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Sunday, April 19, 2026 |
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| Alfred Ehrhardt: Bauhaus-trained filmmaker's sixty-film legacy finally takes centre stage |
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Alfred Ehrhardt, Alfred Ehrhardt bei Dreharbeiten in Schweden, 1950. 8,9 x 13,9 cm, Silbergelatineabzug © Alfred Ehrhardt Stiftung.
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BERLIN.- For the very first time, Alfred Ehrhardts film work is the focus of an exhibition. The photographer, documentary filmmaker, and Bauhaus-trained artist created more than sixty filmsan oeuvre that has long been overshadowed by his photographic work. Now, the Alfred Ehrhardt Stiftung bring his films to the fore, offering a fresh aesthetic and historical perspective on one of the most prolific German cultural filmmakers of the twentieth century.
A selection of twenty key short and feature-length films will be presented across ten screens in two program phases: ten films during the first five weeks of the exhibition, followed by ten further works in the second half. The selection includes nature studies, films on art and cultural history, as well as productions from the Nazi era that have rarely been shown to date. The exhibition features Ehrhardts so-called shell films devoted to snails, mussels, and corals; his investigations of nature as a master of form, including studies of the tidal flats near Neuwerk, volcanic landscapes in Iceland, and ice formations off the coast of Greenland; as well as films on art and artists, among them works on Ernst Barlach, documenta II, and African masks.
Problematic aspects are not glossed over. With Urkräfte am Werk (Germany 1937/39), Ehrhardts debut film rediscovered in 2024, and the propaganda film Flanderns germanisches Gesicht (Germany 1941), his cinematic practice is examined within the historical context of its time.
Presenting multiple films in parallel makes it possiblefor the first timeto gain a comprehensive overview of Ehrhardts central motifs, methods, and obsessions. Spirals, islands, serial structures, and a fascination with life processes as visualized through media emerge with particular clarity. From at least the early 1950s onward, Ehrhardt explicitly drew on his Bauhaus training, employing bona fide cinematic techniques such as time-lapse, slow motion, and extreme macro photography. It is only on this basis that the material and technical foundation of his film work become fully apparent. Since 2019, fourteen films have been newly digitized and restored, eight of them with the support of the German Film Heritage Funding Program of the German Federal Film Board (FFA).
In parallel, extensive research has been conducted in external archives over the past several years, and for the first time all film-related materials in the Alfred Ehrhardt Stiftung archive have been digitized, analyzed, and systematically cataloged.
The exhibition is accompanied by a comprehensive illustrated volume, Alfred EhrhardtFilm, which documents his cinematic work in detail for the first time. Within the exhibition, archival materials presented in vitrines and display windowsincluding film scores created during the editing process, production photographs, and musical notations by composers such as Oskar Salaoffer insights into Ehrhardts working methods and his distinctive inventive spirit. Film posters and awards testify to the lasting recognition and esteem in which this highly acclaimed German Film Award recipient is held today.
The Alfred Ehrhardt Stiftung preserves one of the best-documented estates of a German cultural filmmaker of the post-war period. The exhibition presents Alfred Ehrhardt as a filmmaker in a new light, with a breadth and depth that has never been seen before. Films like never before!
Accompanying the exhibition is the publication "Alfred Ehrhardt Film" (German/English, edited by Christiane Stahl and Stefanie Odenthal for the Alfred Ehrhardt Stiftung, with texts by Thomas Tode, 288 pages, Dölling und Galitz Verlag, Hamburg 2026).
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