly implies this invitation to Weimar, but no, it is a poem by Marianne Brandt, one of the most famous Bauhaus artists.

There are two magazines with yellow covers on display
Focusing on Weimar’s annual theme, “Bauhaus and National Socialism”, and available to read in the Weimar Room: “Klassisch Modern”, the magazine of the Klassik Stiftung; Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK
Four people are standing in a row, looking composed
Group photo in the “Weimar Room”: Hermann Parzinger (President of the SPK), Malte Krückels (State Secretary and Plenipotentiary of the Free State of Thuringia to the Federal Government), Anke Blümm (curator of the Auf/Bruch exhibition) and Ulrike Lorenz (President of the Klassik Stiftung Weimar); Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK
Deckchairs and signposted standing signs in a foyer; in the foreground, the blurred lower half of a person walking
Both a telescope and a shop window: the Weimar Room at the Berlin State Library; Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK

For alongside Goethe, Schiller and Nietzsche, Weimar is famous above all for one cultural export: the Bauhaus, the legendary art school. However, the first annual exhibition, which is being promoted in Berlin, does a fine job of undermining that myth: whereas it was previously assumed that the Bauhaus – which was, after all, closed down by the Nazis in 1933 – was on the ‘right side’, the three-part exhibition ‘Auf/Bruch. Bauhaus and National Socialism’ reveals for the very first time that there were indeed some links between the two and that modernism was more Janus-faced than one had previously been willing to admit. On the opening night, curator Anke Blümm spoke decisively in her talk about the contradictions in the professional biographies of many a Bauhaus member – of Grethe Reichardt, who had already driven Gunta Stölzl out of the Bauhaus before 1933, partly because of her Jewish husband; of Herbert Bayer’s creative masterpieces in the service of the Nazis; or indeed of Fritz Ertl, who had helped design the Birkenau concentration camp.

Three people are standing on a podium
SPK President Parzinger and Ulrike Lorenz discussing the "Weimar Room"; Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK
A blonde woman wearing glasses is speaking into a microphone
Curator Anke Blümm gave a talk introducing the Weimar exhibition "Auf/Bruch. Bauhaus and National Socialism"; Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK
Warming tray with sausages
Whether it’s a must-have or not, it’s simply delicious and so couldn’t be left out: the Thuringian grilled sausage, photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK

This theme year was chosen very deliberately in Weimar, partly because cultural institutions have a role to play. It is also linked to the 2024 election year and serves as a reminder of the shift to the right in Thuringia in 1924, which led to the Bauhaus leaving Weimar, explains President Lorenz. SPK President Parzinger emphasised the close ties between the SPK and the Classical Music Foundation. The ‘Weimar Room’ would underline this once again and, at the same time, highlight the SPK’s role as a showcase for institutions from the federal states, Parzinger went on to explain.

And so, on this sultry July evening, over Thuringian grilled sausages and white wine, we celebrate a fine new fruit of cultural federalism.

A woman at the DJ desk
Metaware brought some cool sounds from Weimar to Berlin, Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK
A blurred photo of a woman behind a mixing desk
The FLINTA* DJ collective (from Weimar, of course) created just the right atmosphere; Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK
Two people in white suits on a stage
When it comes to Weimar, Goethe is a must: "Panzerkreuzer Rotkäppchen" performed their version of *Erlkönig*; Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK
A person with foam at the mouth is being looked at by another person
The performance was intended to make the audience feel uncomfortable – and it succeeded; Photo: Liesa Johannssen/photothek.de/SPK

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