The Prague Post - German artist Kiefer feels 'threatened' by far-right AfD

EUR -
AED 4.29998
AFN 80.20019
ALL 96.461892
AMD 447.888756
ANG 2.096037
AOA 1073.53821
ARS 1674.032396
AUD 1.768974
AWG 1.646306
AZN 1.993556
BAM 1.962357
BBD 2.356975
BDT 142.516177
BGN 1.95491
BHD 0.441331
BIF 3453.584411
BMD 1.170707
BND 1.514496
BOB 8.115944
BRL 6.218097
BSD 1.17021
BTN 103.877641
BWP 15.597782
BYN 3.970165
BYR 22945.848967
BZD 2.353463
CAD 1.632492
CDF 2950.180466
CHF 0.931063
CLF 0.028706
CLP 1126.137937
CNY 8.334904
CNH 8.364125
COP 4519.805429
CRC 588.165185
CUC 1.170707
CUP 31.023724
CVE 110.690616
CZK 24.314987
DJF 208.057666
DKK 7.465187
DOP 73.053642
DZD 151.796857
EGP 55.725833
ERN 17.560599
ETB 169.869638
FJD 2.637366
FKP 0.868887
GBP 0.868155
GEL 3.190189
GGP 0.868887
GHS 14.749649
GIP 0.868887
GMD 84.290691
GNF 10167.587136
GTQ 8.969971
GYD 244.762577
HKD 9.111668
HNL 30.625705
HRK 7.531035
HTG 153.131645
HUF 388.651482
IDR 19438.412054
ILS 3.834327
IMP 0.868887
INR 103.866317
IQD 1533.62562
IRR 49257.47991
ISK 141.779336
JEP 0.868887
JMD 187.486432
JOD 0.830062
JPY 176.003863
KES 151.607747
KGS 102.377808
KHR 4706.240711
KMF 492.868098
KPW 1053.637687
KRW 1651.422235
KWD 0.358401
KYD 0.975238
KZT 636.820555
LAK 25369.210856
LBP 104836.774155
LKR 353.882396
LRD 213.596014
LSL 20.101059
LTL 3.456792
LVL 0.708149
LYD 6.345055
MAD 10.670985
MDL 19.619133
MGA 5236.570605
MKD 61.589305
MMK 2458.471509
MNT 4209.261933
MOP 9.382147
MRU 46.675707
MUR 53.091273
MVR 17.923838
MWK 2032.928293
MXN 21.471346
MYR 4.934521
MZN 74.81972
NAD 20.089673
NGN 1722.815764
NIO 42.877088
NOK 11.618912
NPR 166.204225
NZD 2.007562
OMR 0.450138
PAB 1.17016
PEN 4.052981
PGK 4.897944
PHP 68.119281
PKR 329.316517
PLN 4.252065
PYG 8197.389223
QAR 4.262835
RON 5.088595
RSD 117.175932
RUB 97.152498
RWF 1695.183128
SAR 4.391024
SBD 9.636098
SCR 17.197413
SDG 704.172404
SEK 10.983691
SGD 1.512794
SHP 0.919992
SLE 27.289082
SLL 24549.135918
SOS 669.059008
SRD 45.210292
STD 24231.262558
STN 25.053121
SVC 10.239211
SYP 15221.509659
SZL 20.089234
THB 37.977776
TJS 10.918147
TMT 4.10918
TND 3.406565
TOP 2.741915
TRY 48.8088
TTD 7.932164
TWD 35.702924
TZS 2874.084844
UAH 48.342924
UGX 4039.496819
USD 1.170707
UYU 46.726122
UZS 14136.281698
VES 216.775699
VND 30865.678981
VUV 141.311737
WST 3.258305
XAF 658.127837
XAG 0.02413
XAU 0.000296
XCD 3.163893
XCG 2.109047
XDR 0.815122
XOF 655.011493
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.798961
ZAR 20.112862
ZMK 10537.766527
ZMW 27.88056
ZWL 376.967041
  • RBGPF

