Few living artists confront the relationship between history, memory and creation with the gravity of Anselm Kiefer. His exhibition at the Centro de Arte Hortensia Herrero in Valencia reveals an artist who transforms the physical remnants of destruction into works of extraordinary emotional and intellectual depth, inviting viewers to slow down and engage with the enduring weight of the past. Through Kiefer’s monumental vision, art emerges not as an escape from history, but as one of its most profound forms of reckoning
Text by Angie Afifi
While conversations around contemporary art often return to spectacle, speed, or overt political positioning, what lingers most powerfully after time spent at the Centro de Arte Hortensia Herrero in Valencia is the deep, almost gravitational pull of Anselm Kiefer’s work. His first major solo exhibition in the city, open until October 2026, fills the historic Valeriola Palace with a quiet authority that feels increasingly rare today. Here, history does not shout. It presses slowly through dense layers of lead, ash, straw, paint, and earth, demanding a slower, more embodied kind of attention.
Born in 1945 in the final months of the war, Kiefer has long carried the unresolved weight of Germany’s past. In Valencia, entire rooms are dominated by monumental landscapes and architectural ruins. The vast surfaces do not merely depict, they accumulate material: straw rises like fragile remnants of life, lead folds heavily like closed books of forgotten knowledge, and ash appears to still settle from some distant fire. One particularly striking work, evoking Danaë, stretches more than thirteen metres wide. Its golden tones blend with scorched darkness, creating an atmosphere that feels simultaneously mythic and painfully intimate. These are scarred, textured images, heavy with material memory. The works demand time, the kind of sustained, concentrated presence that contemporary life rarely permits.
Beneath the physical weight lies a profound emotional density. Kiefer offers no easy consolation or moral clarity. His art creates spaces of melancholy, uneasy beauty, and quiet endurance. There is exhaustion, yet also persistence: the stubborn act of creation in the aftermath of inherited catastrophe. His oft quoted statement that his biography is the biography of Germany resonates here not as a national declaration, but as a deeply human condition: how any culture must live with its ghosts, and how the artist chooses whether to transform them or leave them buried.
The exhibition stirs an unexpected parallel. Standing before one of Kiefer’s immense, multi-layered landscapes, where earth and sky seem locked in silent, unending struggle, Andrei Tarkovsky’s Andrei Rublev comes to mind with striking clarity. Tarkovsky’s 1966 film follows the medieval Russian icon painter through a world torn apart by Tartar invasions, political violence, famine, and human cruelty. Like Kiefer, Rublev witnesses horrors that render the very act of creation almost impossible, even obscene. The monk takes a vow of silence, withdrawing from painting because beauty feels unbearable amid such suffering.
The resonance runs deep. Both Kiefer and Tarkovsky’s Rublev position the artist within historical catastrophe, not as a hero, but as witness and survivor. Where Rublev eventually returns to his craft after profound doubt, producing works of transcendent beauty in the film’s final colour sequence, Kiefer repeatedly returns to Germany’s scorched symbols and ruined landscapes, transforming lead, ash, and earth into forms that still carry meaning. One sculpts through cinematic time and natural elements, the other through material density and physical gravity. Yet both reveal that genuine creation often emerges not in spite of suffering, but through a difficult, almost alchemical engagement with it. In this Valencia exhibition, the Russian connection, this shared meditation on the artist’s fragile responsibility in a broken world, feels particularly alive. It underscores that the question of whether art can still matter after horror is not new, but remains urgently human.
This perspective on the artist in a catastrophic world opens broader reflections. Kiefer is not alone in this territory, although few inhabit it with such material solemnity. A similar impulse runs through William Kentridge’s engagement with South Africa’s apartheid legacy. His charcoal animations are built on constant erasure and redrawing, much like Kiefer’s layering and burying. Both artists treat memory as something unstable yet persistent: marks that remain even when one tries to wipe them away.
The thread continues toward Ai Weiwei, whose installations with porcelain, wood, and objects of surveillance convey a comparable sense of cultural memory under crushing pressure. While Kiefer remains largely in the realm of myth and material poetry, Ai moves into more direct confrontation. Still, both understand the artist as one who must speak when official history demands silence.
Further along this line lies a related intensity in the ash paintings and monumental sculptures of Zhang Huan, which engage with China’s Cultural Revolution and Buddhist traditions. Like Kiefer, he transforms destruction, literally using ash from incense and temples, into works that feel both heavy with loss and quietly redemptive. These artists do not form a strict school or movement. Rather, they share an ethical stance: the willingness to remain with difficulty, to carry the weight of what has been lost, suppressed, or incompletely mourned. In an era that often favours irony, detachment, or instant legibility, their work insists on slowness, complexity, and emotional honesty.
Leaving the Centro de Arte Hortensia Herrero, one carries the sensation of lead and earth. Kiefer’s exhibition offers no simple answers or comforting redemption. What it offers is presence, a stubborn, material affirmation that even after catastrophe, something can still be built, remembered, and transformed. In that quiet affirmation lies a form of hope that feels more honest, and ultimately more moving, than many louder declarations in contemporary art today.
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