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PRESS KIT Museum Barberini extends an invitation to a press conference in the empty building #EmptyMuseum on November 24 at 11 a.m., Humboldtstraße 5–6 (Alter Markt), 14467 Potsdam Dr. Ortrud Westheider, Director of the Museum Barberini, the architect Thomas Albrecht, and builder representative Willy Athenstädt introduce the newly reconstructed historical Barberini Palace, comment on the program of events for the Visitor Days #EmptyMuseum (Nov. 28 – Dec. 4,16), and take attendees on a tour of the empty museum. At this press conference the new museum galleries can be visited for the first time. Following the Visitor Days, the opening exhibitions Impressionism: The Art of Landschape and Modern Art Classics: Liebermann, Munch, Nolde, Kandinsky (Jan. 23 – May 28, 2017) will be installed. Panel: Dr. Ortrud Westheider, Director of the Museum Barberini Thomas Albrecht, Architect from Hilmer & Sattler Willy Athenstädt, Builder Representative The conference will be followed by a tour of the Museum Barberini CONTENTS 1. 2. 3. 4. Visitor Days #EmptyMuseum Barberini Palace: Its Reconstruction as a Modern Museum Opening Exhibitions & 2017 Program of Events Dr. Ortrud Westheider, Curriculum Vitae Johanna Köhler Leiterin Marketing und PR/ Head of Marketing and Public Relations Museum Barberini gGmbH Friedrich-Ebert-Str. 115 14467 Potsdam, Germany T +49 331 97992-192 [email protected] www.museum-barberini.com Ursula Rüter & Stefan Hirtz Projektbezogene Kommunikation ARTEFAKT Kulturkonzepte Marienburger Str. 16 10405 Berlin, Germany T +49 30 440 10 686 [email protected] www.artefakt-berlin.de 1. Visitor Days #EmptyMuseum With the Museum Barberini a new art museum is opening in Potsdam in January 2017. Around eight weeks before the official opening, the public will have a chance to explore the museum’s galleries from November 28 to December 4, 2016 before the artworks move in. Starting now, guests wishing to take part in the many events held during the Visitor Days can book free timed tickets through the Museum Barberini’s new website. Tickets to the opening exhibition which begins on January 23, 2017 can also be purchased online. During the Visitor Days guests can take tours or use the Barberini app to learn more about the eventful history of the reconstructed palace, and discover how traditional craftsmanship and innovative technology have been combined in the new building. The Museum Barberini will look back on the palace’s days as a youth hostel, theater, cinema, civil registry office, dance school, and concert hall. The Hybrid Letter Box shares eyewitness accounts of the Barberini Palace by converting handwriting into digital entries in the visitors’ book directly. The exhibition Barberini Palace: Stories of a Building sheds light on the history of the Baroque palace, from its creation in 1771/72 until its destruction in 1945 and examines its reconstruction from 2013 to 2016. During the Visitor Days the public can enjoy tours, readings, films, dances, music and many new galleries and perspectives. Visitors can also experience an exciting program of events every day from 12 to 9 p.m. between November 28 and December 4. Monday is dedicated to the building’s architecture with quick tours through the museum and a talk held by the architect in the evening. Tuesday is all about art for youth. Workshops and tours for young people and children will be held. On Wednesday Bernd Geiling, company member of the Hans Otto Theater, will be recalling the palace as a theatrical venue. On Thursday André Kubiczek will read from his novel A Sketch of Summer and on Friday the museum will be transformed into a cinema with silent films by Hans Richter, Man Ray and Fernand Léger set to the music of a DJ. In addition, couples wanting to tie the knot can register to hold their marriage ceremony at the museum free of charge. The following weekend begins on Saturday with tango classes and Argentine milonga with tanguito Potsdam and DJ Ultimo Guapo. It ends on Sunday with a closing promenade concert in cooperation with the Kammerakademie Potsdam. Admission is free. Tickets may be purchased online and the full program can be found at www.museum-barberini.com. Tickets are also available at the ticket desk in the museum during the Visitor Days. 2. Barberini Palace: Its Reconstruction as a Modern Museum The Original Building More than 250 years have passed since Frederick the Great commissioned the construction of the Barberini Palace. This monumental building, which was known to citizens of Potsdam as the Palast until into the twentieth century, had an eventful history. It was used as a residential building and an event hall, and then an administration building until its destruction at the end of the Second World War. Following its reconstruction as a museum, the Barberini Palace once again assumes its previous use as a cultural center. The Alter Markt (Old Market) with the City Palace was the centerpiece of Potsdam, the royal seat. In the years after 1750, King Frederick the Great wanted to give the square a representative appearance. He looked for magnificent models such as the ones he had seen in etchings depicting Italian architecture. The Venetian art dealer Francesco Algarotti advised