The collective explores issues having to do with capitalism and media in the context of post-industrial society, and their work has been described as displaying "parodistic elegance between gravity and levity, comedy and catastrophe". The work of the collective ranges from graffiti in Dresden Neustadt in the early 1990s to the sculpture, videos, painting, and installations of today. The strategies of subversion Bewegung Nurr employed often referenced the work of other artist groups of the 80's and 90's, such as General Idea and Die Tödliche Doris.
In 2010 and 2011, Bewegung Nurr erected a temporary memorial to the Sinto German boxing champion Johann Wilhelm Trollmann. Trollmann won the German light-heavyweight title in 1933, but was stripped of his victory by the Nazis, sterilized, arrested by the Gestapo, and finally murdered in Neuengamme concentration camp. The memorial erected by Bewegung Nurr, titled "9841", was first displayed on June 9, 2010 in Viktoriapark, Berlin—the anniversary of the day in 1933 when Trollmann won his light-heavyweight boxing title. The memorial was displayed again in Hannover in 2011 on the Ballhofplatz. In July 2014, Bewegung Nurr created the project "Haus der 28 Türen", a pavilion erected on Tempelhof Field in Berlin as a memorial to refugees who lost their lives attempting to enter Europe. The structure was later moved to Oranienplatz in Berlin, where it fell victim to arson on March 31, 2015.
Members
1989: Alekos Hofstetter, Christian Steuer, and Daniel H. Wild
1996 to 2008: Alekos Hofstetter, Christian Steuer, Lokiev Stoof
since 2009: Alekos Hofstetter, Christian Steuer, and Florian Göpfert
Literature
Boris Abel : BEWEGUNG NURR. Leonhardi Museum, Dresden, 2002,.
Peter Lang : KLASSIK - Zur Geschichte der Künstlergruppe BEWEGUNG NURR 1989-2005. Revolver - Archiv für aktuelle Kunst, Frankfurt/M., 2005,.
Galerie Lisi Hämmerle : BEWEGUNG NURR – DIE KAPITULATION. Galerie Fischer und Fischer, Berlin, 2011.
Tanja Vonseelen : 9841 - Temporäres Denkmal für Johann Trollmann. Hellerau - Europäisches Zentrum der Künste, Dresden, 2012.