Where are the main museums in Berlin located? Beata Uze Erotic Museum

Berlin is a paradise for those who like to travel through cool Europe. Here you can endlessly wander through the exhibition halls, drink hot coffee, enjoy art of all styles and learn new and amazing facts about the history of the city. The cultural landscape of Berlin consists of sacred and neoclassical architecture, ancient and medieval archeology, paintings by representatives of all artistic movements, historical installations... In this post, there are seven museums and exhibitions that I recommend visiting in Berlin.

Pergamon Museum, Bodestraße 1-3, 10178 Berlin

Of all the archaeological diversity, it stands out for its significant collection. Pergamon Museum. The building follows the shape of the Pergamon Altar from ancient Greek Pergamon, a discovery by German archaeologists that is more than 2,000 years old. The altar managed to visit post-war Leningrad, and the Nazis used it as a symbol of the 1936 Olympic Games. The sculptural frieze, displaying the perfect bodies of the Olympian gods, clearly tells the story of the struggle of the gods against the Titans. The Gate of the goddess Ishtar tells here about the history of ancient Babylon, the Millet Gate testifies to the earthquake in Ancient Rome, the facade of the Mshatta Palace from the era of the Umayyad Caliphate is a rare relic of the era of early Islamic art.

German Historical Museum, Unter den Linden 2, 10117 Berlin

Inner courtyard of the Arsenal building (German Historical Museum) in 1908

The oldest building on Unter den Linden Boulevard that survived the Allied bombing is the Arsenal (German: Zeughaus). Built in 1685 in Baroque style, the building is today the largest historical museum in the country. The exhibition covers a thousand-year period from the history of the ancient Germanic tribes to the fall . Attracts a huge number of weapons, from polearms to automatic ones from the Second World War. All stages of the development of German society, detailed description stories of three Reichs and divided Germany. Numerous uniforms, documents, photographs... I was shocked by the huge detailed installation model of the “showers” ​​in the Auschwitz concentration camp and the Wehrmacht statue by sculptor Arno Brecker.

Berlin Art Gallery, Matthaikirchplatz, 10785 Berlin


Rubens Hall at the Berlin Art Gallery

The Berlin Art Gallery is a Mecca for art lovers. Works famous masters XIII - XVIII centuries in 53 exhibition halls with a total area of ​​7,000 m². Jan van Eyck, Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Bruegel, Rubens, Titian, Botticelli - that’s far from full list geniuses of world painting presented here. The gallery is located in an architectural complex Cultural forum(German: Kulturforum), whose endless façade of terracotta panels interrupts the neo-Renaissance façade of the villa of publisher Paul Pareus. For the more insatiable visitors, the complex, built in the 60s right next to the Berlin Wall, also houses Engraving cabinet and there are temporary exhibitions of works by famous and representatives of postmodernist movements in painting.

Museum of Photography, Jebensstrasse 2, 10623 Berlin


Helmut Newton's grave in Berlin

The works of Australian photographer of German-Jewish origin Helmut Newton are primarily aesthetics female body against the backdrop of glamorous interiors and urban landscapes. Newton worked with such celebrities as David Bowie, Anthony Hopkins, Björk, Andy Warhol... Berlin Museum of Photography. Helmut Newton is also hosting this year's "Private Property" collection: personal items, photographs and furnishings from the photographer's residence in Monte Carlo. Museum is located in the former building of the officers' casino, built in the imperial style of the Gründer era, and is adjacent to the building of the Zoological Garden station (German: Zoologischer Garten).

The Story of Berlin, Kurfürstendamm 207-208, 10719 Berlin


Berlin History Museum on Kurfürstendamm

Charlottenburg Palace, Spandauer Damm 20-24, 14059 Berlin


Charlottenburg Palace

Feel the atmosphere of royal chambers early XVIII century is possible in Charlottenburg Palace Museum. Back in 1696, the Prussian princess Sophia Charlotte of Hanover ordered the laying of the first stone of the Litzenburg Palace, which was then still on the way from Berlin to Potsdam. In 1701, the princess became queen, the palace continued to be expanded, as well as the first baroque palace park in Prussia. In 1705, after the death of his wife, King Frederick I named the palace after her - Charlottenburg... Today there are interiors from the era of the first Prussian royal couple, antique furniture brought from India and China, tapestries and portraits of members of the royal Hohenzollern dynasty, a small chapel for prayers and funeral services for the dead, a collection of Prussian and Chinese porcelain. There are even huge porcelain vases with the image Russian troops in the background is a gift from the Russian Emperor Alexander I and a portrait of Tsar Peter I

If you're hungry after visiting the museums, you can taste traditional German cuisine in a fresh Berlin restaurant Sauerkraut(translation from German: sauerkraut). And don't forget about ours))

Berlin's most famous museum - and undoubtedly one of the most popular in Germany with over a million visitors a year. The magnificent Pergamon Museum is located in the city center on Museum Island e. It was opened in 1930 to house a collection of full-scale reconstructions of ancient monumental buildings, the museum is truly a series unique museums under one roof, including collections of antiquities, the Museum of the Middle East and the Museum of Islamic Art. The main attraction of the museum, of course, is the Pergamon Altar. Considered one of the wonders of the ancient world, this massive monument dedicated to Zeus and Athena was erected in ancient city Pergamon in Turkey around 180 BC. Other important exhibits include examples of Hellenistic architecture, including the Roman market gate at Miletus from 165 BC. e. and restored 3rd century BC. e. mosaic floor. Also interesting are examples of Neo-Babylonian architecture from the time of Nebuchadnezzar II, including the monumental Ishtar Gate and part of the throne room façade from Babylon. The museum's most valuable exhibit of Islamic art is the 8th-century façade of Mshatt Castle from Jordan.

2. Egyptian Museum of Berlin

The Egyptian Museum in Berlin - the most important part of the new museum on Museum Island - includes many important artifacts with a rich history from Egypt, including an impressive collection of papyrus. Also on display are about 1,500 works of art and culture dating back to 5000 BC. e. before 300 AD BC, including the limestone head of Queen Nefertiti, wife of Pharaoh Akhenaten, from approximately 1350 BC. BC, and a family altar depicting Nefertiti and Akhenaten with three of their six daughters. Other highlights include portraits, masks and tombstones of a royal sculptor named Buck and his wife. Also of note are works from the Fifth Dynasty around 2400 BC. e., including a portrait of a married couple. The New Museum is also home to a museum of prehistoric and early history and exhibits from the collection of classical antiquities.


