The picture on the left is of the Berliner Dom, where a big projector flashed images on the front. Great thing was that these images were made specially for this building, and were aligned to the contours of the Dom.
Not having a tripod means using lamp posts and dustbins as stands - and freezing your hands of in the meantime.
This is where my trusty old Powershot A95 with its all-manual controls and rotating screen can still deliver some beating to the modern all-automatic with huge-but-fixed screen compact cameras.
Next pictures are made on Unter den Linden, all the trees were lighted. Vattenfall (whose power plants are all over town) must me making millions.
At the backside of the Dom, on the bank of the Spree. The DDR museum is located under the sign. Picture on the right shows the projection on the backside of the Dom, which was animated.
Everywhere strong spotlights were lighting the sky and moving around, with the Television Tower as central point - five or six spotlights rotating around it and colored lights shining up. From where I lived - especially from the Elsenbrücke, the city could easily be made out with a large glowing blob of cloud overhead and multiple spotlights crossing the sky. I wonder how much these spotlights look like those located on the Flak Turms searching out allied airplanes looked, sixty-five years ago...
Not all was about ligthed buildings, the two pictures underneath on the right show some kind of "light gallery", the utmost right picture shows a piece depicting the Berlin Wall, but made out of UV-fluorescent material. Very nice.
Picture on the left shows how tall the Fernseheturm really is - top is out in the clouds.
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