    -2.2200

    76

    -2.92%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.8

    -0.29%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    24.44

    -0.04%

  • SCS

    -0.1300

    16.98

    -0.77%

  • RELX

    0.0000

    46.41

    -0%

  • NGG

    0.4700

    73.9

    +0.64%

  • GSK

    0.1000

    43.45

    +0.23%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    15.7

    -0.38%

  • RIO

    0.8700

    66.98

    +1.3%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    11.29

    -0.62%

  • AZN

    0.1800

    85.49

    +0.21%

  • BTI

    -0.0600

    51.18

    -0.12%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    23.19

    -0.73%

  • BCC

    -2.4500

    75.18

    -3.26%

  • JRI

    -0.1200

    14.18

    -0.85%

  • BP

    0.6700

    34.83

    +1.92%

German artist Kiefer feels 'threatened' by far-right AfD
German artist Kiefer feels 'threatened' by far-right AfD / Photo: Dingena Mol - ANP/AFP

German artist Kiefer feels 'threatened' by far-right AfD

German artist Anselm Kiefer, known for work confronting his country's Nazi past, said Wednesday he felt "threatened" by the rise of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), which scored its best election result last month.

Text size:

Speaking to AFP in Amsterdam at the launch of a new exhibition, Kiefer, considered by many to be the world's greatest living artist, said his work was not meant to be overtly political, but he kept well abreast of developments.

Asked about the anti-immigration AfD, which finished in second place with just under 21 percent in recent German elections, Kiefer said: "I feel threatened. Not only from Germany."

"It becomes so complex, so you cannot put the things together anymore. There's no sense," said the 79-year-old, who rose to prominence with a series of photographs in which he posed in different European settings performing the taboo Nazi salute.

"When we had the Cold War, it was very dangerous too... But it was more clear, you know?" he said.

War and death have been a constant feature in the work of Kiefer, whose family home in Donaueschingen, southern Germany, was bombed on the night of his birth, March 8, 1945, two months before the end of World War II.

The centrepiece of the new exhibition -- the first-ever joint collaboration between the city's Stedelijk and Van Gogh museums -- is a 24-metre-long installation of paint, clay, dried petals, gold leaf... and uniforms.

Kiefer said it was not an explicitly anti-war artwork, more an expression of his internal feelings.

Asked whether there was a link to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, he said: "I do what is in me, what has to come out. And that is about all kinds of things, about death, about the war."

But he said he closely followed events in Ukraine and "it's logical that it comes out in a more substantial way."

- 'Will they ever learn?' -

The exhibition is titled "Sag mir wo die Blumen sind" (Where have all the flowers gone), after a song from which he splashes a lyric on his centrepiece -- "Will they ever learn?"

"And this sentence makes the song philosophical, you know? Because we cannot understand... that these things are happening today. They happened in 1933," he said.

"And this sentence, I put it on the wall for this thing. So, it feels a little bit like an anti-war statement," said the smiling German, dressed all in black apart from a white shirt.

The exhibition, which opens to the public on Friday, also seeks to illuminate the links between Kiefer and Van Gogh.

At the age of 18, Kiefer won a bursary which he used to retrace Van Gogh's steps from the Netherlands to France. In his twilight years, the Dutch master remains an inspiration.

"I was always influenced by Van Gogh, since I was seven, eight, nine, ten years old. And in the early 60s, I travelled in the footsteps of Van Gogh," even sleeping in a haystack.

The walls of the Van Gogh museum are now adorned with the German's vast canvases, depicting in his own way the famous sunflowers, crows and wheatfields, using real dried vegetation and gold leaf, a much-used material in the exhibition.

Asked if the gold might suggest a more optimistic tone piercing the sentiment of war and death, Kiefer said he was "neither optimistic nor pessimistic."

"Gold is not a positive thing. It's just gold, you know?"

K.Dudek--TPP