3. The Dahlem Museum Complex

The Dahlem Museum Complex (Dahlem Museum) is home to the most important collections of non-European artefacts and treasures, and also has the world's largest collection of European decorative and folk art from many other cultures. The Ethnographic Museum presents a collection of more than 400,000 objects. The Asian Art Museum exhibits numerous works of art from China, Korea and Japan dating back to 3000 BC. e. to this day, including bronzes, ceramics, paintings and sculptures. Particularly noteworthy are the 63 Chinese bronze mirrors, dating from the 6th to 9th centuries, and the 17th century throne of a Chinese emperor. Finally, the Museum European cultures has an impressive collection of 280,000 ethnographic artifacts from all over Europe. Highlights include a collection of textiles, photographs and prints, as well as childhood-focused exhibits. youth culture and religion. The Dahlem Museum Complex is an amazing landmark of Berlin.


4. The German Museum of Technology

Opened in 1983, the Deutsches Museum of Technology or Deutsches Technik Museum Berlin hosts numerous wonderful permanent exhibitions, related to the country’s role as an industrial power in Europe and the world. Highlights include a fascinating look at the Industrial Revolution, with a reconstructed workshop and equipment from the country's first factories. During a tour of the museum, you will be introduced to an excellent collection of various bicycles, horse-drawn carriages, motorcycles and cars, while the big machines are in the railway transport segment, which includes locomotives and carriages ranging from 1843 to modern ones. The museum is also famous for its fine collection of aviation, from gliders and engines aircraft, both military and civilian to individual aircraft.


5. Berlin Art Gallery (The Gemäldegalerie)

Exhibited at the Berlin Art Gallery main collection Berlin State Museum, it is highly regarded for its magnificent collection European painting from the Middle Ages to the era of neoclassicism. The core of this impressive gallery is the former royal collection, which expanded significantly in the 20th century. Highlights include Dutch and Flemish painting, in particular the works of Rembrandt, Bosch, Van Dyck and Rubens. French painting is represented by works by Poussin, landscapes by Claude Lorrain, and paintings by Georges de la Tour, while German masterpieces are represented by works by Dürer, including The Young Woman from Vienna and famous portraits Hieronymus Bosch and Jacob Muffel. And also countries: Spain (El Greco and Goya), England (Gainsborough and Reynolds), and Italy (Bellini).


6. Berlin Museum of Applied Arts

The Berlin Museum of Applied Arts (Kunstgewerbemuseum) was founded in 1867 and remains one of the most important and most visited art galleries in Berlin. The museum presents all areas of European applied art from early Middle Ages to the present day. These are items made of ceramics, porcelain, glass, bronze, gold, enamel and the work of Byzantine jewelers, along with silver vessels, furniture, watches, textiles, embroidery, decorative carpets, art nouveau and art deco works.


7. The New National Gallery

The New National Gallery is housed in a modernist glass and steel building, erected in 1968, consisting of a square hall and a pleasant terrace, containing a number of sculptures by Alexander Calder and Henry Moore. The collection consists of numerous paintings, sculptures and drawings from the 19th and 20th centuries, including the Realists, the German School of Rome, French and German Impressionists, Expressionists and Surrealists, as well as a good choice American paintings. Among the most important artists are Adolf von Menzel, Manet, Auguste Renoir, Edvard Munch and Max Ernst.


8. The Old National Gallery

The museum building was originally built as a reception hall and special occasions, in 1876 it acquired the Old National Gallery in Berlin. The building resembles a Corinthian temple, located on a high plinth with a wide staircase. The entrance to the museum is preceded by a large bronze equestrian statue Frederick William IV from 1886, along with prominent female figures. The core of the collection contains examples from the neoclassical and romantic movements, as well as French impressionists such as Manet and Monet. Numerous German artwork and the sculptures are also well presented.


9. Jewish Museum Berlin

One of largest museums of this kind in Europe and certainly one of the most interesting from an architectural point of view. The Jewish Museum Berlin includes many interesting exhibits focusing on German-Jewish history and culture over a period of approximately 2,000 years. The collection includes rare documents, religious objects, paintings, photographs and sculptures, as well as many rare books, scripts, textiles. Of particular note is the museum's collection concerning Jewish life in medieval settlements along the Rhine, as well as the Baroque era.


10. Museum of the "Bridge" group (Brücke Museum)

In the Berlin district of Grunewald, in a large wooded city park, is located the most modest museum in Berlin - the Brücke Museum or the Museum of the Bridge group. It was built in 1967 as a gallery and archive for the works of the group of expressionist artists founded in Dresden in 1905, known as the Bridge. The initiative to create the museum came from the artist Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, one of the founders of the group, whose works are exhibited in the museum.

The museum displays numerous paintings, watercolors, drawings and sculptures of fellow group members: Erich Haeckel, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Otto Müller, Max Pechstein. The museum also has works by other artists, including Otto Herbig, Max Kaus and Emil Nolde.


Deutsches Historisches Museum Zeughaus / Museum of German History
Museum of German history from the mid-17th century to the present day.
The German Historical Museum is housed in the Zeughaus, a former arsenal built in 1706. It was the first large Baroque building in Berlin. The building was originally used as a warehouse for storing war trophies and weapons. The museum's permanent exhibition includes more than 8,000 historical exhibits telling about persons, events, ideas and processes in almost two thousand years of German history: from the first century BC. e. and to this day.
Address: Zeughaus, Unter den Linden 2, 10117 Berlin
Opening hours: Friday - Tuesday 10:00-18:00; Thursday 10:00-22:00; Wednesday is a day off.
Entrance fee: 2,00 € ; children (up to 18 years old) - for free.

Neue Wache / Former guardhouse building
Mausoleum-monument to the victims of fascism and militarism.
The design of the Neue Wache building, the main creation of German classicism, was carried out by Karl Friedrich Schinkel. Since 1993, on the initiative of Federal Chancellor Helmut Kohl, an enlarged copy of Käthe Kollwitz’s sculpture “Mother with her Dead Son” (also called “Pieta”), made by Harald Hacke, has been installed in the spacious premises of Neue Wahe.
Address: Unter den Linden 4, 10117 Berlin-Mitte
Opening hours: daily 10:00 - 18:00.

