LabforCulture

Interview with Berlin Photographer Harald Hauswald

Gert Röhrborn | 18 Nov 2008, 10:39

For Harald Hauswald Photography was a way to virtually escape from the feeling of confinement which terrified him in the German Democratic Republic. He used it as an opportunity to fully develop his personality and skills in spite of and against the off-the-shelf lifestyle imposed by real socialist authorities. That is why in 1989 he saw himself much better prepared for the tough sides of capitalist dog-eat-dog society than a considerable number of East Germans who had actually enjoyed and accepted the regime’s general policy of directing people through life and who only resented its specific impotence to live up to its pretensions. From the late 1970s onwards Hauswald had opened his eyes and lenses to the back side of the East German capital’s social reality of “people rooting in rubbish bins, and punks and hooligans” which was consciously underexposed in the official media.

Harald Hauswald, who currently has two exhibtions on the myth of Eastern Europe and football hooligans on display in Berlin, was interviewed by Barbara Lubich on his personal way through real socialism and beyond. Learn about an exciting drift of a young tramp yearning for Led Zeppelin, catapulted by love from the provinces to the capital and opposing the system just by his desire to live.

This is the second chapter of six making up a full-scale documentation of the seven nation cooperation project "Overcoming Dictatorships - the Encounter of Poets, Artists and Writers".
Visit http://overcomings.blogspot.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZYB47LhDKk


 


Commentaires

Seuls les membres inscrits peuvent ajouter un commentaire. Inscrivez-vous ou connectez-vous en haut de cette page.
Il n'y a pas encore de commentaires.
Rejoignez-nous et tissez des liens à travers toute l'Europe ! Pourquoi rejoindre LabforCulture ?

Inscrivez-vous

Check out job opportunities provided by Culture Jobs International