Monday 29 June 2015

Christopher Street Day Parade, Berlin, June 27, 2015

Gay Pride is referred to as Christopher Street Day across Germany and Switzerland, in commemoration of those courageous men who stood up to the New York City Police, back in June 1969. 

This year's Berlin parade was held two days ago.  It was attended by approximately 500,000 people from around the world. Over 60 floats participated, among them were embassies (US,  Slovenia, etc.), organisations (gay Muslim groups, etc.) and clubs and bars (Connection, Berghain, etc.). 

This year's big issue was - predictably -  gay marriage, as in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland gay men and women have the right to enter into a civil union, but this union doesn't come with the same rights as a marriage. In other words, there's a gap in equality which is begging to be closed and this is what this year's Christopher Street Day Parade in Berlin was all about! 

My friend Willem den Hartigh from Holland contributed to  this post

(please click on each image to enlarge)








Friday 26 June 2015

The Queen Among Queens

I don't suppose The Queen was aware of the fact that her visit to the German Capital came at a time when preparations for Berlin's annual Gay Pride Parade ('CSD') were in full swing. As every queen in town has been busy sewing and stitching away to look their best when Saturday comes, she, The Queen would have easily outshone them all!

No homegrown queen can hold a candle to the original, whom I happened to catch a glimpse of this morning while walking Lucas:


I know, from what you see there on the photo, it could be anyone. But it is her (and Prince Philip), and if you look closely, you can just about make out the Royal flag on the Bentley (which she had flown in ahead of her visit).  

She, The Queen is on her way back to the UK now and I must say, an odd visit it has been indeed. Bad enough she was offered a painting by a no-name German artist (Nicola whatshername???) which failed to impress, but President Gauck then had the gall to actually suggest that, "if she doesn't like the painting, there's a always box of candy".

So much for German diplomacy!

To make matters worse, the poor woman was carted about, up and down the River Spree, in a tawdry trawler - all because the trawler was "exactly as old she (The Queen) is". 

Really!

And having had the dubious pleasure to sample Miss Merkel's command of English (via YouTube) as she explained to The Queen where she, Merkel, used to live (like The Queen cared!), I have no doubt that President Gauck's (command of English) is even worse.


Sir Simon Rattle, chief conductor of the Berlin Philharmonics since 2002

On top of everything else, I consider it deeply embarrassing, that neither Gauck nor Merkel actually had the decency to treat The Queen to a concert of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra (whose conductor is, after all, a Brit!), or to a performance at one of Berlin's three opera houses. Nor was there a visit to any of Berlin's fabulous museum on the agenda, though I'm sure The Queen would have much appreciated seeing, for instance, the two Vermeers at the Gemäldegalerie since she owns one herself.


Johannes Vermeer: 'Woman with a Pearl Necklace', Berlin/ Gemäldegalerie 


Though part of me hates harping on about the good old days, I have no doubt that when Germany's former - Oxford educated! - President Richard von Weizsäcker (who died last year) played host to The Queen back in 1992, things were done rather differently. I'm sure that Mr. Weizsäcker's qualities as a host far exceeded those of Mr. Gauck,

And better English he spoke, too!


Richard von Weizsäcker (Germany's President 1984 - 1994) 


Wednesday 24 June 2015

Architects to Watch: Sohrab Zafari


Berlin based Sohrab Zafari is a German architect of Persian descent. Of late, he's made quite a splash with some spectacular projects that he designed - the majority of them in Germany - and most notably, the so-called Housing at the Old City Wall in Berlin, which some say stands a good chance of being voted 'Berlin's Most Beautiful Building' next month. 

...and here it is: 


To find out more about Sohrab Zafari, click HERE

Monday 22 June 2015

Pride Week Berlin 2015

Usually, the most prominent rainbow colors seen in Berlin's Gay Village is the neon light installation on the dome of Nollendorf Square tube station which is an all-year thing:


These days, though, with Pride Week in full swing, a bus stop in the Gay Village got a rainbow face-lift: 


... and an additional rainbow flag has been attached to Nollendorf Square tube station:



... while the owners of the bars, clubs, and hang-out's in that area were rummaging through their deco paraphernalia, digging up all kinds of wacky things: 


... and at the same time townhouses across the city hoisted the rainbow flag, like for instance Charlottenburg: 


... and Schöneberg townhall: 

Sunday 21 June 2015

Berlin's Most Notorious Construction Sites (...besides the BER,that is!)

