What is it about?
What did "zero hour" mean for Munich in spatial terms? The symposium will focus on selected buildings and ruins and the significance of the culture of remembrance. How can the changing forms of fascism be viewed critically? What are places of memory? How can we remember and why do we need a culture of remembrance today?
Welcoming words:
Sabine Schalm Public History at the Munich Department of Culture
Andres Lepik Architecture Museum of the TUM
Sharon Hecker art historian and curator, keynote lecture
Michaela Melián Artist and musician (Germany)
Emanuele Guid Curator and author (Italy)
Frederike Lausch Lecturer at the Department of Architecture gta ETH Zurich (Germany)
Roberto Gigliotti Professor, Faculty of Design and Arts, The Free University of Bozen-Bolzano (Italy)
Elisabetta Ratallino Art historian, curator, The Free University of Bozen-Bolzano (Italy)
Sabine Brantl Curator at the Haus der Kunst Munich (Germany)
Tiago Saraiva Professor the Department of History at Drexel University (Italy, Germany)
Manon Haase Curation and Project Coordination Neuaubing Place of Remembrance, Munich Documentation Center for the History of National Socialism
Moderation:
Andres Lepik and Andjelka Badnjar
Student session with Stefan Pielmeier and Constantin Heid
Registration: anmeldung@architekturmuseum.de
Admission is free of charge
TUM Chair of History of Architecture and Curatorial Practice in collaboration with the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano supported by Public History in the Munich Department of Arts and Culture.
www.unibz.it/de/faculties/design-art/
www.architekturmuseum.de/en/
www.arc.ed.tum.de/en/agp/news/
Where?
Pavillion 333 | Schauwerkstatt für Architektur, Design und Kunst
Barer Straße 40
80333 München
- accessible by wheelchair