November 29, 2009

Manfred Gnädinger, Museo del Aleman / Museum of the German

this picture (July 2006) courtesy 
of the author of the website Man de Camelle

Early years

Manfred Gnädinger (1936-2002) was born in a well to do family in the the Böhringer district of the municipality of Radolfzell am Bodensee in southern Germany. He had six brothers and sisters. His mother died when he was 14 years old.

In the 1950s Manfred studied social work and he was employed at an educational institute. But he also liked travelling, like in 1959 he traveled through Italy from March to September. At that time he was in his early twenties and already had artistic ambitions, dreaming about setting up his own museum.

In the early 1960s Manfred made another trip, travelling in France and Spain, a voyage that in 1961 ended in Camelle, in the Coruña area in Spain, at that time a rather isolated community facing the Atlantic.

In Camelle he was given shelter in the house of a Spanish lady who was German from origin and still could speak German. Apparently Gnädinger felt at home in Camelle. It has been said that he and his landlady were like mother and son.  He also started to develop artistic activities and in some rooms of the house where he stayed, he organized exhibitions of his work

However, when his landlady died, Gnädinger had to leave the house. A neighbor sold him for a small price a piece of land located near the ocean and helped him build a cabin on this spot.

In that cabin with an area of about 13 m², without running water and electricity, Gnädinger began to live in his own way, feeding himself with food he procured from the sea and with vegetables he cultivated in his own garden, walking barefoot and dressed in just a loincloth, exercising a lot by swimming far into the ocean and jogging daily.

picture from the website turismo en Galicia

Creating a museum and an art environment

In and around his cabin Gnädinger created his own artistic environment. He made sculptures from stones and rocks that were around and from all kind of washed up material that could be found on the beach. 

The cabin became a museum, adorned with his paintings and drawings and also his notebooks and artbooks, all neatly arranged. It could be visited by tourists, who had to pay a small fee to look around and had to make some drawing in one of Gnädinger’s notebooks.
  
this picture and the next one 
courtesy of the website Man de Camelle

Gnädinger became known as the Aleman of Camelle (the German of Camelle) and generally was spoken of as Man. Although he was rather eccentric, apart from a single incident the villagers in general seem to have accepted his way of life and looked at him as one who belonged to the community.

The incident in question had to do with the planned construction of a 380 meter long dam to the sea, meant to improve the safety of the ships of the local fishermen. The dam would intersect the space next to the cabin and initially Gnädinger opposed this plan, which caused a -quickly resolved-  conflict with the fishermen. When in 1985 the dam was built, it became an  extension of the art environment, lively decorated by Gnädinger with his specific circular paintings.


Pollution of the coast

In 2002 there were dramatic developments.

Sailing along the Galician coast, the oil tanker Prestige run into problems, it broke into two and lost tons of oil. The sea and the beaches were heavily polluted and Man’s plot, creations and cabin were ruined, covered with a thick layer of black raw oil.

Emotionally shocked, Man locked himself up in his cabin with a sign on the door that everybody should keep out. After a number of days people became worried, entered the cabin and found Man dead.

Photo

His death aroused much publicity in the Spanish newspapers. He was described as the first human victim of oil pollution.

Gnädinger was buried at the local cemetery. Ten years later his mortal remains were cremated. The urn with his ashes for years stayed at the cemetery, but on January 27, 2018 this urn, in accordance with Gnädinger's last will, was relocated to a place near his site. Family members attended the ceremony.

Future of the site

After Man had passed away the government has not been very active in taking measures to preserve the site for the future, although it has been reported that Gnädinger had legated money to the state to keep the site intact.

At the time the first version of this post was published (2009) the cabin and the sculptures were still extant. A fence had been erected with a signpost asking people to respect the site. A foundation had been formed by friends of the museum to promote measures to protect the site.

In July 2009 the Galician parliament decided to start a project to study all aspects of such a preservation and an interview with Juan Creus who would do the research, was published.