Pergamon-Museum / Pergamon
The first architectural museum in the world, which presents the art of antiquity, Asia and Islamic peoples.
Ancient Greek and Roman culture - architecture, sculptures, vases, manuscripts, mosaics, bronzes and jewelry. In the Asian part (along with the Louvre and British Museum) presents one of the most significant collections of oriental ancient art in the world. The exhibition area is 2000 sq. m You will get a comprehensive impression of the history, culture and art of the East. Exhibits of the art of Islamic peoples from the 8th to the 19th centuries come from different countries, from Spain to India. The pearls of the collection are exhibits from the East, Egypt and Iran.

Address: Kupfergraben, Eingang Pergamonmuseum, 10178 Berlin
Opening hours: Tuesday - Sunday 10:00 - 17:00; Thursday 10:00 - 22:00.
Entrance fee: 6,00 €

Neues Museum / New Museum
Modern Art.
Address: Bodestraße 1-3, 10117 Berlin-Mitte

Bode-Museum / Bode Museum
Museum of Ancient Egypt + Museum of Early Christian and Byzantine Art + Art Gallery + Museum of Sculpture + Numismatic Cabinet.
This museum includes the Egyptian Museum, the Museum of Prehistory, an impressive art gallery, large collections of Byzantine art, and the Coin Cabinet. Therefore, you can get acquainted with the museum’s collection for more than one day.
Address: Bodemuseum, Bodestraße 1-3, 10178 Berlin-Mitte
Opening hours: Tuesday - Sunday 09:00 - 17:00; Monday is a day off.
Travel: by metro (U6), skytrain (S1,2,25), bus No. 147 to Friedrich St., by skytrain (S5,7,75), tram (M4,5,6) to Hackescher Markt station ; by tram M1, 12 - to the Am Kupfergraben stop, by TXL buses to Staatsoper and No. 100, 200 to Lustgarten park.

Alte Nationalgalerie / Old National Gallery
Painting, sculpture of the 17th - 19th centuries.
Address: Bodestraße 1-3, 10178 Berlin
Opening hours: Tuesday - Sunday 10:00 - 18:00; Thursday 10:00-22:00


Treptow park / Treptow park
The park was created in 1876 and its development was continued by Johann Gustav Meyer. In 1919, 15,000 workers gathered here for a strike led by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht. The park is also famous for its monument dedicated to the 5,000 Soviet soldiers who died and were buried here. This place is the largest cemetery for Soviet soldiers in Germany after the cemetery in Niederschonhausen. It was built in 1947 - 1949. in the monumental Stalinist style with tombstone panels and frescoes depicting scenes of war.
Address: Am Treptower Park 14, 12435 Berlin
Working hours: Monday - Friday 8:00 - 20:00; Sunday 08:00 - 18:00

Berliner Zoo
occupies an area of ​​160 hectares, a park with spacious enclosures, the most interesting buildings are a pavilion for elephants, a pavilion for wild animals, a snake farm, and much more.
Address: Am Tierpark 125, 10307 Berlin
Opening hours: January - February 09:00 - 17:00; March 09:00 - 18:00; April - September 09:00 - 19:00; October 09:00 - 18:00; November - December 09:00 - 17:00; December 24 09:00 - 14:00
Entrance fee: 9,00 € , preferential = 4,50 € , child = 7,00 €

Dahlem / Dahlem Museum Complex
Fully functioning farm in the southwestern part of Berlin, in the Zehlendorf district. History and prospects for the development of agriculture and food + history of villages now part of Berlin, including the history of Dahlem + Art Gallery
Address: Königin-Luise-Straße 49, 14195 Berlin
Opening hours: daily from 10:00-18:00; Tuesday is a day off.
Entrance fee: 2,00 € , children under 14 years old - for free, on Wednesday - free entry

Museum Haus am Checkpoint Charlie
Berlin Wall; history of origin, authentic evidence of escapes under, above and through it.
The first exhibition opened on October 19, 1962 in a two-room apartment by Rainer Hildebrandt, who was the head of the museum until his death. The museum is based on the site of the legendary Check Point Charlie, hot spot The Cold War is where the division of the world began and where it ended. The Wall - history and events, original objects of successful escapes on, under and above the ground, the worldwide struggle for human rights. All texts in the museum are presented in English, German and Russian.
Address: Friedrichstraße 43-45, 10969 Berlin
Opening hours: daily 09:00 - 22:00.
Directions: U-bahn line no. 6 Kochstrasse / U-bahn line no. 2 Stadtmitte
Bus M29
Entrance fee: 12,50 € , schoolchildren and students = 9,50 €

Schloss Charlottenburg / Charlottenburg Palace
Summer residence of Sophia Charlotte, wife of Elector Frederick I: a state chamber in the Baroque style, a porcelain cabinet, a gallery of family portraits, a palace chapel. In the building: a museum of early history, a gallery of romance, a molding department.
Address: Luisenplatz, 14059 Berlin
Working hours: Tuesday - Friday 09:00 - 17:00; Saturday - Sunday 10:00 - 17:00; daily break 12:00 - 13:00

Brücke-Museum / Brücke-Museum
Painting, sculpture.
Paintings, watercolors, drawings, graphics, sculpture from the Expressionist period, primarily from the Brücke group.
Address: Bussardsteig 9, 14195 Berlin-Dahlem
Opening hours: daily 11:00 - 17:00; Tuesday - closed

Beate Uhse Erotic Museum / Museum of Erotica
Chinese and Japanese erotic art (illustrations from the 18th century), Indian sculptures, Bali culture, European erotic art.
Four floors, 5,000 exhibits and a quarter of a million visitors annually.
Address: Kantstraße/Ecke Joachimstaler Straße, 10623 Berlin
Opening hours: daily 09:00 - 24:00

Gemäldegalerie / Picture gallery
Collection of European Arts XIII- XVIII centuries takes about 7 thousand. sq. m of exhibition space. The exhibition includes masterpieces by artists different eras: Van Dyck, Brugel, Raphael, Titian, Caravaggio, Rubens, Vermeer, Rembrandt...
Address: Matthaikirchplatz 8 (Kulturforum)
Directions U-Bahn U2 (Potsdamer Platz)
S-Bahn S1, S2, S25
bus M29; M41; M48, M85; 200, 347
Opening hours: Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday 10:00 - 18:00; Thursday 10:00 - 22:00

