- Antikensammlung Berlin
The Antikensammlung Berlin (Berlin
antiquities collection) is one of the most important collections of classical art in the world, now held in theAltes Museum andPergamon Museum in Berlin. It contains thousands of ancient archaeological artefacts from the ancient Greek, Roman, Etruscan and Cypriot civilizations. Its main attraction is thePergamon Altar and Greek and Roman architectural elements fromPriene ,Magnesia ,Baalbek andFalerii . In addition, the collection includes a large number of ancient sculptures, vases, terracottas, bronzes, sarcophagi, gems and metal working.History of the collection
Foundation
The collection's foundations were laid in the time of the
Brandenburg Elector Friedrich Wilhelm I, including (among others) the acquisition of the collection ofGerrit Reynst . Acquisitions continued in 1698 when Friedrich III bought the important collection belonging to the Roman archaeologistGiovanni Pietro Bellori . After a longer interval, in which Friedrich Wilhelm I exchanged, among other things, 36 valuable statues for two dragoon regiments withAugustus II the Strong , followed in 1742 by Friedrich II's purchase of the collection of cardinalMelchior de Polignac , which included the well known figure of the "girl playing a game of knucklebones". He acquired in 1747 the already famous bronze statue of the so called "praying boy", which was set up on the terrace of theSchloss Sanssouci until 1786. the collection was significantly expanded in 1758 through the inheritance of the Markgräfin von Ansbach-Bayreuth's collection, which included the "Nile mosaic" fromPraeneste , and in 1764 through the purchase ofPhilipp von Stosch 's gem collection.The majority of the antiquities were scattered among the royal castles in the 1770s, or shown in a specially-built ancient temple in Potsdam where they were not accessible to the public. 1797 saw the first thoughts of public access, with the plan to erect a public museum in Berlin to show off the most important pieces in the royal collections, among other things. A commission under the direction of
Wilhelm von Humboldt was appointed to select the exhibits. At the same time as this new museum was coming into existence, further important purchases were made, for example in 1827 the collection of bronzes and vases belonging to the consul-general Bartholdy and in 1828 the collection of 1348 antique vases belonging to the general Franz Freiherr von Koller.The collection to 1939
The collection found its first home in the
Karl Friedrich Schinkel 's 1830 building (now theAltes Museum ) in theLustgarten next to the Stadtschloss. The collection consisted was predominantly Greek and Roman in the beginning, though it also included some medieval and modern sculptures. In the course of the 19th century, many further purchases were made, including in 1831 the Dorow-Magnus collection of 442 vases. The vase collection was expanded significantly in the following years by the bequest of the archaeologistEduard Gerhard 's collection and became one of the best in the world.The building's central room was the Rotunda, one of the earliest examples of purpose-built museum architecture, in which was exhibited the first display of sculptures, as chosen by von Humboldt's commission. Off it extended two halls, one of classical gods, the other of classical heroes, to which were joined two rooms with statues of Roman emperors, portraits, sarcophagi, cinerary urns and reliefs. Small objects were initially housed in the Antiquarium room.
