Exhibition: ‘They Used To Call Us Guest Workers’ at Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg

Exhibition dates: 31st October, 2025 – 17th May, 2026

Curator: Unknown

 

Muhlis Kenter (Turkish, b. 1952) 'Seamstress in textile factory' Alsdorf near Aachen, 1980

 

Muhlis Kenter (Turkish, b. 1952)
Seamstress in textile factory
Alsdorf near Aachen, 1980
Gelatin silver print
H. 30.4 x W. 40.5cm
© Muhlis Kenter

 

In the 1970s and 1980s, Bremen professor Muhlis Kenter photographed Turkish workers, then known as guest workers.

 

 

Only a little text tonight as I’m battling chronic depression and the little grey cells are not firing on all cylinders.

Absence, longing, loneliness, hard work, isolation, family, home.

Social inequality, sexism, racism and life in exile.

As noted by Annabelle Steffes-Halmer in her article “Migrants’ stories for a new home” (2021) on another exhibition on the same theme, In Situ: Photo Stories on Migration (Museum Ludwig, June – October 2021), photographs of this type are “a story of emancipation. [They] tell tales of people who came to a foreign country, which they discovered for themselves and which ultimately became their home. It is not only a (photo) history of migration, but also the history of Germany.”

Have a great Easter everyone.

Dr Marcus Bunyan


Many thankx to the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg for allowing me to publish the photographs in the posting. Please click on the photographs for a larger version of the image.

 

 

Muhlis Kenter (Turkish, b. 1952) 'Textile factory Workers' Alsdorf near Aachen, 1980 from the exhibition 'They Used To Call Us Guest Workers' at Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg, October 2025 - May 2026

 

Muhlis Kenter (Turkish, b. 1952)
Textile factory Workers
Alsdorf near Aachen, 1980
Gelatin silver print
H. 30.4 x W. 40.5cm
© Muhlis Kenter

 

Muhlis Kenter (Turkish, b. 1952) 'Concert situation' Nd from the exhibition 'They Used To Call Us Guest Workers' at Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg, October 2025 - May 2026

 

Muhlis Kenter (Turkish, b. 1952)
Concert situation
Nd
Gelatin silver print
H. 30.4 x W. 40.5cm
© Muhlis Kenter

 

Muhlis Kenter (Turkish, b. 1952) 'Sewing company 'Mertes & Söhne'. Sewing company for workwear. The operations manager supervises the entire production process' Alsdorf, 1979

 

Muhlis Kenter (Turkish, b. 1952)
Sewing company ‘Mertes & Söhne’. Sewing company for workwear. The operations manager supervises the entire production process
Alsdorf, 1979
Gelatin silver print
H. 30.4 x W. 40.5cm
© Muhlis Kenter

 

Christa Kenter (German) 'Portrait of Muhlis Kenter' Aachen, 1981

 

Christa Kenter (German)
Portrait of Muhlis Kenter
Aachen, 1981
© Muhlis Kenter

 

 

“They Used To Call Us Guest Workers”: Extending the Photography and the New Media Collection 

The Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg (MK&G) is expanding its collection with key works by the photographers Muhlis Kenter, Nuri MusluoÄŸlu, Asimina Paradissa and Mehmet Ünal. After coming to Germany from Turkey and Greece in the 1960s and 70s, the four documented life, work and their political engagement there from a migrant perspective. The exhibition “They Used to Call Us Guest Workers” presents around 80 photographs and collages that depict the everyday lives of people with and without a migration background in the Federal Republic of Germany while addressing the themes of social inequality, sexism, racism and life in exile. Viewers have the opportunity to discover here an often-overlooked perspective on socio-political issues that are still highly topical today.

With a shared interest in society and politics, each of the four amateur photographers developed a unique approach and yet they all took up the tradition of the workers’ photography movement. Like its historical role model in the interwar period, this movement was dedicated to the battle against class barriers and social inequality. The aim was for workers to pick up a camera themselves to raise awareness of the realities of their lives and help shape the public debate with their images.

