The philosopher Alain de Botton, and art writer John Armstrong have co-authored a very readable book, Art as Therapy, explaining in straight-forward language why they believe art and other creative cultural production is important, and how it can "guide, exhort and console its viewers". They list seven functions of art as remembering, hope, sorrow, rebalancing, self-understanding, growth and appreciation. In the age of the 24/7 news cycle, it is not hard to imagine why they place remembering at the top of their list.
In Berlin, on the way to the C/O Photography Museum we passed through the Breitscheidplatz in front of the Kaiser Wilhelm church, where in 2016, a truck deliberately ploughed into the Christmas markets, leaving many dead and injured. Such sites are often marked by spontaneous tributes and memorials as part of a general public outpouring of grief. How to memorialise such sites in the longer term becomes a complex and sensitive subject. In Berlin, the response is understated and powerful: the names of those killed are engraved in the steps of the church, and a gold crack runs from the church steps and down through the pavement. The crack visualises the attack as a deep scar, and is a sombre and powerfully moving image, acknowledging the co-existance of despair and hope. You can read the project description by commissioned firm merz merz here.
Reading a little bit about merz merz as a design and consulting firm, and the way they interact with museums and public places, is a valuable insight into the changed nature of the museum industry, especially in environments where art and culture makes such a significant contribution to the economy.
The Berlin Christmas market memorial brings the work of Doris Salcedo to mind, who in 2007 installed an 157 metre long crack in the floor of the Turbine Hall of Tate Modern. This work also creates a place for grief and remembering, and in particular the ideas of borders, segregation and migration. Saucedo has a large body of public work memorialising acts of loss and violence in her native Columbia, and other parts of the world. There are many powerful interviews with this artist available online, but be warned they contain confronting themes.
Before the night market attack, the Kaiser Wilhelm church in Breitscheidplatz already stood as a memorial. Bombed in the war, the church was left as a ruin, and a modern church built alongside it. It serves as a place of contemplation and witness, and a monument for peace.
Memorial for the Berlin Christmas market attack at the Kaiser Wilhelm church in Berlin
Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial by Merz Merz
Kaiser Wilhelm Church, Berlin