The new museum's first director was the sculptor
Ludwig Tieck , and its first archeological curator (from 1833 to 1855)Eduard Gerhard . Even at this stage - thanks to Gerhard - the focus was not merely on displaying works of art, but also on scientific research and development, then a novelty in museums. A sign of this scientific approach was the beginnings of a systematic catalogue (with drawings) of the museum's ancient artworks from Italy and Greece. This collection of drawings grew fast and its 2500 leaves are used by researchers even in the present day.During his term of office, Gerhard did not restrict himself to acquiring 'star objects', but instead tried to look at the whole breadth of the collection and to expand it in a variety of areas. In order to produce a complete overview of ancient art-history, he also went against opposition to casts and encouraged their acquisition by the collection instead of expensive original statues. The cast collection - in existence since 1796 at Berlin's
Akademie der Künste - was connected to the museum in 1842. In the following decades, the collection expanded to become one of the largest of its type. The combination of originals and copies in time came to support the Museum's encouragement of research and scholarship.The old museum-building soon became too small for the collection and a further building, the "
Neues Museum " (New Museum), was built byFriedrich August Stüler between 1843 and 1855 to the north of the original building. In this new building, ideas of arranging the archeological collections into a full chronological and conceptual timeline began to become reality. In the lower floor of the museum the Egyptian collection (which had already existed for some years but not been accessible to the public) was put on show, whilst on the upper floor, the cast collection was set up according to designs by Stüler. The rooms' decor and wall paintings were designed specifically to fit the relevant subject or epoch. This new layout, however, did not last long, as in 1879 the vases collection was moved out of the Antiquarium into the new building.Even though the vase collection had outgrown the storage capacity of the old building, the available space was still not enough, so in 1883 it was decided to separate off the post-ancient sculptures into their own collection, to be housed in the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum (now known as the Bode Museum, or the Skulpturensammlung und Museum für Byzantinische Kunst ie the Sculpture Collection and Museum for Byzantine Art) that was already in the planning stages. Yet the 1884 purchase of the collection of
Peter Alexandrovich Saburov [In French, "Sabouroff", hence "the Sabouroff Painter".] again caused an acute shortage of space.To expand of the collection, the museum had since 1875 carried out its own excavations around the Mediterranean, starting with the ruins of Olympia. In 1878
Carl Humann andAlexander Conze began excavations in Pergamon, which brought the Museum its most famous object, thePergamon Altar . Further excavations followed in Priene, Magnesia, Miletus and Baalbek, but these excavations entailed new problems.The collection was enriched in the early 20th century by acquisitions as well as by excavations, such as that of smaller objects belonging to Friedrich L. von Gans in 1912, the glass collection purchased in 1913 from M. von Rath, the "Thronende Göttin" (Throne of the Gods) in 1916, the statue of a woman holding an apple in 1925, and a collection of mummy portraits from the Fayum in 1929.
For the presentation of all these pieces of ancient architecture, another new museum building was required. Between 1897 and 1899, the architect
Fritz Wolff created the firstPergamon Museum . It was opened 1901 and in its light well was displayed the Pergamon altar and other architectural examples. Yet problems with the foundations soon led to its closure and demolition closed and dismantled.Wilhelm von Bode in 1907 planned a new building, begun in 1912, but theFirst World War and theWall Street Crash caused building work to come repeatedly to a standstill. In 1930, at the collection's centenary, a new museum (named the Pergamonmuseum from 1958) could be delivered finally at the public, designed byAlfred Messel and built byLudwig Hoffmann . The three existing middle halls were reserved for ancient art.The old left wing became the Deutsche Museum, to relieve severe space problems at the Kaiser-Friedrich-Museum. The right wing was reserved for the Near East collection and the museum of Islamic art. The three middle halls - after large extensions were added - were able to present ancient architecture to its full height, with innovative use of natural light. There was no discussion as to the form of this presentation, leading to some embittered disputes that became known as the "Berliner Museumskrieg" ("Berlin museum war"). Through connections between the three archaeological museums, from 1930 until the museums' closure on the outbreak of war in 1939 visitors were able to undertake a tour through the early high cultures of ancient Egypt, the ancient Near East and the antique world for the next nine years.
