The walls of Berlin talk. In this city
famous for it's wall, every concrete surface seems to call out for my
attention.
Most of my week in Germany I stayed in
an apartment in East Berlin, a few miles south of the City center.
The view from the balcony of the 6th story apartment was
beautiful. Lush green trees spill through the cracks of terracotta
red roofs; the steeple of an ancient church pushes out to dominate
the skyline. At street-level, however, the green trees are overgrown
with weeds and the bushes hide broken glass and soggy leaflets. The
buildings are old and often ill-kept and the cobblestones of the
streets shine with discarded metal bottle caps. Some parts of Berlin
shine new and untouched, catering to the busloads of tourists that
flood in every day. The greater part of the city, however, has an
unkempt feeling. It's overgrown islands, dilapidated buildings and,
of course, graffitied walls.
I have to admit that I love graffiti.
Even in Honduras, where the spray-painted walls are often the product
of violent gangs or an angry protester, I love reading the words
scrawled on the walls. And when graffiti moves past these crude
marking on a wall, it is not only interesting but truly beautiful.
Graffiti has the freedom of a charcoal drawing with the permanence
and size that allows it to communicate to huge crowds. It is an
incredible way for art to retain its presence in our everyday lives.
I've been wondering how graffiti
became so prevalent in Berlin, since it seems more common in this
city than in any other place I have visited. While I was in Berlin, I
saw an old photo of young men and women dismantling the wall. In the
background stood a man holding posters and brushed. I like to imagine
people, angry at their government, angry at the injustice of their
situation, angry at the wall, grabbing a brush, a can, and shouting
it out. I imagined the colors spreading: from the wall, through
alleys, over roofs and under bridges, carried across the city on the
subway. Plastered across whole buildings, until it even started
creeping into homes, galleries and restaurants, embraced as more than
just a sign of protest.
Somehow the graffiti that covers the walls of Berlin don't make it look run down. To me, the kaleidoscope on the walls hint at a culture that is wide awake and ready to to talk and to change. Maybe the graffiti is merely vandalism, but I like to think that there's more to it. In a city that often looks like no one cares for it, men and woman have painstakingly painted it's walls. And there is something to be said about that.
Oh Anna, what a JOY to read your first impressions of Berlin! thank you for showing us this place we have read and heard about so much! Well done! have a wonderful time exploring and blogging!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a good research paper for a class down the road--why does Berlin have so much graffiti--especially it would seem strange for East Berlin which was tightly controlled. And the connections between graffiti and murals is also interesting. Have fun!
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