him in this undertaking. Regarding a painting by the veduta painter Canaletto, Algarotti had written that the style of painting consisted of “taking a real place and then adorning it either with beautiful buildings located in entirely different places or with architectural follies.” Frederick the Great transposed this notion of painting to urban planning when he commissioned the architects Georg Christian Unger and Carl von Gontard to build the Barberini Palace between 1771 and 1772 on the basis of a Roman model. The Model The model for the Barberini Palace was the palazzo of the same name in Rome. It was commissioned by Taddeo and Francesco Barberini and erected by Gian Lorenzo Bernini in cooperation with other architects in 1627–38. The building in Potsdam features various modifications. The central section is smaller and protrudes from the façade; in the Roman palazzo it is recessed. The most conspicuous difference is the mezzanine floors in the Potsdam building, which were typical of local town houses. The front façade of the structure was imposing. Concealed behind it, however, was a simple building owned by residents of the city. Commercial buildings were located in the courtyard. In the nineteenth century, the Barberini Palace was believed by many to have been erected for the ballet dancer Barbarina (Barbara Campanini), who enjoyed great popularity during Frederick the Great’s reign. The dancer, however, only shares a name similar to that of the palace. From 1847 to 1851, King Frederick William IV had the Barberini Palace altered and upgraded. The investors were the master masons Heinrich Zech and Adolph Wilhelm Hecker, with the king contributing 80,000 thalers to subsidize the building costs. The plans for the alterations were drawn up by Ludwig Persius, a Potsdam architect. He rebuilt the building behind the decorative façade and adjusted it to fit the size of the front. Major changes culminated in a new appearance: Two rearward side wings created elegant living quarters and formed a courtyard accessible via the grand new portico. Even after the alteration and rebuilding from 1847 – 1851, the Barberini Palace remained situated on two separate properties with the house numbers 5 and 6. Little is known about living conditions in the Barberini Palace. More than 40 families resided here. Uses Richly outfitted halls were situated on the two upper stories of the central building. They were intended for use by the cultural societies that had been established in Potsdam in the first half of the nineteenth century. Members of the seven societies met in the halls of the Barberini Palace. The St. Lucas-Verein (Society of St. Luke) provided drawing and painting lessons. The art society organized exhibitions and art raffles, and the literary society held public readings. The music societies rehearsed for performances and organized concerts whose proceeds went to charity. The Barberini Palace was an established part of Potsdam’s cultural life. Musicians met here, including the pianists Clara Schumann and Anton Rubinstein, as well as the conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler. In addition to the cinema, the painters Max von Rüdiger and Carl Andreas Seeber ran a studio and a painting and drawing school. Potsdamer Stange, a local beer, was served in the restaurant in the cellar. In 1912, a municipal commemoration of the 200th birthday of Frederick the Great was held in the festively decorated rooms of the Barberini Palace. The City of Potsdam bought the building the same year. The first municipal institutions moved into the Barberini Palace in 1913. These included the civil registry office, the transport authority, and the tourism office. In the 1920s and 1930s, the building also housed the public library, a telephone exchange, the civil registry office, the youth hostel, a coal point, the office of economic affairs, and storage rooms for the museum of local history. Potsdam was subjected to multiple air raids over the course of the Second World War. The city took protective air-raid measures that also affected the Barberini Palace. Blackout curtains were purchased for the building in 1940. The fireproof potato cellar served as a repository for the original construction plans of municipal buildings and sites. Air-raid shelters were set up in the east wing. Apprentices in the city administration served as nightly air-raid wardens in these rooms, which were also equipped with cots. On April 14, 1945, shortly before the war ended, Allied forces carpet bombed the city, destroying large sections of the center, including the Barberini Palace. The attack claimed the lives of nearly 1,600 people. In March, 1948, the remaining rubble of the Barberini Palace was removed. The ruins of the fire-gutted City Palace stood until 1960, when the SED’s Politburo decided to demolish it in spite of numerous objections. After the demolition, the area of the Alter Markt was used for political rallies and events. Plans to reconstruct this central square during East German times envisioned a municipal hall and a theater on the site of the former Barberini Palace. The architect Günter Franke renewed the plans for a theater in 1985. The cornerstone was laid four years later. However, the shell of the building was