09. Feb 2018
08. Apr 2018

Klaus Staeck

Sand for the Gears

At the time they were made, Klaus Staeck’s (*1938) posters were some of the most powerful works to have enlivened the public space. The images he devised helped shape West Germany’s visual memory from the late 1960s until the late 1980s. Staeck always saw himself as a political provocateur, and his designs were intended as a comment on socially charged themes and crises. He thus deliberately triggered scandals whose effects were far-reaching. The exhibition of Staeck’s entire oeuvre not only puts on display around 180 of his posters but also presents his early prints. The show is rounded out with various multiples in which Staeck gives three-dimensional form to his political intentions.

Klaus Staeck, Vorsicht Kunst!, 1982

Klaus Staeck
Vorsicht Kunst!, 1982

Klaus Staeck, Strapse, 1967 (links) / Deutsche Arbeiter, 1972 (rechts)

Klaus Staeck
Strapse, 1967 (links) / Deutsche Arbeiter, 1972 (rechts)

Klaus Staeck, Sand fürs Getriebe, 1986

Klaus Staeck
Sand fürs Getriebe, 1986

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