
Berlin in the 90s: The city found itself in flux after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, caught between past and future. A spirit of optimism battled with fears of loss and defined the mood of this era. Extraordinary new opportunities led to a flourishing of temporary initiatives. Berlin became the city of subcultures, even as controversies raged over the development of the new German capital and its center. The potential futures and utopias of the 1990s left a lasting mark on Berlin’s image and continue to define the city to this day.
A group of photographers from former East Germany founded the photo agency OSTKREUZ in East Berlin during this tumultuous era, in 1990. Today, they are recognized internationally as one of Germany’s most important photo agencies. C/O Berlin shows works by nine OSTKREUZ members, including co-founders Sibylle Bergemann, Harald Hauswald, Ute Mahler, and Werner Mahler, as well as Annette Hauschild, Thomas Meyer, Jordis Antonia Schlösser, Anne Schönharting, and Maurice Weiss. These photographers turned their sharp gaze to societal transformations and the challenges of reunification in a city formerly divided by the Berlin Wall.