First publication of pictures from the archives of the Stasi, the East German secret police.
Almost
300,000 people worked for the East German secret police, per capita far
more than were employed by agencies such as the CIA or the KGB. Not
quite fifty years after the Berlin Wall was built, Simon Menner
(*1978 in Emmendingen) discovered spectacular photographs in the Stasi
archives that document the agency’s surveillance work. Formerly secret,
highly official photographs show officers and employees putting on
professional uniforms, gluing on fake beards, or signaling to each other
with their hands. Today, the sight of them is almost ridiculous,
although the laughter sticks in the viewer’s throat. This publication
can be regarded as a visual processing of German history and an
examination of current surveillance issues, yet it is extremely amusing
at the same time. The fact that the doors of the opposite side—the
British or German intelligence services, for example—remained closed to
the artist lends the theme an explosive force as well as a tinge of
absurdity.
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