Berlin in the 1920s
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It was the decade of daring Expressionist canvases, of brilliant
book design, of the Bauhaus total work of art, of pioneering
psychology, of drag balls, cabaret, Metropolis, and Marlene
Dietrich’s rising star in theater and silent film. Between the
paroxysms of two world wars, Berlin in the 1920s was a carpe diem
cultural heyday, replete with groundbreaking art, invention, and
thought.This book immerses readers in the freewheeling spirit of
Berlin’s Weimar age. Through exemplary works in painting,
sculpture, architecture, graphic design, photography, and film, we
uncover the innovations, ideas, and precious dreams that
characterized this unique cultural window. We take in the jazz bars
and dance halls, the crowded kinos and flapper fashion, the
advances in technology and transport, the radio towers and rumbling
trams and trains, the soaring buildings, the cinematic masterworks,
and the newly independent women who smoked cigarettes, wore their
hair short, and earned their own money.Featured works in this vivid
cultural portrait include Hannah Höch's The Journalists, Lotte
Jacobi’s Hands on Typewriter, Otto Dix's Portrait of the Journalist
Sylvia von Harden, Peter Behrens's project of theAlexanderplatz,
and Josef von Sternberg’s The Blue Angel, starring Dietrich as
cabaret performer Lola Lola. Along the way, we explore both the
utopian yearnings and the more ominous economic and political
realities which fueled the era's escapist, idealistic, or
reactionary masterworks. Behind the bright lights and glitter
dresses, we see the inflation, factory labor, and fragile political
consensus that lurked beneath this golden era and would eventually
spell its savage end with the rise of National Socialism.