Workers’ Photography

John Heartfield and his contributions to the illustrated magazine “Arbeiter-Illustrierte-Zeitung” (AIZ) in the 1930s were an important source of inspiration for the workers’ photography movement. Founded in Hamburg in 1973, the magazine “Arbeiterfotografie” saw itself as a successor to the AIZ. The main figures in the workers’ photography movement all engaged with developments in society and politics but each developed a different approach. Their common goal was to use their cameras in the battle against social inequality. Workers were encouraged to pick up a camera in order to raise their own awareness for the realities of their lives and enable them to intervene in the public debate. 

Between 1975 and 1990, the theme of migration played a central role in workers’ photography. The reports provide an in-depth look at those living in exile, at living and working conditions and women’s work, and at the peace movement and unequal educational opportunities for immigrants. The articles in the magazine were often published anonymously. The images were supplied by the 30 or so local working groups, who often took the photos together. 

Muhlis Kenter

Bremen-based amateur photographer Muhlis Kenter (b. 1952 in Istanbul, Turkey) depicts work and everyday life in Germany. He documents Turkish workers in mining, the metal industry and a textile factory, and accompanies educational projects for Turkish children and young people with a migration background. In his expressive portraits, Kenter spotlights personal stories. His photographs spotlight people navigating between the sense of being foreign in an unfamiliar country and finding their place in Germany. But Muhlis Kenter also observes German society with his camera, focusing on pigeon breeding, fishing and gardening, which he sees as typical German hobbies.

Muhlis Kenter provides behind-the-scenes glimpses of factory work. He for example photographed workers of Turkish origin in a textile factory where people from different backgrounds work side by side in production. The photos were taken as part of a photo story for the magazine “Arbeiterfotografie”. Kenter often focuses on individuals and personal histories, resulting in expressive portraits. For his reportages, he creates complex compositions that highlight in an arresting way the interplay between people and technology at the companies he visits. In one series, he turned the tables, looking not at the lives of immigrants of Turkish origin but rather at “white German” society and what he regards as typical hobbies: pigeon breeding, fishing and gardening.

Muhlis Kenter was born in 1952 in Istanbul, Turkey. In 1972 he took up mechanical engineering studies in Aachen, where he joined a “workers’ photography” group. Alongside his studies, he acted as a support teacher for Turkish-speaking classes. Kenter later worked as a professor of mechanical engineering at the City University of Applied Sciences in Bremen, and he continues to avidly pursue photography. 

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu (b. 1951 in Istanbul, Turkey) photographs public life. The images he produced between 1975 and 1988 show mainly demonstrations, peace marches, strikes and protest actions, especially those taking place in his hometown of Heilbronn. Supplemented by footage of sporting events, street festivals and celebrations, as well as photos of his own family, a dense panorama emerges of German-Turkish coexistence as a collective experience. MusluoÄŸlu’s photos document particularly vividly the protest culture during the years in question – including the peace movement and European Peace Marches, the trade union struggles and the anti-nuclear movements, and the resistance of Turks living in Germany against the military dictatorship in Turkey. He also lifts the veil on xenophobia in public spaces and the living conditions in asylum shelters.

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu is a photographer and political activist. His camera accompanies him to demonstrations, such as the strike for a 35-hour week and protests by the peace movement, or the blockade of the US missile base in Mutlangen in 1983. He not only captures protest posters and scenes but also documents moments of solidarity – such as workers with and without a migration background dancing. MusluoÄŸlu’s photographs chronicle political struggles as well as everyday moments in German-Turkish life, such as family celebrations and trips home. He examines in detail protest posters that touch on migration issues and in another image shows a worker of Turkish origin playing the saz. 

