Sonnenphysikalisches Kabinett

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Sonnenphysikalisches Kabinett (Solar Physics Cabinet), 2021 Like the hand of a giant sundial, Berlin’s “Sky Cannon” rests on the roof of the Archenhold Observatory. It is a panopticon of models and theories that speaks of the millennia-old question of our posit ion in the world. The history of this place begins in 1896, when the astronomer Friedrich Simon Archenhold set up his innovative giant telescope on this site, on the occasion of the Great Industrial Exposition of Berlin, in Treptower Park. In the 1960s, an open-air site with telescopes and a solar physics cabinet was built next to the observatory, which at that time belonged to the GDR. A few years later, a collection of busts of important astronomers and physicists was added to the site to create the astronomy garden. After the fall of the Wall, almost all of the bronze sculptures were dismantled, but the empty pedestals of the busts remain in the open-air grounds of the Archenhold Observatory to this day. The video work embarks on a search for traces. It creates an associative portrait of this small-scale place, where Berlin’s local history connects with the largest of all dimensions, the universe. Protagonists and objects accompany us as we navigate the otherwise hidden rooms of the observatory. The titular Solar Physics Cabinet sets the route: Right at the beginning, we look into the sun. The Jensch coelostat casts its image along plane mirrors into the small auditorium, as a white light projection and as a color spectrum visible to the human eye. We enter the pedestals of the Great Refractor, whose masonry is the last architectural artifact of the “impeded World Fair,” search for the missing astronomers outside, and meet Copernicus in the basement. Produced in cooperation with the Stiftung Planetarium Berlin and the Förderverein der Archenhold-Sternwarte und des Zeiss-Großplanetariums Berlin e.V. Funded by the Senate Department for Culture, Berlin.

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