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‘When will they ever learn?’: Anselm Kiefer reveals Amsterdam installation with anti-war message at its heart

‘Sag mir wo die Blumen sind’, the centrepiece of a new two-part exhibition, is titled after a 1950s anti-war song by the folk singer Pete Seeger

Senay Boztas
7 March 2025
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A crowd at the unveiling of Anselm Kiefer’s Sag mir wo die Blumen sind, 2024. Courtesy of the artist and White Cube, on view at Anselm Kiefer - Sag mir wo die Blumen sind Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam & Van Gogh Museum, 2025. Photo: Peter Tijhuis

A crowd at the unveiling of Anselm Kiefer’s Sag mir wo die Blumen sind, 2024. Courtesy of the artist and White Cube, on view at Anselm Kiefer - Sag mir wo die Blumen sind Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam & Van Gogh Museum, 2025. Photo: Peter Tijhuis


The military uniforms hang from the walls—stiff, battered, empty but overflowing with dead rose petals. A 24m-long new mural by the post-war German artist Anselm Kiefer, crowning the staircase of Amsterdam’s Stedelijk Museum, illustrates the words of a 1950s anti-war song: Sag mir wo die Blumen sind, or Where have all the flowers gone?

The installation is part of a new two-part exhibition by Kiefer, who turns 80 today. The show first examines the influence of Vincent van Gogh in a section at the Van Gogh Museum. The Stedelijk Museum next door then tracks themes the artist has been concerned with throughout his career: the circle of life, death and the legacy of war.

Kiefer rose to notoriety in 1969 with photographs of himself in his father’s military uniform mimicking the verboten Nazi salute and is now known for gigantic, semi-abstract canvasses, often influenced by philosophy and literature and using materials from lead and straw to dried flowers.

The new commission, and title of the show, were inspired by the anti-war song by folk singer Pete Seeger, popularised in Germany by the popular singer, Marlene Dietrich. “This wonderful song I have always in my ear,” said Kiefer. “Quite a kitschy song, but there is one sentence that says: [when will they] ever learn? Because we cannot understand that today things happen that happened in 1933.”

The artist said although his work is not directly polemical, he is influenced by the global climate. “When I work, I never illustrate political events,” said Kiefer at a press opening. “But I’m very well informed. I look at TV, the parliament discussions, I look at CNN: I have a lot of information and this comes out again. It’s not that I make a programme… about the Ukraine war. No, it’s all in me, and it comes out in a more substantial way.”

The Van Gogh connection

As a young student, Kiefer was influenced by Van Gogh and won a travel scholarship to travel in his footsteps across the Netherlands, Belgium and France, even sleeping in a haystack. In the Van Gogh Museum, Kiefer’s version of The Starry Night and works based on sunflowers—often decaying—are shown alongside paintings by the Dutch artist that inspired him.

Anselm Kiefer, The Starry Night (2019)

© Anselm Kiefer. Photo: Georges Poncet

The Van Gogh Museum’s director Emilie Gordenker had long wanted to show the two artists’ work together. “Both Kiefer and Van Gogh think about issues such as composition, the cycle of life as expressed in The Sunflowers, the colour of yellow, here transmuted to gold,” she said. “In fact, when Mr Kiefer was 16, he did a copy of a [Van Gogh] self-portrait that is in our collection.”

  • Anselm Kiefer: Where Have All the Flowers Gone,
    Van Gogh Museum and the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, until 9 June

InstallationAnselm KieferStedelijk Museum AmsterdamVan Gogh MuseumVincent van GoghExhibitions
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