The "Kriegsinferno"
In 1941, safeguarding the objects with
sandbag s and other measures began. What could be moved was largely taken to the Flaktürme at the Berlin Zoo and atFriedrichshain , and in the vaults of the Berlin Mint. With the bombing becoming worse, these places (especially the Flak-towers) seemed unsuitable, and on10 March 1945 it was decided to move the artworks to mines west of Berlin. After about ten convoys had started to move the collections there, however, it became too dangerous to do so, and this was postponed to the first week of April. So a large part of the small art and the supply of the magazines of the antique collection was instead taken to theGrasleben mines and toKaiserroda inThuringia . In the course of the war, the Altes Museum and the Neue Museum were destroyed, and the Museumsneubau and some of the exhibits were damaged. In spite of the concern over their safety, the art treasures in the Flaktürmen were hardly damaged during theBattle of Berlin .The worst, however, came after the end of the Battle, with the objects' guards everywhere deserting their posts and leaving all the stores to be plundered by both Germans and Russians. In two fires in the Flakturm Friedrichshain in May 1945 a large part of the art treasures stored there was probably destroyed including several antiquities. Others were confiscated by the
Red Army and take back toMoscow andLeningrad as "spoils of war", and has still not been returned. How much was taken in this way is still unknown 25 Greek vases that can be shown to belong to the Berlin collection were shown in 2005 at an exhibition entitled "Archaeology of the War" in thePushkin Museum in Moscow. Further vases were discovered in the moscovite of historic museum. Several vases, that were loaned in 1903 to the Provincial-Museum atPoznań (13 of the 19 vases are demonstrably from the Berlin collection), and several portrait busts that were loaned from 1908 to the Schloss there, were subsumed by Poland in 1945 into theMuzeum Narodowe inPoznań , where they are still held today.How great the losses were over the whole collection could first be investigated and documented after the reunification of the collection, with the first catalogue of losses appearing in 2005. This catalogue named five large bronze statues (including the "
Calvatone Victory"), approximately 300 marble and stone statues, more than 40 reliefs, more than 20 stone architectural elements, approximately 30 stone vases, more than 1500 vases and vase-fragments (including pieces by theAmasis Painter ,Berlin Painter ,Brygos Painter ,Edinburgh Painter ,Exekias ,Geras Painter andPan Painter ), 100 pieces of gold jewellery and more than 150 gems.The collection divided
The collection on the
Museum Island In 1958 the
USSR returned much of this war booty to theGDR , but with both the Altes and Neue Museum destroyed a new home was acutely needed for the collections on the Museums Island. The three middle halls of the Pergamon Museum once again housed architectural exhibits, and the central hall again housed the Pergamon Altar. In the right-hand Room was housed Roman architecture, and in the right Wing itself the Near East Museum on the first floor and the Islamic Art museum on the upper floor (as it had been before 1939). In the left hall was housed Greek architecture, with ancient sculptures (formerly in the Altes Museum) in the left wing, and for a short time ancient coins were displayed in the Münzkabinett Berlin. On the upper floor were Roman portraits,Etruscan art and choice pieces from the collection of small-objects. There was no room, however, for the art of ancient Cyprus until the Altes Museum was rebuilt and these objects had to remain in storeA new entrance was formed in 1982, that led now directly into the middle hall and, from there, to the Pergamon Altar. In 1983-84 the ancient sculptures were redisplayed, this time in a chronological sequence, beginning with archaic Greek art, through classical originals, Hellenistic sculptures and Roman copies of classical originals, and ending with Roman art.
