orange toy car in front of a box that it came in with a picture of a boxy red car and blue and yellow background

Spielzeugauto Kybernet, VEB Piko Sonneberg, 1974 © Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum, A. Laurenzo

A children’s barbershop playset, a stylish watering can, a Space Age pedicure kit, and an egg-shaped garden chair are just some of the everyday objects from the former East Germany that scientists can use to learn more about how plastic production and design were shaped behind the Iron Curtain.

The Getty Conservation Institute has partnered with Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum in Munich, the Wende Museum of the Cold War in Los Angeles and the Cologne Institute of Conservation Sciences to launch German Democratic Plastics in Design, a project looking at how Soviet-era plastics were made and valued.

red and yellow watering can next to a black and yellow watering can

Blumengießkannen, VEB Glasbijouterie Zittau, Klaus Kunis, 1960 © Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum, A. Laurenzo

black plastic boom box with speakers and white buttons and a tape player

Radiogerät SKR 730, VEB Stern Radio Berlin, Werksentwurf, 1990 © Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum, A. Laurenzo

These institutions are studying over 300 household plastic objects made between 1949 and 1990 that are in the collections of the Wende Museum and Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum. Ranging from kitchen appliances and children’s toys to beauty tools and furniture, many of these colorful pieces are design achievements in their own right, and represent the modern aesthetic favored by many countries following World War II.

“Plastics design in Germany really took off in the 1950s, but so far our conservation experience has focused more on objects from the West,” says Odile Madden, senior scientist at the Getty Conservation Institute. “With this project, we get to explore these very appealing plastic objects that East Germans used in their daily lives, and use what we learn about how they were made to ensure those cultural touchstones are protected for the long term.”

a box with a blonde girl holding a toy shot, and another girl holding a paper

Original Doll Doctor, 1964, Gordon Spiel. 2007.146.008. Photo Credit: Courtesy of the Wende Museum

the toy doctor set including scissors, scalpel and tweezers in different colors

Original Doll Doctor, 1964, Gordon Spiel. 2007.146.008. Photo Credit: Courtesy of the Wende Museum

As durable as plastic may seem, many historically significant plastic objects are degrading dramatically. They appear stable for decades and then shrink, become distorted, and even disintegrate into piles of crumbs. Conservation scientists, including a team at the Conservation Institute, work with museums around the world to study plastic–whether it is plastic-based art or other culturally important everyday plastic objects. By studying the chemical profile of plastics, they can learn more about their composition, how they degrade, and how to possibly conserve and restore them.

This new project will examine how industrial production and manufacturing techniques, as well as the value countries and cultures put on their plastics, impact how they age and how long they are owned.

East Germany (officially known as the German Democratic Republic) was one of the leading plastics-producing nations in the 1960s, shortly after the Berlin Wall split the country in two. East Germany exported its products to almost all countries of the Eastern Bloc and even to the West via veiled channels. It is also set apart geographically and socio-politically, creating a unique opportunity to analyze plastic production methods that were less influenced by Western practices.

A green old fashioned rotary dial telephone

Telephone, 1986. VEB Femmeldewerk Nordhausen, 2005.900.081. Photo Credit: Courtesy of the Wende Museum

Scientists and conservators will use a number of tools to analyze the plastics in temporary labs located on the Wende Museum campus and at the Pinakothek of Modern, where Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum is located. These tools include portable Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray fluorescence spectrometry.

Researchers have already found some interesting clues about the economics of plastic. For example, numbers embossed on some of the objects indicate the materials used and sometimes the selling price – traits not typically seen in Western plastics.

Each partner brings a particular expertise to the project, whether it is through thoughtful and important collecting of modern objects and long-time research into the conservation of design objects made of modern materials at Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum, an understanding of Soviet culture and social movements through the lens of art at the Wende Museum, Getty’s mission to advance conservation practice and its team of plastics scientists and conservators, or the experts at the University of Cologne and their knowledge of the conservation, analysis, and history of plastics.

The results of the research will be published by the Getty Conservation Institute, and can be used as a tool for museums who want to enhance the conservation techniques for their plastic objects, who want to learn more about the historic context in which these objects were made, and to better interpret their collections for visitors.

The project will also include meetings and conferences for other professionals in this field to learn more about the project and to inform their own work.

Find more information about German Democratic Plastics in Design here.