Four-time Champions League winner, four-time German champion — that’s almost as good as it gets. But former national team player Josephine Henning has left the pitch in favor of art.
As artist in residence at Dortmund’s German Football Museum, she is now designing participatory art and creative workshops for the .
The museum is bringing art and football together in a kind of friendly match: Titled “In Motion — Art & Football,” the immersive show features paintings of 20th century European art, as well as little-known or rarely seen images focusing on football. The includes 41 projectors, 45 loudspeakers, 110 spotlights and huge projection surfaces covering 1,000 square meters.
Dali, Polke, Lagerfeld and soccer
Fashion star , who died in 2019, is represented in the show with a caricature of soccer functionary Uli Hoeness, who was convicted of tax evasion. It shows him as a pot-bellied footballer with leather trousers and shackles.
Even though surrealist artist is not typically associated with the sport, he too is featured in the exhibition, as he once painted his writer friend Jaume Miravitlles as a muscular footballer.
And in a case of “shooting instead of shooting,” a piece by elusive artist , depicts a “football terrorist” with a Kalashnikov dangling from his shoulder executing a bicycle kick.
All these paintings are projected in large format, and every country participating in the UEFA EURO 2024 is represented by at least one artist.
But why does the hype of 22 players and a ball fascinate art of all things? “Football was an expression of modernity in the 20th century. Artists were enthusiastic about the way soccer captured people’s lives. Soccer in the 20th century is a new achievement. Today it is part of life. But back then it was an expression of something new,” explains museum director Manuel Neukirchner.
Parallel development of art and soccer
The exhibition posits that art and soccer are two phenomena that have more in common than we think. Athleticism on the pitch, movement, speed, drama — artists discover a wide range of themes in football. The avant-garde art movement of Futurism at the beginning of the 20th century, as in the works of painter and sculptor Umberto Boccioni, took a liking to the mass choreography of bodies in space.
The beautiful game promises enthusiasts a roller coaster of emotions, an adrenaline rush for 90 minutes — or with extra time when necessary. Thus this exhibition shows the light and dark sides of football.
However, as in reality, women are heavily underrepresented at this exhibition. In art, too, it tends to be a man’s game. The German Football Museum therefore has plans to redesign the permanent exhibition with women’s soccer taking center stage. Josephine Henning is optimistic about the future and would like to see more big dreams for women’s soccer and the resulting long-term prospects.
Incidentally, art of a somewhat different kind can be found in the German Football Museum’s treasure trove. The original trophies won by the German team in recent decades — three European Championship trophies and four World Cups — can also be viewed here. This is as close as you can get to the coveted awards.
The exhibition at the German Football Museum in Dortmund runs until January 25, 2025.
This article was originally written in German.
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