Kept out of the international art market, the collection was restricted to maintaining and presenting the existing collection on the
Museum Island . Only in a few cases could the collection be enriched by new acquisitions, such as an outstanding Greek marble relief of two horsemen and seven precious vases from private owners.The collection in
Charlottenburg Also in 1958 the objects that had been evacuated to Thuringia during the war (then moved by the Americans to
Celle inWest Germany ) were returned to Berlin. Though a repatriation to the Museum Island was out of the question, other homes were found for the objects. In 1961 the antiquities (already on public display from 1960 in Stüler's barrack buildings at the Schloss at Charlottenburg) were placed in the charge of thePrussian Cultural Heritage Foundation . The objects displayed were the core of the collection of small artworks (including the well known bronze statue of the "Cretan ram-carrier"), most of the former vase collection, the ancient gold jewellery collection (including theHildesheim silver hoard), parts of the glass collection, the existing mummy portrait collections (with the addition of one of the few surviving ancient panel paintings, theSeverus Tondo ), and the collection of ancient helmets fromLipperheide . The display of antiquities, including the arrangement of the treasure chamber in the first floor of the Stüler building, was expanded in 1976. In 1987 the first floor became home to the vases fromMagna Graecia , upon which the arrangement of the antiquities collection was complete and extensive.In contrast to its East Berlin counterpart, the collection had access to the international art market, and was able to make its first postwar acquisition in 1958, the "torso of a falling wounded man". Up until reunification, as well as the existing material on the museum island, more than 600 new works of art were acquired by purchases and donation. These included numerous ancient vases (among others, the
Altamura Painter ,Berlin Painter ,Brygos Painter ,Chiusi Painter ,KY Painter ,Myson ,Pan Painter ,Paseas ,Pistoxenos Painter ,Smikros and theTriptolemos Painter ), numerous marble busts (including a portrait bust ofCleopatra VII ), sculptures (including a feminine idol of theCycladic culture) and sarcophagus (among others, a large sarcophagus of a Roman general well known since the 16th century). Along with these single acquisitions, some larger complexes also came into the possession of the Museum. In 1976 an ancient coin of fromHeinrich Amersdorffer 's collection, gold jewellery from Tarentum in 1980, a vase collection from a grave in Tarentum in 1984 (including ones by theArmidale Painter , theDareios Painter , the painter of Copenhagen 4223, theLoebbecke Painter , theLucera Painter , theUnderworld Painter and theVarrese Painter ) and the contents of a late Roman grave inCologne in 1986.The collection re-united
Tour through the current display
Pergamonmuseum display
Altes Museum display
The assembly in the Altes Museum takes in the ground floor of the building and is organized into three large halls and three smaller rooms as well as the Rotunda. The halls are divided up into 30 units in total, named Kompartiments. The Kompartiments are organized by their objects' time, place or theme. Several Kompartiments with connected themes are placed close together. Most Kompartiments between from 12 to 22 are on
ancient Greek art , represented above all by Attic vases, Kompartiments 23 to 25 are onMagna Grecia , 26 and 27 on theHellenistic era and the three last compartments onancient Roman art .Kompartiment 1 - Cyclades, Crete, Mycenae
In the first Kompartiment, the three great Greek Bronze Age cultures are presented. The
Cycladic civilization of the3rd millennium BC is shown through by a millennium of Cycladic figures and marble,steatite and clay containers are shown, the so-called "Kykladenpfannen" (Cycladic bowls).The Mycenean culture is most obviously represented through the fragment of a green limestone capital from the so-called "
Treasury of Atreus ", a monumental royal grave in the vicinity of Mycenae. The capital belonged to one of two half-columns that flanked the entry to the grave. Moreover some bronze and "ton" figures are shown, named thePhi -figure andPsi -figure after their resemblance to the Greek letters Φ and Ψ. Some of the Mycenean finds were painted by the Grabung in Miletus, including aHittite sword that shows close contact with Hittite culture. The earthen vessels on display correspond in part to the usual forms only ever found in the Mycenean culture, but there is also, for example, examples of thekrater form from that period that became important later.Kompartiment 2: Geometric Art
Geometric art is shown by examples of ceramic and bronze objects. These exhibits, from the era between about 1100 and the late 8th century BC, were generally discovered in necropoli, particularly from individuals' cremation and inhumation graves (with family burials of the Mycenaean era no longer being the norm). These were marked by gravestone or grave vases. These vases frequently also show, amidst their geometric borders, representations of the funeral cult, usually the surrendering of the dead ("Prothesis"), the sorrow of the family members, the funeral procession ("Ekphora") or the funeral games.Most geometric vases in the Berlin collection come from Attic graves, but the style nevertheless can be seen throughout Greece in different local styles. Pieces of several of these styles are shown, in chronological sequence. Grave goods were frequently made out of bronze, including mirrors, bracelets, pins and brooches. Consecrated cult objects are also on show, including bronze figures also found in graves, with bronze horses felt to be particularly noble as such goods.