... notorious,because they were all due to be completed years ago, and yet none of them are!



Pergamon Museum (estimated completion date: 2021;architect: David Chipperfield)



State Opera (estimated completion date: 2017/ 18)



National Library (estimated completion date: 2016/ 17)



Barenboim-Said Academy (estimated completion date:  2016/ 17; architect/ interior: Frank Gehry)



James Simon Gallery (estimated completion date: 2017; architect: David Chipperfield)

What's interesting here is, that every single construction site is undertaken by the City of Berlin or the Federal Republic of Germany or jointly by both. For some time now, I've been observing the progress on private construction sites as well as public ones (such as the ones above) and guess what - those that are privately funded are usually completed on time while the public ones tend to be delayed by years. As to why is anyone's guess ...  ... 

Friday 19 June 2015

Townhouses - Friedrichswerder

Friedrichswerder - what sounds like a backwater in Brandenburg is, in fact, the historic name of a specific part of Mitte, precisely the area between Hausvogtei Square and Boulevard Unter den Linden. It's one of those neighbourhoods where Berlin doesn't feel like Berlin at all, and that's meant a lot more positively than it sounds. Here, real estate developers and architects really went to town - literally - giving it their all. Here, you'll find high-end designer stores ('Apool'), elegant little cafes ('Pax'), restaurants graced with Michelin stars ('Meisterstück') and for those lucky enough to call this neighbourhood their home, Ralph Lauren is ready to supply the furniture, as his Home Accessories boutique is located smack in the centre of Friedrichswerder. 

Friedrichswerder also is the area where a year ago, Berlin's most expensive apartment to date had been sold for just over 6m Euros. In my book, it's the area where you'll find New Berlin's (read: post 1990) most interesting, if not most daring, architecture, the Embassy Quarter excepted. 

Unfortunately, the photos below can only give you a faint idea of the architecture, I advise you, however, to enlarge each image by clicking on it: 









The Hidden Beauty of Friedenau

Friedenau is not where your ordinary Berlin ventures to when setting foot on Berlin for the first time, and yet, it has so much to offer, and all it takes is to open your eyes to discover the hidden beauty of this charming neighborhood, located south-west of Berlin's inner-circle:  


The "Deluge Fountain" by Paul Aichele, who designed it for the Expo 1896. The fountain was moved to its current location in 1932. Check out the detail ... the drama of it all: a man trying desperately to rescue his mother (?) from the rising tides: 


... the wife, safely perching above the waters, desperately holding on to her baby. I wonder what incident in his life inspired Aichele to this really dramatic work ... 


The "Deluge Fountain" in its entirety


Turn-of-the-century water pumps, scattered all across Friedenau. 


One of the features that make Friedenau stand out are the city villas - Stadtvillen, as they're called in German - many of which are still occupied by one party only as, for instance, this one: Villa Scatolenti on Nied Street, just two houses down from where Nobel Prize Laureate Günter Grass used to live, a villa now occupied by his son and daughter in law. 


Villa Anna on Alba Street 


... another one is this pretty little number on Perels Park West ... 


... or this one, surrounded by lush greenery ... 


Friedenau Town Hall, which is in dire need of a new coat of paint. Its front was badly damaged during WW2 while its back and side (depicted) have survived more or less unscathed.


"Ceciliengärten", or how I choose to call it, "Sicilian Gardens", is a prime example of "working class living" such as it was conceived in 1920s Berlin. Unfortunately, today, the working classes of this world - Germany's included - can but dream of finding housing as comfortable and pretty as this, relegated as most of them are to tenement blocks in suburbia.


"Sicilian Gardens" with its water tank, or rather, what looks like one for it contains nothing and like most of Berlin's turn of the century domes, has no purpose at all other than being decorative.


The lawn at "Sicilian Gardens" with its two sculptures at either end, "Morning" and "Evening". Needless to say, the lawn is very popular with dog owners, including myself. 


