main content start,
Modegraphik aus STYL 1922, „In der Lennéstraße“, Detail, Mantelkleider vom Modehaus Hammer, Lennéstraße 2. Zeichnung R.L. Leonard
© Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kunstbibliothek
Blick vom Landwehrkanal in die Matthäikirchstraße, im Hintergrund die Kirche St. Matthäus, Aufnahme 1930er Jahre
© Bildarchiv Foto Marburg
Schauspielerin und Cassirer-Gattin Tilla Durieux, eine der meistportraitierten Frauen des frühen 20. Jahrhunderts, 1921
© Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kunstbibliothek
Das Haus Matthäikirchstraße 4, heute Piazzetta des Kulturforums
© Foto: Zentralinstitut für Kunstgeschichte, Photothek, ZI-0178-02-3-252838 / Fotografie der Staatlichen Bildstelle
Zeitreise ins alte Tiergartenviertel
© Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kunstbibliothek

A presentation with free admission by the Kunstbibliothek (Art Library) recollects the creative, art-loving populace of the area around the former Matthäikirchplatz (St. Matthew’s Church Square) a century ago. Images and texts about the lives and activities of famous residents recall a glamorous era brutally ended in 1933 by the National Socialist regime.

Remembering the Historical Tiergarten District

Today’s Kulturforum is home to a unique modernist architectural ensemble of museums, libraries and the Philharmonic Hall – soon to be complemented by the berlin modern: Museum des 20. Jahrhunderts (Museum of the 20th Century) presently under construction. Few people know that the current Kulturforum and its surroundings were already the site of a thriving cultural scene and an emerging modernism one hundred years ago. The neighbourhood, however, looked quite different back then when the Tiergarten district was one of Berlin’s most elegant residential and commercial areas. Wealthy entrepreneurs, members of the cultural scene and intellectuals lived in magnificent houses in the vicinity of the Matthäikirche. Joining them all was their passion for art, literature, music and fashion.

The Kunstbibliothek, which has been intensively researching this sunken Atlantis, invites you on a fascinating journey back through time into the Kulturforum’s past. Memories suddenly return of long-forgotten people, who lived for and with the arts, and whose enthusiasm we owe so much to. With this presentation, the Kunstbibliothek is responding to the tremendous public response to its lecture series Kunstgeschichte(n) des Tiergartenviertels (The Tiergarten District: Its Art History and Its Stories), which continues in 2025. During the series, scholars from various disciplines will present their current research on the area’s history.

The Tiergarten District – A Forgotten World

From the 1860s onwards, the Tiergarten district was considered one of the loveliest parts of Berlin. From being a place to enjoy the summer breezes, with vacation houses and huge gardens, it soon became a desirable residential area. During the 1910s and 1920s, the area was then the “place to be” for artists, art dealers, interior designers, fashion couturiers and photographers. Very little of that glamour survived the radical rupture of the National Socialist era, wartime destruction, and post-war demolitions. The district is now but a myth, with a mere 17 of its more than 529 former stately residences remaining.

The Kulturforum: A Centre of the International Art Scene Over A Century Ago

The presentation focuses on the Tiergarten district’s heydey during the early 20th century, when the neighbourhood, with its cultural networks, emerged as a centre of modernism, art dealing and collecting, fashion, photography and interior design. The origins of the Matthäikirche environs as a cultural hub go back more than a hundred years.

The narrative focuses on a selected group of people who contributed to the area’s renown in various ways. Fashion journalist Julie Elias invited her artist friend Max Liebermann and many other prominent guests to dinner and “tango cocktails” at Matthäikirchplatz. Julius Elias and gallerist Paul Cassirer enthralled the neighbourhood for Van Gogh and the French Impressionists. Eduard and Johanna Arnhold, Oscar Huldschinsky and many other art collectors transformed their private homes into museums for masterpieces from all eras. Interior designers such as Leni Michels-Fougner or Paul Huldschinsky planned living and commercial spaces, while fashion designer Erna Becker created Marlene Dietrich’s iconic outfit. Julie Elias is also remembered as a chronicler of the Tiergarten district, offering insight into Berlin’s creative haute couture scene at the time.

The Tiergarten District’s Past and Kulturforum’s Future

This unique cultural flourishing with its art-loving networks ended in 1933 with the disenfranchisement, robbery and murder of many residents persecuted as Jews or democrats. The Second World War largely destroyed the district, obliterating the memory of its once prominent residents, their extraordinary art collections and their creative achievements.

With this presentation, the Kunstbibliothek is preparing for its future at the Kulturforum site, when the new berlin modern building will provide it with space to exhibit its museum collection on graphic design, photography, and book and media art. The history of the Tiergarten district as a hot spot of European modernism will play an important role at this branch.


