Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts

Monday, September 19, 2022

Old National Gallery

With specific interests and goals, we made rather short work of the Old National Gallery...

Approaching the Old National Gallery

Josef Danhauser, Liszt at the Piano, 1840; the ladies swooning

Elisabeth Jerichau-Baumann, Twin Portrait of the Brother Grimm,
1855

Caspar David Friedrich, Greifswald Harbor, 1818;
an almost exact contemporary of Turner...wonder
whether they ever met

Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Cathedral by the Water, 1813

The Lenbach Wagner, 1895

Lorenz Gedon, Wagner bust, 1883

Lenbach 's Bismarck, 1884
Max Liebermann, The Flax Spinners in Laren, 1887 

The museum has an entire large hall of French Impressionsists...
Monet's View of Vetheuil sur Seine, 1880 

Manet's In the Conservatory, 1879

Cezanne, Mill on the Couleuvre at Pontoise, 1881 








































































































































































































Renoir, Chesnut Tree in Bloom, 1881
We'd read that the the former Chancellor, Angela Merkel, has an
apartment on Museum Island overlooking the Pergamon; we think
this was it...


Neues Museum, 2022

Next up was the Neues Museum, the New Museum, where the really old stuff is, which we'd visited also in 2012, posting on the Troy bits and also the Egypt bits. Pride of the place is the Nefertiti bust; so much so that no pix are permitted.

But, standing outside the room, waiting for the guards to
turn their backs, I did get this one memorable shot

We spent rather more time with the Neantherthals,
the Neolithics, then the Celts, this time


Nice diorama of an elderly artisan fashioning 
a Venus from ivory

Cycladic figures--the Neolithics got around rather more than
one might think

Celtic ornaments

The great Golden Hat...Celtic, actually a device
for astronomical calculations


Among the scene-setting large paintings adorning the Neues Museum

Lions Gate replica from Mycenae

Now looking at Trojan loot, entering the Schliemann exhibit


Heinrich Schliemann, the great adventurer who made his fortune
in the California gold fields and who figured the best way to
find Troy was to read Homer...

Priam's Mask?...rather unclear how much loot was looted by the
Russians, how much was in Turkey or Greece...

More of the haul

Still the main draw...a photo of a photo


Pergamon Museum, 2022

September 15 was our big Berlin museums day, knocking off 4 or even 5 (depending on how you individuate museums): the Pergamon, the Neues, the Old National Gallery, the Panorama, and "The World of Heinrich Schliemann" at the James Simon gallery. All on Museums Island. All for 19€ per person, too.

The Pergamon is a large museum, a museum of large format stuff. The German archaeologists removed not just clay pots and tablets and statues and such, but whole temples and other buildings. Just keeping up with the Brits, you might say. The museum is under renovation presently, and its most famous holdings are closed until 2025. Fortunately, we had visited the Pergamon before, in 2012. See my post from then for a look at that for which this big format museum is most famous. We had also visited Pergamum itself, the ancient city in Turkey, and blogged about it too, in 2010. And also Miletus, too, parts of which now reside in Berlin.

The Kaiser and the Sultan of Ottoman Turkey were close personal
buds in the later 19th century, and thus it was open season for
German archaeologists and adventurers throughout Asia Minor; 
also, the Ottoman Empire was the "sick man of Europe" and looking
for some help; compare Britain's relationship with Greece...

The Official Story; "partage"?!

Helpful model of ancient Babylon

Including the Temple of Marduk, thought to have been the 
"Tower of Babel"

Now entering the processional road to the great hall in later
Babylon; just 100m of the 250m collected

Detail

Spare parts; actual crate used for transporting...

Definitely will be on the quiz


Cast of the Code of Hammurabi; source
of all the "thou shalt nots"

Impressive gold work

More monumental stuff

And you thought angels were strictly Christian

"You've come a long way, baby," except in the US, where
Republicans would like to set the clock back a few millennia

The smaller entry gate; the larger one (see model) was too large
to fit

Scale in the throne room


Helpful model of what you've been walking and looking at









































































































































Shazam! You pass through the gate and you're in Roman Miletus;
the signage here helpfully notes that 60% of the facade here is
original, the highest percentage of anything in the museum (!)

Nice mosaic...a door off to the right leads then to the now-closed
hall of Pergamon; see our 2012 post for pix of this

Perhaps the high point of this visit to the Pergamon was in its
nice restaurant, being served by robotic serveuse (go to my
YouTube channel...https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hlnUKnSBY2Y&ab_channel=MarkSherouse

My north German sushi...raw herring and salad...the waiter asked
whether I understood what I was ordering..."Ach, ja, ja, ich
verstehe..."

Vicki's pizza