Berlinische Galerie
The Berlinische Galerie's collection was formed in the Charlottenburg area of Berlin in 1975, but it has moved several times over its history. It became the 'Gallery of the 20th Century' in Bahnhof Zoo in 1978, after which it became part of the New National Gallery. It relocates to Martin-Gropius-Bau in 1986. Following its re-designation as a public collection in 1994, its final resting place is commissioned and finished in 2004. The current museum is located on Alte Jakobstraße, at the conclusion of an open-air artwork trail that is part of the ongoing exhibition Kunst - Stadt - Raum. Several rows of letters in yellow boxes may be found directly outside the museum entrance.
You should try to figure out who the great artists are! Explore 4,100 square meters of art spanning Classical Modernism to the most cutting-edge installations, as well as the Expressionist, Dada, and New Objectivity movements. The museum is pleasing to the eye in terms of design. Its core space, once an industrial hall, is now bathed in bright white light. The permanent display upstairs is connected to the temporary exhibitions on the ground floor by two remarkable sets of free-standing steps that run the length of the room. The gallery offers fresh perspectives on modern art, re-contextualizing works like Georg Baselitz's A Modern Painter, which was created in 2007.
Address: Alte Jakobstraße 124 – 128, 10969 Berlin
Website: https://berlinischegalerie.de/