The Tiergarten District: Its Art History and Its Stories” was funded in 2022–23 by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.

Research team: Dr Gesa Kessemeier, Dr Joachim Brand

A presentation of the Kunstbibliothek – Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Opening hours,

  • Monday-Friday 09:00 - 20:00
  • Saturday-Sunday 10:00 - 18:00
  • 1. January 12:00 - 18:00
  • 8. March 10:00 - 18:00
  • 1. May 10:00 - 18:00
  • 3. October 10:00 - 18:00
  • 24. December closed
  • 25. December 10:00 - 18:00
  • 26. December 10:00 - 18:00
  • 31. December closed

Location,

Kunstbibliothek
Matthäikirchplatz 8, 10785 Berlin

Third-party OpenStreetMap cookies
By loading the map, you accept OpenStreetMaps' privacy policy of OpenStreetMap.

Telephone,

+49 (30) 266 42 42 42

Website,

www.smb.museum/en/exhibi…

Prices,

Free entrance

Related Events

Tickets

Free entrance

Catalog

Services

Service Telephone

+49 (30) 266 42 42 42

Organizer

  • Kunstbibliothek

Links

Accessibility

More Exhibitions

Wolf R. Eisentraut am Zeichentisch mit dem Modell des Denkmals der Erbauer Marzahns, 1987
©Archiv Eisentraut

Special exhibition

Marzahn-Hellersdorf Museum

Twofold was the pleasure of building

The architect Wolf R. Eisentraut

Borkenkäfergalerien an einer Fichte
© Pelin Asa, Matters of Activity / Max-Planck-Institut für Kolloid- und Grenzflächenforschung

Special exhibition

Kunstgewerbemuseum

Symbiotic Wood

Luftaufnahme der Grabungsstelle, links die noch heute genutzte Badeanlage
© Foto: su concessione della Soprintendenza Archeologia, Belle Arti e Paesaggio per le province di Siena, Grosseto e Arezzo

Special exhibition

James-Simon-Galerie

The Bronzes of San Casciano dei Bagni

A Sensation from the Mud

Near by

Walter Dahn, Ohne Titel, Detail, 1987
© Bildnachweis: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Kupferstichkabinett, Graphische Gesellschaft zu Berlin / Dietmar Katz © Walter Dahn, Courtesy the artist and Sprüth Magers

Special exhibition

Kupferstichkabinett

YES TO ALL

The Gifts of Paul Maenz Gerd de Vries to the Kupferstichkabinett

Abraham Bloemaert, Die hl. Candida und Gelasia, Detail, 1611, FederzeichnungFeder in Braun, grün laviert, weiß gehöht
© Christoph Müller Stiftung / Kilian Beutel

Special exhibition

Gemäldegalerie

“Das alles bin ich!” Christoph Müller’s Gift, Part 1

A World Made of Words and Images

Burkhard Jacobs, Videostill, Projektarbeit, 2024, Virtual Lab II, AMD Berlin
© Burkhard Jacobs

Special exhibition

Kunstgewerbemuseum

Virtual Couture

3D Fashion – Digitised, Animated and Interpreted

Dorothea Tanning, Spannung, Detail, 1942, Schenkung Sammlung Ulla und Heiner Pietzsch an das Land Berlin 2010
© Bildnachweis: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Neue Nationalgalerie / Foto: Jochen Littkemann, © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2024/25

Special exhibition

Neue Nationalgalerie

Max Ernst to Dorothea Tanning: Networks of Surrealism

Provenances from the Ulla and Heiner Pietzsch Collection

© Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand

Special exhibition

German Resistance Memorial Center

1945 - Resistance Against National Socialism at the End of the War

Bass tuba by Johann Gottfried Moritz, Berlin, 1839
(c) Schnepp Renou
Bass tuba by Johann Gottfried Moritz, Berlin, 1839

Special exhibition

Museum of Musical Instruments

Low brass

A brief history of low brass instruments

This form can be used to report content on Museumsportal Berlin that violates the EU Digital Services Act (DSA).

Report content

Cookie-Policy

We use cookies to provide the best website experience for you. By clicking on "Accept tracking" you agree to this. You can change the settings or reject the processing under "Manage Cookies setup". You can access the cookie settings again at any time in the footer.
Privacy | Imprint

Cookie-Policy

We use cookies to provide the best website experience for you. By clicking on "Accept tracking" you agree to this. You can change the settings or reject the processing under "Manage Cookies setup". You can access the cookie settings again at any time in the footer.
Privacy | Imprint