Born in Istanbul in 1951, MusluoÄŸlu came to Germany in 1965, trained as a toolmaker, and later became a social worker for the “Arbeiterwohlfahrt” (Workers’ Welfare Association). He is active in trade unions (IG Metall, ver.di) and the peace movement. Since 1985, his photos have appeared under a pseudonym in the weekly newspaper “Türkiye Postası”, which is aimed at workers and people seeking political protection. 

Asimina Paradissa

Asimina Paradissa (b. 1945 in Vrastama, Greece) occupies a special position in amateur photography as one of the few migrant women behind a camera. She documented her own life in Germany from 1968 onwards, showing everyday life in a hostel for unmarried female workers in Wilhelmshaven as well as scenes of factory work captured from the workers’ point of view. Paradissa’s many self-portraits deal with questions of self-image and what it feels like to live in a certain place. Although her photographs are private, they are at the same time significant testimonies to contemporary history: By giving the women portrayed names and voices, they draw attention to the stories of female migrants and thus add a rare female perspective to the way in which we view migrant labour.

Asimina Paradissa gazes directly out at us from her pictures. Perched on her bicycle, she laughs openly into the camera, while in another picture she looks us earnestly in the eye as she sits on her bunk bed in a dormitory for unwed workers run by the Olympia typewriter works and caringly embraces her friend Evangelia Manolakaki. Even though others usually press the shutter, these images can still be described as self-portraits. Starting in 1966, Paradissa took photos on a regular basis as a way of reassuring herself about her new life in Germany. Among the “guest workers” who came to West Germany in the 1960s, one in three were women who lead lives largely hidden from the public eye. Paradissa is one of the few women of this generation to document her self-determined life in Germany with her camera. Her pictures are at once private remembrances and documents of the times. 

Asimina Paradissa was born in 1945 in Vrastama, Greece. She came to Wilhelmshaven with her brother in 1966 as part of the recruitment agreements concluded between West Germany and Greece, among other countries. In 1972 she settled in Wuppertal. Alongside her job, she began to make photography and write poetry. 

Mehmet Ünal

Mehmet Ünal’s (b. 1951 in Çanakkale, Turkey) photographic practice includes political image-text collages that emerge from actions and protests. In addition to individual images and series, he also produces posters that incorporate writing and found objects – often from public authorities and agencies – and thus comment on the particular experiences of migrants when dealing with bureaucracy. With their thematic acuity and compositional density, these posters are independent artworks that relentlessly expose exclusion and marginalisation.

Mehmat Ünal’s collages combine written, photographic and found objects from the world of German bureaucracy that reflect experiences of racism. Ünal expresses himself through satire and exaggeration; for example, he created a fake Deutsche Bahn advertising campaign offering a “foreigner’s pass” promoting the return transport of people to Turkey. He compares the application for a work permit to a “TÜV certificate for humans”. In his text-image combinations (circa 1982), Ünal criticizes Germany’s official policies towards immigrants and the degrading treatment of those who were once invited to the country as “guests”. After the recruitment of foreign workers was discontinued in the wake of the economic crisis of the early 1980s, Ünal observed a growing atmosphere of hostility towards those regarded as “foreigners”. The first arson attack on a refugee shelter took place in 1980 in Hamburg-Billbrook. Works that Ünal produced against the backdrop of political street protests were published in the magazine “Arbeiterfotografie” in 1984. In several collages, he draws on the legacy of John Heartfield, whose political montages in the mid-1920s brought him recognition as the founder of this genre. 

Mehmet Ünal was born in Çanakkale, Turkey, in 1951. In 1976, he moved to Mannheim, where the former actor works as a photographer and journalist.

