Exhibition Education Installation Arts

Inauguration: Engel und Bergmann by Christina Doll

Inauguration of the artwork Engel + Bergmann as part of the Purple Path art and sculpture trail.

Event information

Date & Time

Location

Hohndorf

entrance free

Christina Doll 
Engel + Bergmann 
Aluminium
2025

A young girl with outstretched arms and a wide robe stands next to a slender man with a mining helmet, who appears to be offering the viewer a piece of ore. The two figures by Christina Doll are reminiscent of the traditional Erzgebirge motif of angel and miner, which the artist, who was born in Cologne in 1972 and now lives in Berlin, translates into a contemporary visual language. Doll's figures, cast in bronze or aluminium, refer less to the traditional design methods of Erzgebirge iconography that have been handed down over the centuries. Her angel and miner appear to have been taken from life in terms of their facial features, their furnishings and their form. The artist approaches people through a process of observation, not portraying them, but empathising with their nature, observing their gestures and facial expressions, finding special features and similarities. It is not celebrities or social media identities, but marginalised groups and suppressed narratives that she gives a face and a form in her lifelike, immediate and truthful sculptures, the forcefulness of which breaks through any surface.

"Feelings are stronger than consciousness," is how Doll describes her experience of meeting a group of children with physical and cognitive disabilities. The artist observed them rehearsing the nativity play and translated their gestures, facial features and shape into the figure of an angel. For the miner, the artist researched the history of mining and the associated church of St Wolfgang in Schneeberg, where rich silver deposits were mined alongside tin, iron and copper in the 15th century.

Labelled as pitchblende and considered unusable, the ore that shaped Schneeberg between 1946 and 1957 was thrown onto heaps over the centuries: uranium. Operated by the Soviet-German AG Wismut, the ore was mined in the pits of Object 03 in the strictest secrecy, initially also under forced labour and with dramatic consequences for workers, the population and nature, in order to produce fuel rods and nuclear weapons in the Soviet Union. Doll gave the miner's figure the facial features of a Wismut worker based on an old photograph; its figure is reminiscent of Lucas Cranach's depiction of Adam on the Reformation altar in St Wolfgang. With the pair of angel and miner figures, the artist has not created an idealised depiction, but rather a monument to real life, the people, their work and their suffering in a sensitive, almost humble manner, which can be experienced in Hohndorf and other places in the Ore Mountains.

(Ulrike Pennewitz / Alexander Ochs)

more information

Program field

Barrierefreiheit

No stroboscopic effects

No stroboscopic effects are used.

Assistance dog welcome

It is possible to bring an assistance dog.

Accompanying person free

Holders of a disabled person's pass can bring one accompanying person free of charge.

Angel + Miner

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