Topographie des Terrors / Topography of Terror
History of the SS and police in the Third Reich, occupation in Europe after the 2nd World War.
This is an information and exhibition center and an open-air museum. It has existed in Berlin since 1987, when an exhibition about the crimes of the Nazis was opened in the dilapidated basements of the Gestapo. In 2010, a special building was built for the center. More than 500 thousand people visit the open-air exhibition every year.
Address: Niederkirchstrasse 8, Berlin
Opening hours: October - April 10:00 - 18:00; May - September 10:00 - 20:00

Führerbunker/ Fuhrer's Bunker
An area with an information board about the history of the “Führerbunkers”, which was blown up in December 1947, the entrances were covered with soil.
The bunker was the headquarters of the Fuhrer, in which he and a number of other Nazi leaders (including Goebbels) committed suicide. The site of the emergency exit is now a parking lot. After many years of research, the "Berliner Unterwelten" (Berlin Underworlds) Association, in cooperation with the Senate Office for Urban Development, succeeded in establishing June 8, 2006 on historical place Gertrud-Kolmar-Straße information board with history and information about the Führer Bunker (in the Ministergärten near Potsdamer Platz). This board provides an opportunity those interested in modern and military history from all over the world to find this significant, albeit negative history, place. The designation of the area of ​​the former “Führerbunkers” should counteract the generation of myths and historical transformations.
Address: Gertrud-Kolmar-Straße, Berlin

Das Stille Museum / Museum of Silence
Painting.
Here is a collection of paintings by Russian artist Nikolai Makarov.
Address: Linienstrasse 154 A, 10115 Berlin
Ticket price: 2 euros 50 cents
Opening hours: Tuesday - Sunday 14:00 - 18:00

Jagdschloß Grunewald / Hunting castle
Art of the XV - XIX centuries.
Address: Hüttenweg 10 (am Grunewaldsee), 14193 Berlin
Working hours: 15.05 - 15.10 Tuesday - Sunday 10:00 - 17:00, Monday - closed; 16.10 - 14.05 only on weekends and holidays and only with a guided tour at 11:00, 13:00 and 15:00
Entrance fee: 2,00 €

Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung / Egyptian Museum
2000 masterpieces tell the story of Egypt. Monumental works and Egyptian architecture, as well as statues, reliefs, small plastic objects (bust of Nefertiti, portrait of Queen Thea and the famous “Berlin Green Head” attract up to 500,000 visitors).
Address: Schloßstraße 70, 14059 Berlin
Opening hours: Tuesday - Sunday 10:00 - 18:00

Madame Tussaud Berlin / Madame Tussauds Museum
In the summer of 2008, a branch of the famous Madame Tussauds museum opened in Berlin on the central boulevard Unter den Linden. This is the eighth Merlin Entertainments museum in the world. Here you can see famous politicians, figures of Germany's present and past, and outstanding people from other countries. The exhibition includes more than 70 figures, which are exhibited in 8 thematic halls on an area of ​​2500 square meters. The first hall is dedicated to the history of the German state. The second is culture. The third exhibits legends of the scene, next to it is the hall of sports champions, there is a VIP hall of Hollywood stars and much more. The museums exhibit figures: Angela Merkel, John Kennedy, Mikhail Gorbachev, Adolf Hitler, the head of the SED, Walter Ulbricht and Erich Honecker, Marlene Dietrich, Boris Becker, Pope Benedict XVI, Robbie Williams, Johnny Depp, Nicole Kidman, Karl Marx, Barack Obama, Justin Timberlake, Madonna, George Clooney and many others.
Entrance fee: 20 EUR/person

AquaDom / Aquadom
- largest in the world at the moment, cylindrical seawater aquarium, which is located in the center of Berlin. “AquaDom” is located in the courtyard of the five-star Radisson hotel. An aquarium is a tank made of acrylic glass 16 m high and 11.5 m in diameter. The height of the structure as a whole is 25 meters. An elevator shaft runs along the axis of the monumental glass cylinder. The elevator gliding along it is a transparent 2-story cabin, delivering visitors and tourists from the 1st floor hall through a giant aquarium to the top observation deck. All fish for him were selected very carefully. The most unusual inhabitant of the aquarium is the Napoleon wrasse, an inhabitant of the Indo-Pacific region. The volume of AquaDom is one million liters of sea water.
1 - Spree
2 - Wannsee
3 - Havel and Elbe
4 - Port of Hamburg
5 - Circular aquarium
6 - North Sea
7 - Rocky Shore
8 - Aquarium where you can touch starfish, anemones, etc.
9 - Seahorse Paradise
10 - Stingrays
11 - Depths of the Atlantic
12 - Jellyfish
13 - cinema hall
14 - Mirror Maze
15 - Gift shop
16 - AquaDom - pipe aquarium
Directions: S-bahn Alexanderplatz & Haeckischer Markt (S5/S7/S9/S75)
U-bahn Alexanderplatz U2,U5,U8
Bus 100/M48/200/248/TXL
Tram M1,M2,M4,M5,M6

Berliner Grusselkabinett / Berlin Panic Room
Three unique attractions:
- a fear room with live ghosts and brownies
- cabinet of figures on the history of medicine
- museum-bomb shelter from the Second World War

The former air-raid shelter has now been converted into a cabinet of horrors, and at the very least, mild goosebumps are guaranteed. Everything is shown here: witches and ghosts, gravestones and cemetery tools, vampires and the talking figure of a headless horseman. Address: Schoneberger Str. 23 A
Opening hours: Mon: from 10 to 15
Tue, Thu, Sun: from 10 to 19
Sat: from 12 to 20
Entrance fee: 9.50
Entry for children under 10 years old is NOT RECOMMENDED!
Directions: S-Bhf Anhalter Bahnhof
U-Bahn Gleis Dreiech Potsdamer Platz
Bus M29 and M41
Panic room website - www.gruselkabinett.com

Gärten der Welt im Erholungspark Marzahn / Gardens of the World
Japanese, Chinese, Italian gardens, labyrinth garden, etc.
Opening hours: daily
November 1 to February 30: 9-16
April 1 to September 30: 9-20
Entrance fee: 3 euros
Address: Eisenacher Str. 99
S Marzahn and take bus 195 to "isenacher"
Str.” U Hellersdorf and take bus 195 to “isenacher Str.”

