Berggruen Museum

Berggruen Museum

The Berggruen Museum (also known as the Berggruen Collection) is a collection of modern art classics in Berlin, which the collector and dealer Heinz Berggruen, in a "gesture of reconciliation", gave to his native city for a price well below its actual value. The most notable artists on display include Pablo Picasso, Alberto Giacometti, Georges Braque, Paul Klee and Henri Matisse. The Berggruen Collection is part of the National Gallery of Berlin.

Contents

History

The Berggruen Museum – West Stüler Building

The collection arrived in Berlin in 1996, with Berggruen's return to his native city after six decades in exile. Berggruen initially lent the collection, which he had assembled over 30 years, to the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation (PCHF).[1] He finally sold it to the PCHF in December 2000, for the "symbolic"[2] price of 253 million marks, well below its then estimated value of 1.5 billion marks.[3] Today it is exhibited under the title "Berggruen Collection – Picasso and His Time" as part of the National Gallery of Berlin, in the West Stüler Building on Schloßstraße, opposite Charlottenburg Palace.

The centrepiece of the collection is the work of Picasso, with over 100 exhibits, together with over 60 pictures by Paul Klee. Henri Matisse is represented by over 20 works, including more than half a dozen of his famous cutouts. Sculpture ensembles by Alberto Giacometti and examples of African sculpture round out the core of the collection.

Berggruen continued to purchase works after the museum's opening in 1996, including Picasso's important 1909 painting Houses on the Hill (Horta de Ebro)[4] from the Museum of Modern Art in New York. A total of 165 works were transferred from Berggruen to the PCHF in the 2000 sale.

In 2005 the Berggruen family acquired Picasso's Nu Jaune (1907) for $13.7 million at Sotheby's in New York.[5] This gouache is one of the first studies for Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, a milestone in 20th century art.

To mark the 10th anniversary of the museum, and his permanent retirement from public life at the age of 92, Berggruen donated a sculpture by Alberto Giacometti, Standing Woman III, to the collection in December 2006. It had in fact already been on loan at the museum until then, standing in the Stüler Building's rotunda. To keep the two-meter high bronze statue within the collection – his life's work – Berggruen quickly purchased it and donated it to the PCHF.[3] Several weeks later, on 23 February 2007, he died in Paris.

The museum received 1.5 million visitors during its first decade from 1996 to 2006.[3] Besides the permanent exhibition "Picasso and His Time", the museum hosts numerous special exhibitions on themes of classic modern art.

Expansion

In July 2007 the heirs to Berggruen's estate announced that they would present a further 50 classic modern works to the museum, in order to continue in their father's tradition of reconciliation with Germany.[6] Since the transfer at Christmas 2000 Berggruen had continued to purchase paintings, including works by Picasso, Matisse, Klee and Cézanne, among others. To make an expansion possible, the state of Berlin announced that it would endow the PCHF with a new building for its 50th anniversary: the Kommandantenhaus, adjacent to the West Stüler Building.[7][8]

A society for friends of the Berggruen Museum (Förderkreis Museum Berggruen e. V.) was founded at the same time, with members including Berggruen's widow Bettina, his children Nicolas, Olivier and Helen, as well as Michael Blumenthal, Michael Naumann and Simon de Pury. The PCHF agreed to take on the running costs of the society.

Plans were announced in 2008 to connect the two buildings with a glass pergola, chosen from an architectural competition, to be paid for by the government and installed by the state of Berlin.[9][10]

In May 2008 a further 70 paintings were added to the collection.[9]

