Revisiting “The Lost Museum: Berlin Sculpture & Paintings Collections 70 Years After World War II”

<p>Ona blustery day in late March 2015, I took refuge in Berlin&rsquo;s Bode Museum for an insightful, curator-led tour of an exhibit called &ldquo;The Lost Museum,&nbsp;<em>Das</em>&nbsp;<em>Werschwundene Museum</em>.&rdquo; The German term&nbsp;<em>verschwundene</em>&nbsp;could also be translated as missing or disappeared.</p> <p>Appearance, disappearance, and reappearance are recurrent themes in this unconventional and thought-provoking exhibit. As an art lover who relocated to Germany from the USA, I was intrigued by the tragic premise, that many of Berlin&rsquo;s artistic treasures lost in World War II could still be seen.</p> <p><strong>But I underestimated something: the enormous power and emotional impact of displaying something wantonly damaged and considered gone.</strong></p> <p><a href="https://elisheva-marcus.medium.com/revisiting-the-lost-museum-berlin-sculpture-paintings-collections-70-years-after-world-war-ii-7680dde0aa38"><strong>Website</strong></a></p>
Tags: lost Museum