Notable pieces are a Geometric-Attic neck-amphora with animal representations by the
Empedokles painter , a Geometric-Argive bow- handledkrater , an early Attic Hydria by the Mesogaia-painter, a Bronze votive horse figure as well as five-part set of grave goods (consisting of a Deckelpyxis, a Spitzpyxis, a Kalathos, a bowl and a three-legged stool). All these pieces are burned yellow in tone and with geometrical borders.Kompartiment 3: Archaic Art
= Kompartiment 4: Weapons and small finds from Olympia =Kompartiment 5: Ionic Greece I - Samos
Kompartiment 6: Ionic Greece II -
Miletus Kompartiment 7:
Corinth andAegina - trade in archaic GreeceKompartiment 8: Treasury (Schatzkammer) I - Gold
= Kompartiment 9: Greek Mythology =Kompartiment 10: States of archaic Greece -
Laconia andBoetia
= Kompartiment 11: States of archaic Greece - Athens =Kompartiment 12: Attic Vases I - Sport among the Greeks
Kompartiment 13: Attic Vases II - Sporting contests
Kompartiment 14: The Praying Boy
Kompartiment 15: Attic Vases III - The Greek deities
= Kompartiment 16: Attic Vases IV - Greek heroes =Kompartiment 17: Attic Vases V - Festivals and Feasts
Kompartiment 18: Attic Vases VI - In the sanctuary
Kompartiment 19: Attic Vases VII - Death and burial
Kompartiment 20: Treasury II - Silver
Kompartiment 21: Attic Vases VIII - Theatre and public life
Kompartiment 22: Attic Vases IX - Women's lives in the city
Kompartiment 23:
Tarentum - The Greeks in ItalyKompartiment 24: Greek culture in Italy
= Kompartiment 25: Tanagra and Hellenism in the east =Kompartiment 26:
Priene Kompartiment 27:
Hellenistic sculpture Kompartiment 28: Roman Portraits
Kompartiment 29: Roman
funerary art Kompartiment 30: Roman painting
Rotunda
References
Further reading
* Belser Kunstbibliothek, "Die Meisterwerke aus dem Antikenmuseum Berlin", Stuttgart / Zürich 1980
* Gerhard and Ursula Stelzer, "Bilderhandbuch der Kunstsammlungen in der DDR", Leipzig 1984
* Exhibition catalogue, "Weltschätze der Kunst – der Menschheit bewahrt", Berlin 1985
* Wolf-Dieter Heilmeyer (Hrsg.): "Antikenmuseum Berlin – Die ausgestellten Werke", Berlin 1988
* Rudolf Fellmann (Hg.): "Antike Welt im Pergamon- und Bodemuseum", von Zabern, Mainz 1990 (Sonderhefte zur "Antiken Welt") ISBN 3-8053-1186-9
* "Bertelsmanns Museums-Führer", Gütersloh / München 1992
* Brigitte Knittlmayer and Wolf-Dieter Heilmeyer (Hgg.): "Die Antikensammlung. Altes Museum, Pergamonmuseum", von Zabern, 2. Auflage, Mainz 1998 ISBN 3-8053-2449-9
*Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (Hrsg.), "Dokumentation der Verluste – Antikensammlung Bd. V. 1", Berlin, 2005, ISBN 3-88609-522-3
* Andreas Scholl and Gertrud Platz (Hrsgg.): "Altes Museum - Pergamonmuseum. Die Antikensammlung. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin". 3., vollständig überarbeitete und erweiterte Auflage, Verlag Philipp von Zabern, Mainz 2007External links
* [http://www.smb.spk-berlin.de/smb/sammlungen/details.php?lang=de&objID=3 Antikensammlung homepage]
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