Acquisition
1994

Reinhard Mucha
Weimar, 1993
Wood, glass, aluminum, steel, felt, and lead oxide
46 x 99 x 11 3/4 in. (116.8 x 251.5 x 29.9 cm)
The Artist
currently on display at the
Art Institute of Chicago
The Acquisition
In Weimar, Reinhard Mucha created a cool, detached commentary on twentieth-century German history by encapsulating and neutralizing emotionally charged materials within a vitrine. The sculpture includes a door encased behind glass panes, upon which lines are painted with an orange pigment often used on rail cars. The paint calls attention to the glass, which invites observation but creates a separation between object and viewer. The artist first exhibited Weimar with other vitrines named after German towns with one or more intersecting railways. A recurring idea in his work, trains signify not only the industrialization of Germany but also the Holocaust. Here, Mucha attempted to contain and intellectualize his homeland’s conflicting, emotional legacy of genocide, geographical division, and cultural achievement.