Meanwhile the house gradually fell into decay as can be seen on below picture (December 2010) from the website Man de Camelle:

the caption says: this is what Man's house looks like on 
     december 28, 2010, the day of the Holy Innocents, 
the day of his death, back in 2002, 8 years ago
  
One year later, at the end of 2011, it was announced that on December 27 and 28 there would be a demonstration in Camelle to protest against the inactivity of authorities to take measures to protect the site.

For many years no action was taken by the authorities. The site continued deteriorating.

A permanent exposition of Man's legacy
In June 2015 however in a building on the Rua Muelle 9 in Camelle a permanent exposition of Man's legacy was opened, which included Man's notebooks and other personal items, photographs and other documentary material, thus giving visitors an idea of Man's life and works.

In 2017 the site was restored

In March 2017 the local authorities approved the restoration of Man's house, a project prepared by the architects Juan Creus and Covadonga Carrasco. A first action included a selective cleaning of the interior of the house, as well as the rocky terrain around the house. Also a drainage from the outside would be made to allow the rapid evacuation of rainwater. 

It was also announced that the paintings made by Man would be restored so that they can be preserved for later periods.

The restoration of the cabin took place in December 2017.

Situation late 2021




















The pictures above and the one below were made in October 2021 by Tiramisu Bootfighter, who traveled through Spain in the context of his project La Valise, Galerie Ambulante. The one left above shows what's left of Manfred's cabin and the one below shows a sculpture made of stacked stones that has stood the test of time 

The picture above right shows a sculpture that is located in the local museum dedicated to Gnädinger, depicting him in front of the valise that accompanies Bootfighter on his travels.



Documentation
* Man, home sen paz (Man, home without peace), a movie (2010, 78") by Simón Vázquez and David Formoso. This film had its premiere on December 28, 2010, in Camelle, 8 years after the 2002 disaster
* The site got a scholarly review in: Jo Farb Hernandez, Singular Spaces. From the Eccentric to the Extraordinary in Spanish Art Environments, Seattle (Raw Vision, SPACES, San José State University), 2013. A short version of this review on SPACES website (added November 2013)
* Article by Yaysis Ojeda Becerra, “Los círculos di Man" (The circles of Man) on website Prontuario de Arte. 
This article discusses Gnädinger's world of thinking when making his artworks, including the deeper meaning of the circles in his decorative work.
* Article by Andrea Serodio Domínguez, "Man de Camelle (Camariñas, A Coruña). Presentando el museo del artista", in internet magazine Bric-á-Brac, nr 2 (2019), p. 95-110. This article in particular discusses Gnadinger's life from the perspective of his desire to create and manage a museum.

Video
* Fragment (2011) about the site on the North Spain trip video by Serflac (YouTube, starts at  04.23, cannot be embedded here)

first published November 2009, last revised  September 2023

Man (Manfred Gnädinger) 
Museo del Aleman 
Camelle, Galicia, Spain 
what's left of the site can be seen from the street
Google Streetview, the site, with over 1800 photos
Google Streetview, the museum, with almost 1800 photos

4 comments:

  1. Henk... what a truly incredible story ! and tragic ending... how terrible that fate should deal such a blow to such a person.
    Thank you as always for bringing us such visions of noble human qualities, an artist aspiring to a better way of life, a higher level than crass consumerism. Yes, a very touching story...

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  2. Hello dear Henk, it had been a long, very busy but always eager to visit and discover a new extraordinary story. It seems like the shadow of the industrial development did pursuit Manfred for all his life. It is terribly ironic that it was the consequence of an accident derivated from human activity what finally put an ended on his pilgrimage. Certainly the disappointment of realize that it would be impossible to isolate himself from such that pollution and rumble of human kind should have been an unbearable beat to his soul. Regards and congratulations for such a great story again.

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  3. Hello Owen and Alberto,
    Thanks for your comments. It can be seen as very tragic that someone who wants to abstain as much as possible from the consumptive and climate disturbing features of western society, sees his life and work destroyed by the fuel that society depends upon. I took me some time to compose this post, because of the many commentaries and the mingling of fact and fiction. All the best, Henk

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  4. One's heart can't help but feel for man. so sad after all those years living his desired life and dream.
    Has camelle now recovered from this oil spill to it's fomer beauty? or does it's legacy linger?
    Richard

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