References

  1. ^ Der Glückskauf für Berlin Ingeborg Ruthe, Berliner Zeitung, 11 November 2000. (German)
  2. ^ Wowereit beglückwünscht Berggruen zum 90. Geburtstag State of Berlin website, 5 January 2004. (German)
  3. ^ a b c Ein Giacometti zum Abschied Die Tageszeitung, 16 December 2006. (German)
  4. ^ Weekend Update Walter Robinson, Artnet Magazine. (English)
  5. ^ Picasso Surprise Highlights Sotheby's Strong Sale Carly Berwick, The New York Sun, 3 November 2005. (English)
  6. ^ Nicolas Berggruen: „Ich hoffe, ich habe sein Auge geerbt“ Interview with Nicolas Berggruen, Der Tagesspiegel, 28 August 2007. (German)
  7. ^ Kunstsammlung Berggruen: Familiäre Bande Nicola Kuhn, Der Tagesspiegel, 16 July 2007. (German)
  8. ^ Museumserweiterung: Brückenschläge zu Berggruen Nicola Kuhn, Der Tagesspiegel, 18 July 2007. (German)
  9. ^ a b Museum Berggruen: Ein großes Erbe Bernhard Schulz, Der Tagesspiegel, 31 May 2008. (German)
  10. ^ Museum Berggruen: Seit er denken kann, ist er von Kunst umgeben Matthias Gretzschel, Hamburger Abendblatt, 9 June 2010. (German)

External links

Notes

This article incorporates information from this version of the equivalent article on the German Wikipedia.

Coordinates: 52°31′09″N 13°17′43″E / 52.51917°N 13.29528°E / 52.51917; 13.29528


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Museum Scharf-Gerstenberg — Östlicher Stülerbau, seit 2008 Sitz der Sammlung Scharf Gerstenberg Die Sammlung Scharf Gerstenberg ist ein Kunstmuseum in Berlin Charlottenburg. Es zeigt seit Juli 2008 Kunst von der französischen Romantik bis zum Surrealismus. Die Sammlung mit… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Berggruen, Heinz — ▪ 2008       German born art collector born Jan. 5, 1914 , Berlin, Ger. died Feb. 23, 2007, Neuilly sur Seine, France amassed a collection of 20th century art, the core of which consisted of some 130 works by Pablo Picasso, with whom Berggruen… …   Universalium

  • Museum Berggruen (Berlin) — Museum Berggruen im Stülerbau Das Museum Berggruen (auch bekannt unter Sammlung Berggruen) in Berlin Charlottenburg gilt als eine der weltweit bedeutendsten Sammlungen der Kunst der klassischen Moderne, die der Sammler und Kunsthändler Heinz… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Museum Berggruen — im Stülerbau Das Museum Berggruen (auch bekannt unter Sammlung Berggruen) im Berliner Ortsteil Charlottenburg gilt als eine der weltweit bedeutendsten Sammlungen der Kunst der klassischen Moderne, die der Sammler und Kunsthändler Heinz Berggruen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Berggruen — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Heinz Berggruen (1914–2007), deutscher Kunstsammler, Journalist, Autor, Kunsthändler, Galerist und Mäzen Helen Berggruen (* 1945), US amerikanische Malerin Nicolas Berggruen (* 1961), deutsch… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Museum Berggruen — Musée Berggruen Le Musée Berggruen de Berlin présente un ensemble exceptionnel d œuvres de Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti et Georges Braque qui donnent un intéressant aperçu des écoles d avant garde au début du… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Museum Berggruen (Berlin) — Musée Berggruen Le Musée Berggruen de Berlin présente un ensemble exceptionnel d œuvres de Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti et Georges Braque qui donnent un intéressant aperçu des écoles d avant garde au début du… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Berliner Museum — Die Berliner Museen gehören zu den bekanntesten Kulturgütern der deutschen Hauptstadt. Museen in Bundes , Landes oder Kommunalbesitz werden von öffentlichen Vereinen und Stiftungen als Museumsträger betrieben. Zentren der Museen und Sammlungen… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Heinz Berggruen — (January 5, 1914 February 23, 2007) was a German art dealer and collector who founded the Berggruen Museum [ [http://www.smb.spk berlin.de/smb/sammlungen/details.php?objID=22 lang=en Berggruen Museum Homepage] ] in Berlin, Germany.He was born in… …   Wikipedia

  • Kulturgeschichtliches Museum — Filmmuseum Potsdam Musikinstrumenten Museum Markneukirchen Diese Liste gibt einen Überblick über Museen in Deutschland. Sie ist nach thematischen Schwerpunkten sortiert und erhebt keinen Anspruc …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”