Jacks Fun World / Adventure and recreation park "Jacks Fun World"
- the largest children's game complex in Berlin in the Reinickendorf district. A unique world of entertainment for children and adults. Attractions for every taste: cylindrical slides, mini golf course, sledding hill, climbing walls and towers, trampolines with bungees, the longest cable car in Berlin (100 m) at a height of 8 meters above the ground. For the little ones (1-5 years old) there is a large soft play complex with an area of ​​1,500 sq. m. m with a dry pool, wave slide and rope nets. Jacks Fun World is a great place to celebrate a child's birthday.
Address: Miraustrasse 38
Directions: S Eichborndamm
U Holzhauser Str.
U Rathaus Reinickendorf
Opening hours: Tue-Fri from 14.00 to 19.30
Sat, Sun, holidays and holidays: from 10.00 to 18.00
park website - www.jacks-fun-world.de

Deutsche Currywurst Museum Berlin / Curry sausage museum
Sausage - this delicacy in Germany has long been a source of national pride. An original museum, everything is dedicated and decorated accordingly: furniture in the shape of sausages, installations in the shape of French fries, drops of ketchup hanging from the ceiling, etc. In the museum you can get an idea of ​​what was in the refrigerator of the average German family in the 60s, prepare sausages for a while, get acquainted with various seasonings, etc. There are 2 types of entrance tickets to the Museum: simple admission ticket, its price includes a treat with sausage.
Entrance ticket SNACKticket, its price includes a menu set of 3 curry sausages + bun + mineral water). The museum is designed for both adults and children.
Address: Schuetzenstrasse 70 (100 meters from Check Pont Charlie)
Directions: U Friedrichstrasse/Leipzigerstrasse
Opening hours: 10:00-22:00
Admission ticket: simple ticket - 11 euros/adult, child x 8.50 euros.
Snackticket - 13.90 euros/adult, 12.50 euros x child

Bunte SchokoWelt /RITTER-SPORT / The colorful world of chocolate Ritter-sport
is a complex of 2 cafes, a chocolate museum and a chocolate shop. In the shop you can buy different types of chocolate, and in one of the cafes you can create your own personal chocolate. On the lower floor, little friends of Ritter Sport can visit the chocolate workshop and realize their own fantasies by creating their own chocolate bar - from the selection of products to the design of the packaging. At the master class, children and young people from 7 to 18 years old will learn all about the path of cocoa beans to chocolate.
Address: Französische Straße 24
Opening hours: Mon. – Wed: 10.00 – 19.00, Thu – Sat: 10.00 – 20.00, Sun: 10.00 – 18.00
Free admission!


Restaurant "Zur letzten Instanz"
- this is the oldest (1621) and one of the most popular restaurants in the city. According to existing legend, this medieval tavern received its name because it was located not far from the criminal court building, and criminals sentenced to execution here had the opportunity to drink the last glass of vodka for free before execution. The interior decoration of the restaurant is similar to that of a village tavern. It can accommodate 120 guests and also has a beer garden with seating for 50 people. Scenes were filmed here famous film“Seventeen Moments of Spring” (dinner of Stirlitz and Pastor Schlag). This restaurant is mentioned in the novel "Major Whirlwind". Many prominent people visited this establishment - Napoleon Bonaparte, Heingrich Zille, Ludwig Van Beethoven, Wilhelm Raabe, Maxim Gorky, Mikhail Gorbachev, Jacques Chirac, Engelhard Humperding, Jack Nicholson, Eva Mendes, Nicolas Cage, Jackie Chan and many others.
Reserving a table in advance is required!
Address: Waisenstrasse 15-16.
Opening hours: Mon. - Sat. 12.00 - 01.00

Badeschiff / Pool Badeschiff
In the Badeshiff pool, which is located directly on the Spree River, above the river water. A small bridge leads to the pool, and around it visitors sunbathe on sun loungers and hammocks. Badeshiff is open even in winter - it is covered with a special awning that perfectly maintains the temperature.
Address: Eichenstraße 4
Opening hours: in summer 08:00-00:00, in winter 12:00-00:00
Entrance ticket - 3 euros/person/day

Pfaueninsel / Peacock Island
The palace of Frederick William II is located in a picturesque forest park with peacocks. Entrance from Pfauinsel Highway to Zehlendorf.
PALACE opening hours: Tue-Sun 10:00 - 13:00 / 13:30 - 16:30
ISLAND is available daily from 08:00 -20:00

Zeiss-Großplanetarium Berlin / Zeiss Planetarium
Fascinating multimedia presentations with music, laser illumination on a variety of astronomical topics. The planetarium has a projection of the night sky; you can look at models of stars and planets. Slides, videos, music - transport visitors to distant galaxies. There are also exciting educational programs (including in Russian) for groups. Attention: do not confuse a planetarium with an observatory - in a planetarium all the stars and planets are artificial models.
Address: Prenzlauer Allee 80
Opening hours: Mon.-Fri. 10:30, Fri. at 20:00, Wed., Sat. 14,15.30,17,20, Sun 14,15.30 and 17:00.

Filmmuseum Berlin/ Cinema Museum
Fascinating exhibition dedicated to history German cinema, not only for specialists and film lovers. The museum is also designed for ordinary onlookers who will be able to press buttons, look into holes and use touch screens.
Address: Potsdamer Straße 2, 10785 Berlin-Tiergarten
Opening hours: Tue.-Sun. from 14.00 to 18.00
Ticket price: 6 EUR

Stasimuseum/ Stasi Museum
one of the most popular museums in Berlin by travelers, talks about the Stasi secret service, the East German equivalent of the KGB. Thematic exhibitions are often held, but the most interesting is the museum of spy gadgets from the 50s and 60s. There are hidden video cameras, secret weapons and many, many more spy things.
Address: Ruschenstraße 103
Entrance ticket: 4 euros – adults, 2.50 – children

Gedenkstätte Plötzensee/Plötzensee Prison Memorial
The Plötzensee Prison Museum is a memorial that was created by order of the Berlin Senate in memory of the victims of the Nazi regime. The prison was built in 1868-1879, the entire territory is under state security as a historical monument. The memorial complex commemorates the victims of National Socialism; more than 2,800 opponents of the regime from many countries were executed here, including Czechoslovakian journalist Julius Fucik, Hero Soviet Union Tatar poet Musa Jalil, Russian princess, heroine of the Resistance movement in France Vera Obolenskaya, as well as many of the participants in the conspiracy that ended in the failed assassination attempt on Hitler on July 20, 1944.
Address: Hüttigpfad, Berlin-Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf
Opening hours: March - October daily 09.00 - 17.00, November - February daily 09.00 - 16.00 (closed: December 24 and 26 and December 31 - January 1) Access: metro station "Turmstraße" or S-Bahnhof "Beusselstraße" further bus no. 123 to "Gedenkstätte Plötzensee" (3 min walk) Admission is free. There are no guided tours.

