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Demolishing Modernism: GDR and Neo-Prussian Architecture in Berlin

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  • Costa, Xavier

Abstract

This article examines the significance of some recent architecture and urban demolitions in Berlin. As an example of present-day iconoclasm in the heart of Europe, the relevance of these cases lies not only in the destruction of politically-charged artefacts, but also in their replacement with replicas of eighteenth-century architecture, thus materializing a Prussian revival and a nostalgia for the country’s royal past. In 2006, Berlin initiated the demolition of the Palace of the Republic (Palast der Republik). The Palast der Republik occupied the site of the original Berlin Palace, or Berliner Schloss, the residence of the Hohenzollern dynasty between 1701 and 1918. The demolition of the Palast has been followed by the construction of a replica of the eighteenth-century Schloss, but now intended to house the new Humboldt Forum, a museum dedicated to non-Western art. In recent years, both Berlin and neighbouring Potsdam have witnessed several integral reconstructions of historical buildings. This series of architecture demolitions and replicas therefore appears as a calculated and well-orchestrated operation to redefine the presence of the past through built artefacts, deserving to be examined from the broader perspective of iconoclastic precedents in art and architecture.

Suggested Citation

  • Costa, Xavier, 2022. "Demolishing Modernism: GDR and Neo-Prussian Architecture in Berlin," European Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 30(S1), pages 102-107, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:eurrev:v:30:y:2022:i:s1:p:s102-s107_12
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