979 research outputs found

    Revolution, Wilhelmshaven, 6. November 1918: ein Aquarell des Malers Karl Bloßfeld

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    Tauerei auf dem Rhein. 3. Teil: Die Seilschleppschiffahrt 1871-1905

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    Der "St. Louis Flüchtlingsschiff Blues": zur Verarbeitung von Holocaust und Kriegsgräueln im Comic

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    American comic artist Art Spiegelman, whose parents survived the Holocaust, has made the odyssey of the ship St. Louis some seventy years ago the topic of his latest work. The commanders of the Hapag motor vessel attempted in vain to let more than nine-hundred Jewish emigrants from Germany go on land in Cuba. When the Cuban authorities declined to recognize their visas, the captain of the St. Louis tried to bring the passengers to safety in the U.S., but President Roosevelt refused them entry. Spiegelman took a number of contemporary American caricatures as a point of departure for his retelling of the tragedy in the form of a large-scale comic drawing, supplemented with his comments on the Americans’ refusal to offer refuge

    Marinemalerei am Deutschen Schiffahrtsmuseum: ein Überblick über 30 Jahre Forschung

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    Since the foundation of the German Maritime Museum in 1971, scientific research of German marine painting has enjoyed such high priority that marine painting in Bremerhaven has become a research focus of national and international significance. In 1979 the decision was made as to the four fields of research that would be at the focal centre of the museum's research activities in connection with the "Blue List." (The German Maritime Museum was the sixth research museum to be included on the "Blue List" - so called because it was originally on blue paper - of research institutes to be supported jointly by the federal and state governments.) At that time, the museum's supervisory board agreed to place special emphasis on the research of the "pictorial depiction of German maritime history." In the thirty years since the foundation of the museum and until the very present, the collection of paintings has been continually expanded and is now the most important of its kind in public ownership in Germany. This unique source has frequently served as a point of departure for special exhibitions which would not have been possible without the research that had been carried out previously on the life and work of the respective painters. The results of this research are documented in catalogues, monographs, essays and biographical reference book articles, and have been made accessible to the public for general information and further research. Three monographs are particularly worthy of mention due to the attempt made in them to develop syntheses. Two of these books were written by researchers on the museum staff; one summary was actively supported by the museum. With the explicit encouragement of the German federal Scientific Council, voiced on the occasion of its evaluation of the research undertaken by the German Maritime Museum in the year 2000, the efforts will be further intensified in the future

    "Raumkunst" an Bord der Lloydschiffe: das Kinderspielzimmer 1. Klasse auf der Bremen IV, gestalten von Walter Trier

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    With its two turbine-driven express steamers BREMEN and EUROPA, launched in 1929 and 1930 respectively, the Norddeutscher Lloyd set new standards in terms of both external appearance and interior furnishings. Six architects were commissioned to provide artistic drafts for the firstclass- section interior of the BREMEN. The main rooms in First Class were designed by Düsseldorf architect Fritz August Breuhaus. Breuhaus was also the designer of the children's playroom. He commissioned the artist Walter Trier, a caricaturist and illustrator of children's books, to decorate the playroom with frescoes. The year 1929 also marked the publication of the first edition of Erich Kästner's famous children’s book Emil and the Detectives, containing the illustrations by Walter Trier; they can still be found in today’s editions of the work, which continues to delight young and old alike. Walter Trier avoided persecution by the Nazis by emigrating to Canada via England. Kästner personally witnessed the burning of his books in May 1933. Even though he stayed on in Germany he was forbidden to publish any more of his work. Neither the children’s playroom nor the BREMEN itself survived the war: The ship was destroyed by fire in 1941

    Eduard Adolf Nobiling/Edeling (1801-1882): eine biographische Skizze aus Anlaß seines 100. Todestages

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