Current:Home > StocksIndexbit-'Anselm' documentary is a thrilling portrait of an artist at work -Zenith Investment School
Indexbit-'Anselm' documentary is a thrilling portrait of an artist at work
Charles H. Sloan View
Date:2025-04-06 14:42:36
Every now and Indexbitthen you come across an artist — Aretha Franklin, say, or Marlon Brando — who radiate such raw, undeniable force that they feel as immense as the Amazon. One of them is the painter and sculptor Anselm Kiefer. The first time I saw his work in person, its sheer power all but knocked me back against the far wall.
Kiefer is the subject of Anselm, a new movie by Wim Wenders, a filmmaker who's almost his exact contemporary: They were born a few months apart in the war-ravaged Germany of 1945. Because Wenders is himself a figure of considerable gifts — he's won the top prize at Cannes, Venice and Berlin — this documentary is not a traditional "great artist" doc.
Shot in an astonishingly vivid 6K 3D — which captures art with dazzling clarity — Anselm offers both a thrilling portrait of the artist at work and, with the aid of terrific archival footage, lets us see what infuses his work with such intensity.
The movie begins with a long, gorgeous sequence at La Ribaute, Kiefer's studio/art installation in the southern French town of Barjac. Wenders' camera moves through, around and above mysterious white plaster statues of what appear to be brides — the heads are made of metal or vegetation — that are set out among trees and strangely formed buildings. Just as you fear that Wenders may be indulging his sweet tooth for beautiful imagery, the film begins exploring what gives Kiefer's art its wallop.
Kiefer was born into a country buried beneath post-World War II rubble, fostering a lifelong awareness of destruction. This helps explain why his paintings so often include actual burnt vegetation, shards of metal, hunks of earth, fragments of clothing.
In fascinating scenes, Wenders shows how the cocky, black-clad, elegantly grizzled 78-year-old artist creates his trademark effects — be it charring straw with flame throwers like the hero in a Tarantino movie or fastidiously pouring molten metal onto canvases with an elaborate contraption operated by an assistant.
Yet if Kiefer was shaped by ruin, even more decisive was his country's wilful amnesia. He grew up grasping that Germany and its artists weren't confronting the national past that led to World War II and the mass murder of the Holocaust.
Starting in the 1960s, Kiefer set about rectifying that failure, from his early photos in which he sardonically shot himself doing the Nazi salute in various European countries, to paintings that deconstruct mythic German heroes, to his staggeringly strong visions of what feel like the interior rooms of the death camps.
At once abstract and concrete, his work is all about remembering — and re-examining — a German tradition filled with pro-Nazi geniuses like Martin Heidegger and heroic witnesses like Paul Celan, whose Holocaust poem "Death Fugue" Kiefer takes as a touchstone.
This didn't exactly endear him to other Germans, who didn't like the way he was dredging up the past.
Now, Wenders has made many acclaimed fiction features — most famously Paris, Texas and Wings of Desire — yet he's also been a generous celebrant of those he admires. He's made documentaries about everyone from the aging Cuban musicians of the Buena Vista Social Club to choreographer Pina Bausch and Pope Francis. His appreciation of Kiefer feels especially personal. Wenders knows that Kiefer's work has tackled head-on subjects that he himself has ignored or only approached at very oblique angles.
Focusing on the artist, not the man, the film makes us feel Kiefer's art in all its beauty, bleakness and moral weight. Wenders doesn't get into stuff like Kiefer's marriages or discuss how, thanks to the craziness of the art market, his net worth is estimated at more than $100 million dollars and he can afford to buy tracts of land to build and display his art. He does occasionally dramatize moments from Kiefer's life and these re-creations are the film's one flaw. Not a calamitous one, but hokey and unnecessary.
What has always made Kiefer's art necessary is his sure instinct for what's essential. In what he calls his "protest against forgetting" of Germany's dark history, he got in early on the themes that people continue to explore in films like the upcoming The Zone of Interest, about a family who live happily outside the barbed wire fences of Auschwitz. If you know Kiefer's work, Wenders will show you his artistry in a way you've never before seen it, and if you don't know it, Anselm will make it clear why you should.
veryGood! (66119)
Related
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Can pilots carry guns on commercial flights? Incident on Delta plane raises questions
- George Santos survives House vote to expel him from Congress after latest charges
- Confusion, frustration and hope at Gaza’s border with Egypt as first foreign passport-holders depart
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- U.S. job openings rise slightly to 9.6 million, sign of continued strength in the job market
- Connecticut judge orders new mayoral primary after surveillance videos show possible ballot stuffing
- Ottawa Senators GM Pierre Dorion is out after team is docked first-round pick
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Detroit-area man sentenced to 45-70 years in prison for 3 killings
Ranking
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- New Jersey governor spent $12K on stadium events, including a Taylor Swift concert
- Connecticut judge orders new mayoral primary after surveillance videos show possible ballot stuffing
- ‘A curse to be a parent in Gaza': More than 3,600 Palestinian children killed in just 3 weeks of war
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Daniel Radcliffe’s Stunt Double Recalls Harry Potter Accident That Left Him Paralyzed
- LSU and Tulane are getting $22 million to lead group effort to save the Mississippi River Delta
- Toyota recalls nearly 1.9M RAV4s to fix batteries that can move during hard turns and cause a fire
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Corey Seager earns second World Series MVP, joining Sandy Koufax, Bob Gibson and Reggie Jackson
Crowds gather near state funeral home as China’s former Premier Li Keqiang is being put to rest
Army adds additional charges of sexual assault against military doctor in ongoing investigation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Rare all-female NASA spacewalk: Watch livestream from International Space Station
Bankrupt and loving it: Welcome to the lucrative world of undead brands
College Football Playoff rankings winners, losers: Do not freak out. It's the first week.