"Stolpersteine" - "stumble stones" in English - a project to commemorate the Holocaust across Germany (Europe, actually, as the project has recently been extended) are numerous in Friedenau. Not because Friedenau had a particularly high number of Jews settling there, but because one of the last Jewish Prayer Houses was located there along with one of the last remaining so-called 'Jew's House' (denoting houses were Jews were 'lumped together' by the Nazis before being deported). One such a house and the above mentioned Prayer House were located on Stier Street, just around the corner from my apartment ... 


... therefore, Stier Street has a high number of such stumble stones, and new ones are still being implemented on a regular basis as more facts on those deported emerge. Today, Friedenau is once more boasting a modest Jewish community, the most "famous" member of which is Rabbi Daniel Alter who rose to national prominence when he was attacked outside his house by a group of Arab youths about two years ago. The attack made headlines across the country, and a few days later, a rally was held in Friedenau to express solidarity with the Jewish Community and to take a clear stance against racism and anti-semitism.


God, so the saying goes, is in the detail ... though looking at this gargoyle found on the entrance of a building on Nied Street, it appears the devil had a hand in it, too ...


"Salve" betrays the Germans love affair with Italy, set off, probably, by Goethe's famous "Travels to Italy", published in the late 18th century. Taking their cue from Goethe, no doubt, the erstwhile owners of this building had "Salve" inscribed above the entrance door, just like Goethe did at his home in Weimar.


Beautiful Art Nouveau detail on an apartment building on Nied Street.


... a glass manufacturer ... 


This is one of my favorite hang-out's ... The "Süsskramdealer", or ""Dealer in Sweets", run and owned by a gay guy (of course!), who sells excellent coffee and all things chocolate from around the world (though mostly France and Italy), mixed in with some local stuff, such as the Berlin based Praline maker, 


If you'd ask me what's typical of Friedenau, I'd have to say, 1. the unusually high number of psychoanalysts, 2. the equally high number of alternative practitioners, and 3. the omnipresence of classical music, be that that there are quite a few violin makers, piano makers (such as the one above) or sellers of wind instruments located in Friedenau, or that you can often hear classical music coming out of apartments as people are practicing the piano, the violin, or are simply listening to classical music on the radio whilst going about their day-to-day chores. 


... a seller of antiques, selling their wares in the front yard ... 


... a wine-bar round the corner from my home ...



... our local market, taking place on three days per week, where you can find, for instance, saucisson from the Auvergne, sold by Catherine from Paris, as well as an assortment of Turkish, Italian, Greek, and Austrian food stalls. In addition to that, you have all the farmers from the Brandenburg area also selling their produce, and along with all the organic food stores nearby, they make for a highly competitive (food) market.



...speaking of the Turkish community, Friedenau also has a mosque, located in the Islamic Cultural Center, and though Friedenau may not be Kreuzberg, it is - almost - as multi-cultural, having as it does its fair share of Korean tea houses, Vietnamese take away's, Thai restaurants, and, of course, its obligatory slew of Italian restaurants (there are 11 in my immediate vicinity alone!). But that bourgeois Friedenau is a lot more dynamic and international than one is led to believe, is evident in its dog owners, for the ones I know come from all sorts of countries, including Russia, the US, Spain, Vietnam, Poland, Italy, India, and Israel. 


... this is our Russian supermarket, open 24/7, and a real blessing given the many public holidays in this country where everything is closed - so this 24/7 grocery store is a Godsend indeed! 


The "Haunted House", as I call it, for it looks a little somber ... a little, yes, haunted, all offset now by the lush, beautiful lilac ...


... no, it's not all doom and gloom, Friedenau in Spring is all about groom and bloom - the whole neighbourhood exploding in a gush of colours and blossoms, and though I'm not usually into gardening, Friedenau in Spring never ceases to amaze and inspire me!


... and looking at the beauty of it all: who could blame me ...?


... for in Spring and Summer, what's beautiful anyway, looks even prettier now, in the sunshine, framed by lavish greenery ... 


... the entire district turned into a park ...


... with me in it, for as someone said to me the other day, "DO MOR OF WHAT MAKES YOU HAPPY", and so I'm having plenty of cake and plenty of chocolate, for as long as cocoa is growing on trees, chocolate is my vegetable!