
From the Germanic tribes repelling the Romans from between the trees to the fairytales collected by the Brothers Grimm and the post-war environmentalist movement against the dangers of “forest death”, the German imagination has often been stirred by the forest. Right at this moment there is an exhibition taking place at the German Historical Museum that explores the importance of the forest not only as a place of recreation but its symbolic, spiritual and (yes) fairytale role in poetry, art and music.
From the website:
The exhibition will visualize this special relationship of the Germans to the forest, focusing first on the Romantic Age around 1800, when the forest and the trees first became a matter of scientifically based forest management and at the same time enriched literature, music and the graphic arts as subject and theme. It was above all painting – the core of the exhibition – that shaped patterns of perception that have marked our view of the forest up to the present day.
It looks extremely interesting, and we cannot recommend enough the German Historical Museum in general, as one of the best in Berlin and a must-see for anyone interested in history of the city and the country. The “Under Trees” exhibition is running until the 4th March 2012.





(Photo: Border crossing at Friedrichtraße station, from the 
