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Today was actually not that brilliant, spitting rain, nevertheless, I decided to go to Potsdam to see Einstein's Tower. It s often cited as one of the few landmarks of expressionist architecture and is an astrophysical observatory in the Albert Einstein Science Park in Potsdam, designed by architect Erich Mendelsohn It was built for astronomer Erwin Finlay Freundlich to support experiments and observations to validate Albert Einstein 's relativity theory.

What I hadn't realised before I set off was how far I had to walk. At the train station where there is no tourist bureau of course, with the help of some young kids and a passing man, possibly a railway employee, I was faced in the right direction and told, ‘must walk, keep going to left. In fact there was that arterial road desolation in front of the station, with the town some distance away and the Wild Park woods far away in the opposite direction. Walking for an hour up hill, I thought, ‘surely it will be marked'. Wrong. Finally, stopping a lone cyclist, I asked, ‘Einstein's Tower bitte?' He said I had to go back then turn right then left. A completely unmarked track had me doubtful but I saw a man and a dog coming towards me and asked, ‘Einstein's Tower bitte?' Evidently it was the right direction and I had to just keep going. All I could see was trees. No tower. Until I saw a gate, locked, and wire fencing stretching into the distance. Those people I asked told me what I had asked for, directions to the tower. I hadn't asked is it open to visit, to see? Following the wire fencing for quite awhile I still couldn't see anything but trees. So it was in there somewhere. The guidebooks don't even mention it so I can't grumble that they didn't say that it was closed.

Looking it up on the Internet later, one can see its' distinctive penile extension form that must have been one of Foster's inspirations for his ‘Gherkin' in London. Its' a guy thing, but amazing. Wish I could have seen it.

Ditto with the Bildergalerie at Sans Souci, which is the oldest surviving royal gallery in Germany. A large number of paintings were taken by Russia in 1946, some have been returned, but perhaps not enough, as the guidebooks don't mention it. I won't know because again, it wasn't open. Sans Souci was not open on the Holiday, its statuary all boxed up and hidden from view. I had walked back through the woods, then past empty derelict buildings along the canal into the town centre. Even if one had thought ahead and brought a picnic lunch, the windy, spitting rain wasn't conducive to any such dallying. It was an enormous amount of walking. In the town central area, the Dutch Husimand area with its' fine-looking long street of Dutch style houses was built to attract Dutch settlers, who didn't come because Holland at that time was very wealthy and Potsdam poor. Now it is a a historical novelty, rather twee. I had come at the wrong time. I trudged back to the railway station along its bleak approach.

My tip is: Don't bother to go to Potsdam. (Or if you do, don't go on a holiday, and not on weekends).


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Two quotes:

Nietzsche- ‘Collective celebration has been replaced by the hell of individual existence'.

Nora Ephron- ‘Never marry a man you wouldn't want to be divorced from'.

A couple of weeks ago I'd gone to the exhibition opening of photographs of the Vanuata Islands and met the designer who turned out to be a New Zealander. Today, she came over to the Milchhof for a visit with her thirteen-month son. Typically she'd been living in London and had come to Berlin for a symposium and liked the friendly, laid back openness of this easy to get around smaller city. When an offer of a job here was made she took it, but not speaking any German when she came, she found it difficult, however she then met the German photographer and has now settled in. Nevertheless she still finds the long darkness of the winters oppressive, and tries to visit New Zealand at that time if she can. Since I have lived in New Zealand and know the exhilaration of its' clear air, and having just gone through a Berlin winter I can sympathise.

As well as talking about New Zealand, we both had a rave about Berlin's cheapness and easy living. Berlin has come alive. It is a totally changed, open place now. Instead of emptiness and darkness, the streets are filled with people day and night, eating, reading, talking, drinking, all outside as much as possible. Still, it is the longed-for contrast that makes it so delightful, so precious that Berliners take advantage of it immediately and rush outdoors. To me, Berlin looks a completely different city from what it was when I arrived in December.


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