Gedenkstaette Seelower Hoehen/Museum-Memorial "Seelower Heights"
The Seelow Heights are the last line of defense of the Nazis on the way to Berlin. Here April 16-19, 1945 happened largest battle World War II on German soil, an operation of Soviet troops carried out within the framework of the Berlin offensive operation, the first stage of the offensive for the 1st Belorussian Front. On the eve of the battle, Marshal Zhukov had at his disposal 900,000 soldiers, 3,059 tanks and armored vehicles, 3,000 aircraft, and 17,824 guns. General Busse had at his disposal 90,836 men, 512 tanks and 2,625 pieces of artillery, supported by the 9th Army with 300 aircraft of the 4th Flying Division and the 23rd Division with 32 heavy batteries. For three days of continuous battle Tens of thousands of soldiers died on both sides: 33,000 Soviet, 12,000 German, 5,000 Polish soldiers. After taking the heights The Soviet troops of the Seelow Heights, many times superior to the enemy, encircled and destroyed the 9th german army. Here in November 1945 it was inaugurated Seelow Heights Museum - memorial to Soviet soldiers, then in 1972 a site with equipment and a small museum appeared, but with interesting exhibits. The museum is designed as a command post of the 1st Belorussian Front on Reitvein Heights. Through modern electronic technologies, outdoor exhibition and Soviet military cemetery museum visitors can get comprehensive information in several languages ​​about the battles of 1945, history of the museum-memorial. The Seelow Memorial is the burial place of more than 33,000 Soviet soldiers who died during the assault on the heights, 197 of which are identified, 2 mass graves and 66 individual graves. A monument to the Soviet war by sculptors Kerbel and Tsigal was erected here. The following materials were used for the construction of the complex: the base of the monument is granite, the monument is gray limestone, the figure of a soldier is made of bronze, the armored tower is gray limestone. Nearby is a stone map of the fighting on the Seelow Heights. In 2003, Archbishop Theophan of Berlin and Germany consecrated a cross in memory of the fallen soldiers of the Red Army with the inscription: “To the children of Russia from the mother of the Church.” December 15, 2012 after restoration memorial Complex was re-opened, this solemn event was attended by the Minister-President of the State of Brandenburg, Matthias Platschek, and the Ambassador of the Russian Federation to Germany, Vladimir Grinin.
Opening hours: November-March Tue. to Sun. - 10:00 - 16:00
For Christmas and New Year- does not work.
April-October Tue. to Sat. - 10:00 - 17:00
on holidays - open.
Last launch 30 minutes before closing!
Directions: by train from Berlin on regional express RE 1 to Frankfurt on the Oder, then on RB 60 to Seelow (Mark), then 3 minutes on foot.

Luegenmuseum in KYRITZ / Museum of Lies in Kyritz
- controversial museum near Berlin (1 hour 12 minutes by train) in the city of Kyritz. The motto of this museum is “Don’t believe your eyes”! The founder of the museum is a famous German Dadaist artist and former dissident Reinhard Zabka believes that the line between truth and lies is often blurred, especially in art, because art itself is an illusion. He claims that part of the collection came to the museum from the great-granddaughter of the famous Baron Munchausen, Emma von Hohenbuss. All the exhibits here are “tricks”. The deception begins already at the entrance to the museum - guests are offered to try a plastic cake and a magic potion, which is actually nothing more than ordinary tea. the museum has 10 rooms with exhibits: a working flying carpet; Hitler's fake mustache, witch's broom; Van Gogh's severed ear; a mop that belonged to Stalin's father; radio from the Titanic; the airplane the German Chancellor played with as a child; the mummy of Bishop Havel in the form of a cat, etc.
Opening hours: Sat.+Sun. 13.00 - 18.00
Admission is free - donation upon exit
More details on the museum website - http://www.luegenmuseum.de

Stendal / Stendal, (Saxony-Anhalt)
- city with thousand years of history, founded in 1151 by Albrecht the Bear, first marquis and founder of Brandenburg, presumably buried here in Stendal. During the division of the Brandenburg Mark in 1258 between the brothers John I and Otto III, Stendal became the seat of the senior line of the House of Ascania. Stendal was then one of the most important cities in Brandenburg and was considered a member of the Hansa. The most famous native of Stendal is art critic and historian Johann Winckelmann. Another character associated with Stendhal is the French novelist Henri Marie Bayle, who took the pseudonym Stendhal in honor of this city. The 10th Magdeburg Hussar Regiment, military personnel of the Prussian Army, which had the richest and most interesting story. Until 1919, Stendal was a garrison town of the Green Hussars. Until the end of World War II, the complex of buildings was used by the Wehrmacht. After 1945, the barracks were transferred to Soviet troops.

Visiting museums is an integral part of every tourist trip. At any age it is interesting to learn and see something new and exciting! Berlin is no exception, as it has a huge number of museums that are attractive to all ages and interests. We offer you a list of the most iconic museums in the German capital, which should definitely be included in your “tourist arsenal” and the list of “What to see in Berlin?”

Museumsinsel

Museumsinsel- this complex includes 5 of the most famous museums not only Berlin, but the world. All of them are located within close distance from each other, so you won't need to wander around looking for each of them. It’s not for nothing that “Museumsinsel” is translated from German as museum island, because it really is an island of knowledge, beauty and art.

You can purchase tickets to these museums on the official website of the State Museums of Berlin https://shop.smb.museum/#/start. If you want to visit several museums, it is worth purchasing a single day ticket for all Museumsinsel exhibition areas. Its cost is 18 euros.

So, let's begin:

Pergamonmuseum

Pergamonmuseum(Pergamon Museum) - such an unusual name hides an entire ensemble of colossal architectural structures. If you are a fan Ancient world Greece, Rome, Islamic states, Byzantium and the countries of the front part of Asia, then you should definitely visit this place. The processional road brought from Babylon and the Ishtar Gate will definitely not leave you indifferent!

