Berlinische Galerie - Museum of Modern Art, Photography and Architecture
Current Exhibitions
From the Collection
Streets and Faces 1918-1933
Manifesto Collage
About Change, Collection visits the Berlinische Galerie
Michael Sailstorfer
Forst – Vattenfall Contemporary 2012
Art in Berlin 1880-1980
New presentation of the collection
12 X 12
The IBB-Videolounge in the Berlinische Galerie
Boris Mikhailov
Time is out of joint. Photographs 1966–2011
Future Exhibitions
Alfredo Jaar
The way it is. Aesthetics of Resistance
Alte Jakobstraße 124-128
10969 Berlin
Telephone: +49 (0)30 - 789 02-600
Fax: +49 (0)30 - 789 02-700
Berlinische Galeriehttp://www.berlinischegalerie.de
Berlin´s Museum of Modern Art, Photography, and Architecture, as one of the youngest museums in Berlin, has a passion for experimenting. Founded in 1975 as a private institution and for years housed in the Martin-Gropius-Bau, the Berlinische Galerie moved to its new home in Alte Jakobstraße in October, 2004. Combining elements of the national gallery, with its international focus, and the city museum, with its emphasis on cultural history, the Berlinische Galerie collects, researches, and exhibits works from 1870 to the present. Themes include the secessionists and the Jungen Wilden group, Fluxus and Dada, New Objectivity and expressionism, the Russians in Berlin, the avant-garde in architecture and photography, Berlin during the Nazi regime, the city in ruins, East- and West-Berlin and the formation of the metropolis. Creative contemporary scenes are also included. Alongside the permanent collection, the spacious industrial hall has plenty to offer: temporary exhibitions, movies, music, lectures, archives, a library and a study center with a hall providing presentation facilities for works on paper. The museum also has a café and museum shop and last but not least, the “Atelier Bunter Jakob,” an art school offering fun and creative activities for children, families and adults.
Related Topics
Architecture, Avantgarde, Dada, Expressionism, Fluxus, Fotography, Gabo, Hannah Höch, Heinrich Zille, Modern Art, New Functionalism, Puni, Russians in Berlin, Secession, Young Savage







