Summary
Our view of children and the way they are represented in art, be it in the early twentieth century or in the immediate present, invariably depict social reality as well. This is where the CFA exhibition in Berlin and now the accompanying catalogue take up the story, for example, with Paula Modersohn-Becker's portraits of children, which not only play a prominent role in this artist's brief oeuvre (from 1898 to 1907), but are also considered a turning point in the genre. Modersohn-Becker, native of Worpsweder, abandoned the myth of the carefree childhood: disregarding proper proportions, and moreover, with an unprecedented bold use of colour and form, she painted woefully introverted children in all their distress and neglect. The title of the ehibition, based on the epochal youth film "Kids" by Larry Clark, whose portfolio is spread out before us, states that it is no longer about a celebration of childhood innocence and joyous playfulness. Exhibition: Contemporary Fine Art Gallery, Berlin, Germany (2012).