Text from the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg (MK&G)

 

Nuri Musluoğlu (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Workers from Kolbenschmidt with the magazine 'Türkiye Postası' during a strike' Neckarsulm, 1984

 

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu (Turkish, b. 1951)
Workers from Kolbenschmidt with the magazine Türkiye Postası during a strike
Neckarsulm, 1984
Gelatin silver print
H. 25.6 x W. 38.6cm
© Nuri Musluoğlu

 

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Residential home for asylum seekers' Nd

 

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu (Turkish, b. 1951)
Residential home for asylum seekers
Nd
Gelatin silver print
H. 25.6 x W. 38.6cm
© Nuri Musluoğlu

 

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Sit-in, Peace movement' Mutlanger Heide, 1983

 

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu (Turkish, b. 1951)
Sit-in, Peace movement
Mutlanger Heide, 1983
Gelatin silver print
H. 25.6 x W. 38.6cm
© Nuri Musluoğlu

 

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Portrait' 1981

 

Nuri MusluoÄŸlu (Turkish, b. 1951)
Portrait
1981
© Nuri Musluoğlu

 

Unknown photographer (Colleague of Asimina Paradissa with her camera) 'Asimina Paradissa and Evangelia Manolakaki at the women's dormitory of Olympia' Wilhelmshaven, 1969

 

Unknown photographer (Colleague of Asimina Paradissa with her camera)
Asimina Paradissa and Evangelia Manolakaki at the women’s dormitory of Olympia
Wilhelmshaven, 1969
Gelatin silver print
H. 10.5 x W. 7.5cm
© Asimina Paradissa

 

Unknown photographer (Colleague of Asimina Paradissa with her camera) 'Asimina Paradissa on the Bike' Wilhelmshaven, 1966/1967

  

Unknown photographer (Colleague of Asimina Paradissa with her camera)
Asimina Paradissa on the Bike
Wilhelmshaven, 1966/1967
Gelatin silver print
H. 10.8 x W. 7.8cm
© Asimina Paradissa

 

Unknown photographer (Colleague of Asimina Paradissa with her camera) 'Asimina Paradissa at the women's dormitory of Olympia' Wilhelmshaven, 1969

 

Unknown photographer (Colleague of Asimina Paradissa with her camera)
Asimina Paradissa at the women’s dormitory of Olympia
Wilhelmshaven, 1969
Gelatin silver print
H. 10.8 x W. 7.7cm
© Asimina Paradissa

 

Asimina Paradissa was 20 years old when she moved to Wilhelmshaven in northern Germany. In the photo, the Greek woman poses in front of the dormitory at the Olympia company. Back then, she took pictures of weddings, parties and visits to the zoo for her colleagues and friends. The 76-year-old is still a passionate photographer.

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Untitled' Mainz, 1982

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951)
Untitled
Mainz, 1982
Photo collage
H. 45 x W. 29.8cm
© Mehmet Ünal

 

Zieh!! = Pull!!

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Untitled (Homage to Nâzım Hikmet)' Mainz, 1982–1986

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951)
Untitled (Homage to Nâzım Hikmet)
Mainz, 1982-1986
Photo collage
H. 42 x W. 29.7cm
© Mehmet Ünal

 

life
alone and free
like a tree
and brotherly
like a forest
is our longing

 

Mehmed Nâzım Ran (17 January 1902 – 3 June 1963), commonly known as Nâzım Hikmet, was a Turkish poet, playwright, novelist, screenwriter, director, and memoirist. He was acclaimed for the “lyrical flow of his statements”. Described as a “romantic communist” and a “romantic revolutionary”, he was repeatedly arrested for his political beliefs and spent much of his adult life in prison or in exile. His poetry has been translated into more than 50 languages.

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Untitled' Mainz, 1982

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951)
Untitled
Mainz, 1982
Photo collage
H. 45 x W. 31.1cm
© Mehmet Ünal

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Untitled' Mainz, 1983

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951)
Untitled
Mainz, 1983
Photo collage
H. 46,1 x W. 35cm
© Mehmet Ünal

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951) 'Self-portrait' c. 1980

 

Mehmet Ünal (Turkish, b. 1951)
Self-portrait
c. 1980
© Mehmet Ünal

 

 

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