Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Gerhard Richter’s Critical Artistic Strategies: Politics, Terrorism and War
View through CrossRef
Abstract
The present paper analyzes two artistic strategies employed by Gerhard Richter to deal with painful recent cultural memory. Two works in particular reveal the relative success of Richter’s varied artistic strategies addressing contemporary political events: 18. Oktober 1977 (1988) and War Cut (2004). In his series of paintings on the Baader-Meinhof terrorist group, Richter effectively employs his “photopainting” style to address the profoundly disturbing deaths of the Baader-Meinhof group in the 1970s. Richter chose mundane photographic sources for his imagery, denying a hierarchy of “correct” memories of the events and turning photographic indexicality against itself by employing a painterly medium, tinged with nostalgia, to represent it. Richter’s photopaintings of Baader-Meinhof thus use the “factual” nature of the photograph while also utilizing an elegiac painterly mist through which an indistinct emotional memory of the past seems to emerge. Richter’s blurring of images can thus be understood as a fulcrum on which the undecidability of history itself must be represented. Richter constructs War Cut (2004), on the other hand, as a work and aesthetic experience decidedly at odds with the iconicity of his Baader-Meinhof images by employing arbitrariness and conceptual abstraction.
Title: Gerhard Richter’s Critical Artistic Strategies: Politics, Terrorism and War
Description:
Abstract
The present paper analyzes two artistic strategies employed by Gerhard Richter to deal with painful recent cultural memory.
Two works in particular reveal the relative success of Richter’s varied artistic strategies addressing contemporary political events: 18.
Oktober 1977 (1988) and War Cut (2004).
In his series of paintings on the Baader-Meinhof terrorist group, Richter effectively employs his “photopainting” style to address the profoundly disturbing deaths of the Baader-Meinhof group in the 1970s.
Richter chose mundane photographic sources for his imagery, denying a hierarchy of “correct” memories of the events and turning photographic indexicality against itself by employing a painterly medium, tinged with nostalgia, to represent it.
Richter’s photopaintings of Baader-Meinhof thus use the “factual” nature of the photograph while also utilizing an elegiac painterly mist through which an indistinct emotional memory of the past seems to emerge.
Richter’s blurring of images can thus be understood as a fulcrum on which the undecidability of history itself must be represented.
Richter constructs War Cut (2004), on the other hand, as a work and aesthetic experience decidedly at odds with the iconicity of his Baader-Meinhof images by employing arbitrariness and conceptual abstraction.
Related Results
Terrorism in Africa; Economic Origins, Spillover, and Economic Resilience
Terrorism in Africa; Economic Origins, Spillover, and Economic Resilience
The thesis consists of three principal chapters that collectively analyse the complex interplay between terrorism and economics in Africa, highlighting the essential role of instit...
Cyber terrorism as a threat to international security
Cyber terrorism as a threat to international security
The article is devoted to the problem of information terrorism in the context of the threat to the national security of Ukraine. The author defines regulatory consolidation of info...
Illusions of Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism
Illusions of Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism
Terrorism and counter-terrorism represent enduringly and globally important phenomena, and the mutually shaping relationship between non-state terrorism and state counter-terrorism...
Macroeconomic volatility and terrorism incidents in Africa
Macroeconomic volatility and terrorism incidents in Africa
AbstractThis article investigates the impact of macroeconomic volatility on terrorism in 38 African economies spanning the period from 1980 to 2012, using available data. It examin...
The Infrastructure of Terrorism: Concept and Essence
The Infrastructure of Terrorism: Concept and Essence
Systemic approach views terrorism as a complex system, as violent criminal activities determined by the factors of external environment and carried out under their direct influence...
Humanitarian Terrorism as a Higher and Last Stage of Asymmetric War
Humanitarian Terrorism as a Higher and Last Stage of Asymmetric War
The articles reviews the problem of humanitarian terrorism that is a terrorism of self-proclaimed humanitarian goals and self-inflicted constraints. This type of terrorism justifie...
Ti esti state-terrorism?
Ti esti state-terrorism?
This paper is an attempt to answer the raw philosophical question of ‘ti esti state-terrorism’. It is a critical philosophical analysis of the concept of state-terrorism based upon...
Women in Australian Politics: Maintaining the Rage against the Political Machine
Women in Australian Politics: Maintaining the Rage against the Political Machine
Women in federal politics are under-represented today and always have been. At no time in the history of the federal parliament have women achieved equal representation with men. T...