Address: Am Kupfergraben 5, 10178 Berlin

Opening hours:
Monday-Wednesday - 10:00-18:00
Thursday - 10:00-20:00
Friday-Sunday 10:00-18:00

Ticket price: 12 euros (reduced 6 euros)
Official site:
http://www.smb.museum/museen-und-einrichtungen/pergamonmuseum/home.html

Altes Museum

Altes Museum(Old Museum) - is the first building in the Museumsinsel complex. Not only the exhibits, but also the museum building itself is a landmark structure of the Classical era. It was built from 1823 to the 1830s according to the design of the architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel. Here you will find famous busts, sarcophagi of Egyptian pharaohs, various images of the Roman-Egyptian period, as well as other antique collections State museums Berlin.

Address: Am Lustgarten 1, 10178 Berlin

Opening hours:
Monday - closed
Tuesday, Wednesday -10:00-18:00
Thursday - 10:00 - 20:00

Price: 10 euros (preferential - 5 euros)
Official site: http://www.smb.museum/en/museums-institutions/altes-museum/home.html

Neues Museum

Neues Museum(New Museum) - This museum has a very dramatic history. The museum was opened in 1850 and until the outbreak of World War II it developed successfully. But during the war years the building was seriously damaged, and restoration began only in 1986. For more than 20 years, architects restored the museum; it was decided to leave traces of shootings and bombings on the walls as a symbol of the tragic events and a reminder to descendants that war is always scary. On three floors of the museum you can find a large collection of papyri, various artifacts, household items of ancient people, ancient Egyptian pharaohs. The new museum is famous for the fact that it houses a bust of the beautiful Nefertiti, which dates back to the 14th century BC.

Address: Bodestr. 3, 10178 Berlin

Opening hours:
Monday - Wednesday -10:00-18:00
Thursday -10:00 - 20:00
Friday-Sunday - 10:00-18:00

Price: 12 euros (reduced price - 5 euros), children and teenagers under 18 - free admission

Bode-Museum

Bode-Museum(Bode Museum) - The Wilhelm von Bode Museum has collected a rich collection of exhibits of Byzantine art, ritual objects of Egypt, as well as sculptures by such famous European masters as Donatello, Francesco Laurana, Luca della Robbia. A huge domed hall, marble statues of Frederick the Great, luxurious staircases in the Rococo style - the museum itself is a separate work of art. By the way, it was the art critic Wilhelm von Bode who was the first to propose recreating the atmosphere of a particular era not only through exhibits, but also through the design of the halls to which they belonged.

Address: Am Kupfergraben, 10117 Berlin

Opening hours:
Monday - closed
Tuesday - Wednesday -10:00-18:00
Thursday - 10:00 - 20:00
Friday-Sunday - 10:00-18:00

Price: 10 euros (reduced price - 5 euros), children and teenagers under 18 - free admission
Official site: http://www.smb.museum/museen-und-einrichtungen/bode-museum/home.html

Alte Nationalgalerie

Alte Nationalgalerie(Old National Gallery) - was designed by Friedrich August Stüler from 1866 to 1876. It also contains masterpieces by Adolf von Menzel, Edouard Manet, Claude Monet and other famous masters. The most valuable exhibits are “Chess Game at the Voss Palace in Berlin” by Johann Erdmann Hummel (1818), “Monk by the Sea” by Caspar David Friedrich (1808-1809), and the sculpture “Crown Princess Louise and Princess Friederike” by Johann Gottfried Schadow (1795).

Address: Bodestr. 3, 10178 Berlin

Opening hours:
Monday - closed
Tuesday - Wednesday -10:00-18:00
Thursday - 10:00 - 20:00
Friday-Sunday - 10:00-18:00

Price: 10 euros (preferential - 5 euros).
Official site: http://www.smb.museum/museen-und-einrichtungen/alte-nationalgalerie/home.html

DDR Museum

DDR Museum(Museum of the GDR) - on the embankment of the Spree River, near the Liebknecht Bridge, there is a museum of the GDR close in spirit to any Russian. Here you can experience the everyday life of the first German socialist state and fall into the so-called “OSTalgia” - Trabant, youth life in the GDR, the Stasi, goods and services in the GDR and much more. Unlike other museums, most of the exhibits here are allowed to be touched and photographed.

Address: Karl-Liebknecht-Straße 1, 10178 Berlin

Opening hours:
Monday - Sunday 10:00-20:00
Saturday - 10:00-22:00

Price: 9.50 euros (preferential - 6 euros),

Museum für Naturkunde

Museum für Naturkunde(Natural History Museum) - Under the motto “Evolution in Action,” the museum presents impressive, rare and valuable exhibits that clearly and fascinatingly demonstrate the development of life on Earth, its beauty and uniqueness. And all this, on 6000 square meters. But the most interesting thing about this museum is the world's largest restored dinosaur skeleton! This will appeal not only to little visitors, but also to adults! When you come to this museum, you will undoubtedly feel like a hero from the movie “Night at the Museum.”

Address: Invalidenstr. 43, 10115 Berlin

Opening hours:
Tuesday - Friday 09:30-18:00

Price: 8 euros (preferential - 5 euros),

Deutsches Technikmuseum

Deutsches Technikmuseum(German Technical Museum) - museum visitors will be able to go on a journey through the history of technology. Don’t think that this will only be of interest to “amateurs” and boys. Here, in every exhibit you can feel the same world-famous German accuracy, pedantry, and practicality. Vintage steamships, planes, trains - it seems that they are about to come to life, thanks to the interactivity of the exhibition. By going to Spectrum - the science department - you can feel like a real scientist, independently design various natural phenomena, and even try to make some kind of iron figurine. In a word, everything here is aimed at understanding what surrounds us.

Address: Trebbiner Straße 9, 10963 Berlin

Opening hours:
Monday - closed
Tuesday - Friday - 09:00-17:30
Thursday - 10:00 - 20:00
Saturday - Sunday - 09:00-18:00

Price: adult - 8 euros (preferential - 3.50 euros), children under 18 years old from 15:00 admission is free, children under 6 years old - admission free.
Official site: www.sdtb.de

Museumsdorf Düppel

Photo: Peise, www.museumsportal-berlin.de

Museumsdorf Düppel(Museum Village Düppel) - takes visitors back to the Middle Ages with the help of reconstructed ancient village buildings. Here, on 16 hectares of land, the organizers recreated the life and way of life of peasants of the 13th century - dwellings made of huge wooden posts, sheds with thatched roofs, cattle pens, vegetable gardens, and various workshops. This is not just an entertainment center - it is a place where scientists recreate species of long-extinct animals and plants.

