The New Stuttgart
Special Exhibition: The City's Evolution
"The New Stuttgart" is the fourth and final installment in the series "Stuttgart's History in 100 Objects," which unfolds the city's complete narrative through four special exhibitions—a sweeping journey from prehistoric times to today. Drawing on 25 carefully selected objects and archival photographs, the exhibition traces Stuttgart's defining moments and turning points between 1918 and 2010, from the November Revolution through the Stuttgart 21 protests.
The title "The New Stuttgart" invokes a self-conception that defined the city especially in the 1920s—a beacon of democratic, architectural, and educational reform. Yet the exhibition unflinchingly examines ruptures and contradictions: the Nazi era, colonial entanglements, and the contemporary realities of migration, dissent, and diversity.
At the heart of the exhibition are 25 objects drawn predominantly from the StadtPalais collection—a proven approach continued from the preceding section, "City of Kings." Each object is paired with a historical photograph that AI-enhanced technology spatializes and projects onto the floor below. The result: immersive image environments that evoke moments of shared experience, political turning points, technological breakthroughs, and personal stories.
These visual spaces are animated by USOMO, a pioneering 3D audio system that tracks visitors' positions and triggers corresponding sounds, voices, and narratives in real time. The result is an interactive three-dimensional soundscape. Original recordings, dramatized conversations, and ambient acoustics breathe life into Stuttgart's design heritage at the 1927 Werkbund exhibition, the first Everest ascent captured on Kodak film, the historic telephone booth in City Hall, and the heart of the Stuttgart 21 resistance. In "The New Stuttgart," history comes alive with every step you take.
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