Germania (1995): Love, Promise and Reckoning in 1990s Germany

“Germania” (1995) is both a personal and social painting by Heiner Buhr about love, promise, consumerism and the hopes of reunited Germany in the 1990s.

“Germania” (1995) grew out of a very personal experience and, for me, became a painting of its time as well. It tells of love, freedom, consumerism, hope, and the contradictory dreams of reunited Germany.


The Painting

“Germania” (1995) is, for me, both a love painting and a painting of its era. It began with my relationship with a stewardess working for the airline Germania, with whom I associated freedom, travel, and great closeness. Through the almost free stand-by flights, we came to many European cities, and for a while everything seemed open: love, future, movement, adventure.

Painting Germania by Heiner Buhr from 1995 with woman, child, text and numbers as an allegory of love and Germany in the 1990s
Germania, 1995 — Heiner Buhr

East Berlin in the 1990s

But even during that relationship, I was already painting the inner contradiction. On the left side of the painting are words such as “sun, sex, beauty, fun, fast food, chocolate, victory” — promises of a time in which everything seemed attainable, everything possible, and everything available immediately. On the right side appears the other reality: numbers, “deduction”, “debit”, a sober reckoning in which almost nothing remains.

This is why the painting is not only private. The child in her arms is double-layered in meaning. It stands both for a possible future child of our own and for the young, inexperienced reunited Germany of the 1990s. That Germany was full of hope, promises and dreams, but at the same time already burdened with a weight that was almost too heavy to carry.

For many young East Germans, that period was about finally being able to build something of their own and achieve something. Everyone was looking for a path: through quick success, quick money, or through the realization of a dream. My path was art. Money never played the decisive role for me. I wanted to make art — with or without money. That has not changed to this day.

The title “Germania” therefore refers to more than just an airline. It also means Germany itself, in the middle of the 1990s: between departure and projection, between consumerism and overload, between hope and reckoning.


🧾 Work

Oil on canvas, 200 × 150 cm
Berlin
January 1995

This painting is available upon request.

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