The village of Düppel is an hour's drive from central Berlin by public transport.

Address: Clauertstr. 11, 14163 Berlin

Opening hours:
the season opens in early spring and ends in late autumn, exact dates on the museum website www.dueppel.de

Saturday Sunday, holidays - 10:00-18:00

Price: adult - 3.50 euros (preferential - 2.50 euros), children under 18 years old - free admission.
Official site: www.dueppel.de

Deutsches Spionagenmuseum

Photo: www.deutsches-spionagemuseum.de

Deutsches Spionagenmuseum(Spy Museum) - "Espionage as an Art" or " Big Brother is watching you” - this is exactly how another unusual museum from our list positions itself. More than a thousand exhibits will tell you the history of espionage, from Antiquity to the sensational stories of intelligence operations today. Most of The exhibition is dedicated, of course, to the most dramatic period in the history of espionage - the Cold War. On interactive map you will be able to track secret points and observation points. The location for the museum was not chosen by chance, because Berlin is still considered the capital of espionage. From our video report you can learn more about what awaits you at the museum

Address: Leipziger Platz 9, 10117 Berlin

Price: 12 euros (reduced price - 8 euros), children under 6 years old - free admission.
Official site: www.deutsches-spionagemuseum.de

Text: Gulnaz Badaeva

In Berlin you can see both Van Gogh's paintings and unique paintings by local artists. A visit to the art museums of Berlin will leave a lasting impression on you, as it has gained an international reputation as a city of museums. The huge number immediately catches your eye international artists, working here, like many studios and ateliers in the city. Accordingly, there are many art museums to visit in Berlin. In this list you will learn about the most popular places in the artistic capital of the world.

Bréant Museum

This impressive museum showcases three floors of Art Nouveau and Art Deco works. The Brohan Museum is located in the beautiful western district of Berlin - Charlottenburg. Most of the works in this museum date from the period 1889-1939. Porcelain, paintings and some pieces of furniture were once part of the collection of Carl Brehan. Paintings by Hans Baluschek and portraits by Willi Jäkell are also a highlight of the exhibition. In addition to their extensive permanent collection, there are always special exhibitions.

Museum of Applied Arts

The Kunstgewerbemuseum, or Museum of Applied Arts, is one of the oldest museums in Berlin. Starting from medieval period to Art Deco times, this museum collects works by skilled craftsmen. The collection covers all styles and periods in art history and includes silks and costumes, tapestries, furniture, tableware, enamel and porcelain, silver and gold works, as well as modern crafts and design objects. All exhibits are of excellent quality. Many items were donated by representatives of the church, royal court and aristocracy. The closest metro station to the museum is at Potsdamer Platz.

Käthe Kollwitz Museum

At the end of May 1986, the Berlin painter and art dealer Hans Pels-Leusden opened the Käthe Kollwitz Museum. The permanent and most comprehensive exhibition of her work opened four decades after the death of Kathe Kollwitz thanks to this patron. It was in Berlin that Kollwitz lived and worked for more than fifty years. Its themes include reflections on life, death and poverty. Her strong feelings expressed through lithography, sculpture, drawings and graphics.

Georg Kolbe Museum

This museum is located in the former studio of sculptor Georg Kolbe (1877-1947) in East Berlin, near the Olympic Stadium. The museum was built in 1928 according to the design of Kolbe Ernst Rench and borders the sculpture garden, forming a single protected ensemble with it. All the works in this studio were created by the famous sculptor in the 1920s. Visitors can clearly see the changes in mood of his sculptures as they reflect the happier times of his younger years and the less colorful times during the Nazi regime. Most of Kolbe's sculptures are dedicated to the natural human body.

Berlin Art Gallery

The collection of the Art Gallery was founded in 1830, and since then has been systematically updated and supplemented. The exhibition includes masterpieces by artists from the pre-18th century, including Van Eyck, Bruegel, Dürer, Raphael, Titian, Caravaggio, Rubens and Vermeer, as well as paintings by other French, Dutch, English and German artists from the 13th to 18th centuries . Among the most outstanding works"Fountain of Youth" by Lucas Cranac, "Leda with the Swan" by Correggio - the largest collection of Rembrandt canvases in the world. The closest metro station to the museum is Potsdamer Platz.

German Guggenheim

Despite being one of the smaller branches of the Guggenheim, the museum is a must-see for any art lover. He organizes several significant exhibitions every year. Shown as works contemporary artists, as well as works by classics such as Warhol and Picasso. The stylish gallery was designed by Richard Gluckman and takes its name from the building it houses: the 1920 Deutsche Bank. The museum always has a free day on Monday, when most other museums in the city are closed.

House of Culture der Welt

The House of Culture der Welt, or the Chamber of World Cultures, lives up to its name as it is a leading center for contemporary art and home to projects that push all possible boundaries. There is always a rich and varied program of avant-garde art, dance, theater, literature and live music. This Berlin museum is also famous for having the largest collection of bells in Europe, with 68 examples. Visiting hours and exhibitions are constantly changing, so it's best to plan ahead through the museum's website.

Bauhaus Archive - Design Museum

Housed in a modern white building, this museum is dedicated to the projects of talented Bauhaus artists. Walter Gropius, founder of the Bauhaus school, hired the group famous artists to teach at his Dessau school. Modern exhibitions demonstrate the results of this work modern movement between 1919 and 1932, when the Nazis put an end to the group's progression. Objects on display include furniture, sculpture, ceramics and architecture by such renowned artists as Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Wassily Kandinsky and Martin Gropius himself.

New National Gallery

In the Neue Nationalgalerie (New National Gallery) there are always some interesting exhibitions. Here you can look at retrospectives of Hiroshi Sujimoto and Gerhard Richter. Most of the works date from the 19th and 20th centuries. German Expressionism is represented by artists such as Kirchner and Heckel. They are highlighted alongside classic modernist works by Dali, Picasso, Dix and Kokoschka. In the basement of the building there is a café and a souvenir shop. Architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed a unique glass and steel structure specifically for this museum

Hamburg Station - Museum fur Gegenwart

Situated in the renovated train station of Hamburger Bahnhof, für Gegenwart is famous for the work of many famous artists. This Berlin museum contains a rich permanent collection inherited from Erich Marx. Here you can see works by artists such as Amseln Kiefer, Joseph Beuys, Cy Twombly, Andy Warhol and Bruce Nauman. During the evening hours, unique lighting is turned on, making the museum even more unusual.