An exhibition for the 100th birthday
The Angermuseum Erfurt is celebrating the 100th birthday of the important Leipzig painter Bernhard Heisig with an extensive exhibition that includes numerous key works and rarely shown paintings from private collections. The Stiftung Kunstforum Berliner Volksbank is supporting the exhibition with the 15 Heisig works that are part of the Kunstsammlung der Berliner Volksbank.
Heisig modernized history painting in a distinctive way. In his figurative paintings, his own war traumas, the collective pictorial memory and the confrontation with German history and the present are superimposed to create an emotionally charged panopticon.
Heisig’s moving, expressive style of painting, in line with the tradition of Lovis Corinth, Oskar Kokoschka and Max Beckmann, makes viewing the pictures a visual experience. A total of 70 paintings, including still lifes, portraits and landscapes, give a vivid impression of the creative power of the painter, who is counted among the founders of the Leipziger Schule.
“Bernhard Heisig. Malerei als Ereignis” can be seen at the Angermuseum Erfurt from October 12, 2025 to March 1, 2026.
Before the term ‘revolution’ was used in the 18th century – under the influence of the Haitian and Caribbean, French and North American revolutions – to describe a ‘violent overthrow of the existing political or social order’, it was used in astronomy to describe the rotation of celestial bodies.
The essayistic group exhibition Genossin Sonne (Comrade Sun), from 13. September 2025 – 18. January 2026, is dedicated to artistic works and theories that link the cosmos and in particular the sun, the energy supplier for life on earth, with social and political movements. Against the background of the decentring of the human being as a historical subject, we ask to what extent not only the environment on earth but also the cosmos plays a part in historical processes. Is there, as the Soviet cosmists – in particular Alexander L. Chizhevsky in 1924 – claimed, a connection between solar storms and terrestrial revolutions? And what speculative, pleasurable considerations can be found in contemporary art and poetry?
On loan from the Kunstsammlung der Berliner Volksbank, the painting “Sonnenstraße III” from 1990 by Wolfgang Mattheuer is on display.
MENSCH BERLIN in Vienna
The continuation of the exhibition at the renowned Bank Austria Kunstforum Wien is another highlight of the anniversary year. From July 9 to August 21, 2025, MENSCH BERLIN will be on display in the Austrian capital, carrying the cultural heritage of this unique collection beyond Germany’s borders.
The Kunstsammlung der Berliner Volksbank and the Stiftung Kunstforum Berliner Volksbank are celebrating their 40th anniversary. Founded in 1985 in Berlin (West), the collection took on a special position in the West German cultural scene due to its initial focus on GDR art.
Under the leitmotif „Bilder vom Menschen – Bilder für Menschen“ (“Images of People – Images for People”), later expanded to include Berlin cityscapes, the founders built up one of the most important collections of figurative art of the post-war period.
With reunification, the ratio of East and West German art began to equalise. Today, the collection consists of over 1,500 works by around 200 artists. The extraordinary profile of the collection offers the opportunity to compare artistic creation in Berlin and neighbouring regions before and after the fall of the Wall.
The MENSCH BERLIN anniversary exhibition traces this development and builds a bridge from the past to the present. For example, Rainer Fettings’ gloomy depictions of the Berlin Wall and Konrad Knebel’s sober, melancholy tenement facades convey impressions of a divided city, while more recent positions such as the luminous cityscapes by Roland Nicolaus and Carsten Kaufhold show how the perspective on Berlin has changed.
During its run in Berlin, from 20 February to 22 June 2025, the exhibition will change again and again. By regularly changing the works, you will not only experience the highlights of the collection at Stiftung Kunstforum Berliner Volksbank, but also rarely shown works. Gain new insights with every visit and look forward to exciting new discoveries and rediscoveries.
The exhibitions include works by: Gerhard Altenbourg, Annemirl Bauer, Norbert Bisky, Claudia Busching, Rainer Fetting, Ellen Fuhr, Angela Hampel, K. H. Hödicke, Ingeborg Hunzinger, Klaus Killisch, Wolfgang Mattheuer, Harald Metzkes, Cornelia Schleime, Erika Stürmer-Alex, Werner Tübke, Via Lewandowsky and Barbara Quandt and many more.
November 9, 2024 marks the 35th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. To mark the occasion, from November 8th, 2024 to March 2nd, 2025 the Stiftung KUNSTFORUM der Berliner Volksbank gGmbH and the Stiftung Brandenburger Tor, die Kulturstiftung der Berliner Sparkasse, im Max-Liebermann-Haus, are joining forces to explore the topic of the division of Berlin and the view of the Wall from East and West in art. The exhibition Die Mauer: vorher, nachher, Ost und West (The Wall: before, after, East and West) examines artistic positions from the second half of the 1980s to the early 1990s, focussing on the period of upheaval around 1989/90. How did artists from East and West Germany depict and process the Wall in their works? What presence and significance does it have in the artworks of the time?
November 9, 2024 marks the 35th anniversary of the opening of the Berlin Wall. To mark this occasion, the Stiftung Brandenburger Tor, die Kulturstiftung der Berliner Sparkasse, and the Stiftung KUNSTFORUM der Berliner Volksbank gGmbH invite you to a special exhibition from November 8, 2024 to March 2, 2025. Under the title Die Mauer: vorher, nachher, Ost und West (The Wall: before, after, East and West), artistic positions from the period around reunification in 1989/90 will be presented.
The exhibition presents works from the Kunstsammlung der Berliner Volksbank, which was founded in 1985. The focus of the collection is on realistic positions in German post-war art, particularly by artists from Berlin and East Germany. Complementary loans deepen the theme of the exhibition.
The Wall: before, after, East and West illuminates the Berlin Wall from two perspectives: temporally and geographically. The Wall is viewed before and after the opening; different views from East and West, from the GDR and the FRG, are brought together. This provides a multi-layered insight into a time of upheaval and new beginnings.
On display are works by renowned artists such as Annemirl Bauer, Manfred Butzmann, Rainer Fetting, Ellen Fuhr and many more. While the depiction of the Wall was often taboo in the GDR and limited to private, small-format works, West Berlin artists were able to take up the subject more freely and in large formats. The exhibition shows how these different conditions are reflected in the works and what role the Wall played in the art of this period.
The Max Liebermann Haus, home of the Stiftung Brandenburger Tor, is a particularly symbolic location for this exhibition. Located right next to the Brandenburg Gate, it was once a border area and the scene of the division of Germany. Today it is a place of remembrance and encounter – and therefore the ideal venue for this exhibition. The Stiftung Brandenburger Tor itself is also closely linked to the theme: The Brandenburg Gate, which gives the foundation its name, is a symbol of freedom and tolerance, of the unity of Germany and Berlin and of the opening between East and West. From this, the Stiftung Brandenburger Tor derives its mission to emphasize and strengthen the importance of culture for our civil society.