MG #210: Reichstag – Democracy in Pause
Capsule of Time: Democracy in Pause
April 29th, 2020. Berlin held its breath. The city that never sleeps was sleeping—empty streets, silent squares, the Spree flowing past the Reichstag as it had for centuries, indifferent to human concerns. I hadn't been on the water in weeks. Lockdown regulations kept my Camera Obscura boat docked, my photographic paper sealed in darkness, my hands still.
But that morning, something shifted. Not in the regulations—those remained. Something in me. A restlessness. An urge on moving that wouldn't quiet. If the world had paused, perhaps this was the moment to witness the pause itself, to capture Berlin breathing differently.
"So the darkness shall be the light, and the stillness the dancing."
— T.S. Eliot, East Coker (Four Quartets)
I opened the aperture. Eight seconds. Not seven, not nine. Eight seconds is my portal to presence, my window into time's actual movement. During those eight seconds: the earth continued its rotation—approximately 3.7 kilometers at Berlin's latitude. Light from the Sun, having traveled 8 minutes and 19 seconds to reach us, reflected from the Reichstag's stone and glass onto my paper. The Spree's current shifted my boat perhaps 30 centimeters downstream. My heart beat eleven times. I breathed once, fully.
Looking back now, as this image becomes the official Bundestag Christmas Card 2025, as it enters the permanent collection of the German Art Collection of the Bundestag, I'm struck by time's strange loops. An artwork made during democracy's fragility, chosen by democracy to represent itself.
In 2020, Motiongraph #210 was acquired for the permanent German Art Collection of the Bundestag. In 2025, it was selected by Julia Klöckner for the official German Bundestag Christmas Card.