torn down in 1991 following a resolution by municipal councilors. A provisional theater, mockingly known as the “Tin Can,” stood on the site until 2006. Reconstruction as the Museum Barberini In 2005, the City of Potsdam decided to rebuild the City Palace in 2005. This provided the impetus for the reconstruct the historical center around Alter Markt, formerly one of the most beautiful squares in Europe, according to the original designs. Based on a resolution passed in September 2010, the Barberini Palace was to be reconstructed as faithfully as possible as “landmark building”. The main façades, the portico, and the size of the building were to correspond to the original and allow access from Alter Markt to the bank of the Havel River. The Berlin businessman Abris Lelbach abandoned his initial plan to use the Barberini Palace as a hotel, making it possible for the cofounder of SAP, Hasso Plattner, to erect a museum to house his art collection. After a relatively short period of construction, from 2013 to 2016, the building was erected to house art exhibitions based on plans by the Berlin architecture firm Hilmer & Sattler und Albrecht. It meets all the standards of a modern museum. “The reconstructed Barberini Palace is the perfect place to present paintings, and it is with great good fortune that other locations under discussion for the museum project did not come to fruition. Instead we received a proposal to rebuild the Barberini Palace as a museum,” said Plattner. Exhibitions will be presented in 17 galleries at the Museum Barberini under the direction of Ortrud Westheider. The building also provides space for a shop, a restaurant, and an auditorium for readings, concerts and talks. Thomas Albrecht from the firm Hilmer & Sattler und Albrecht was commissioned as the architect for this special, historical building project. After a short construction period from 2013 to 2016, the building has been transformed into a museum that more than meets the high standards demanded by international art lenders. “Thomas Albrecht has devised a traditional structural design for the Museum Barberini that brings out the best in paintings. With our opening exhibition, we look forward to presenting them to you in their new surroundings,” says Dr. Ortrud Westheider, Director of the Museum Barberini. The main façades of the building were based on historical photographs and constructed from Elbe sandstone and plastered in the traditional manner. The entrance hall was given its original design with columns and vaulting, using traditional handcraft techniques. High-quality surfaces such as terrazzo, scagliola, and oak flooring complete the design of the building. Well-documented plans existed for the ruined Barberini Palace which could be used for its reconstruction, including photographical images from the 1920s and a cross-section of the building. This allowed the builders to recreate and exact replica of the exterior with all its historical inaccuracies. In order to make the building as authentic as possible, highly specialized craftsmen, who usually restore churches and cathedrals, were employed. 3. Opening Exhibitions & 2017 Program of Events From January 23 to May 28, 2017 the Museum Barberini will be presenting two opening exhibitions, providing insights into the collection. More than 170 works will be on display. Impressionism: The Art of Landscape Impressionist landscapes were not spontaneous mood paintings but were used by artists as a place to carry out their experiments. These artists liberated landscapes from their historic and symbolic significance. Designed to appeal to all the senses, the exhibition Impressionism: The Art of Landscape is divided into eight themes with 92 works which represent landscape painting as the guiding genre of Impressionism. With works by artists such as Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Gustave Caillebotte the exhibition brings major representatives of Impressionism to Potsdam. Modern Art Classics: Liebermann, Munch, Nolde, Kandinsky The term modern art embodies change, while classic stands for timelessness. The exhibition Modern Art Classics: Liebermann, Munch, Nolde, Kandinsky draws a line from German Impressionism to Fauvism and Abstract Art after 1945 and addresses this dynamic era. With over 60 works, it recounts Art Stories which reveal that modern art has more than one story to tell. Presentation of the collection: Artists in East Germany: A Look into the Collection The Museum Barberini Collection includes major paintings from the former East Germany. For the opening, two galleries present 20 works that illustrate a spectrum of painting that ranges from Bernhard Heisig to Stefan Plenkers. One gallery is dedicated to the imagery of Wolfgang Mattheuer, whose bronze Century Step has found a permanent home in the garden of the Museum Barberini. The website www.museum-barberini.com provides visitors with the opportunity to explore individual works and a fun way to learn about the exhibitions. Surprising and amusing perspectives fade Impressionist paintings into photographs taken on the same spot today. In addition, the website presents videos and background information on the history of the building and the artists in the collection, as well as Prof. Dr. h.c.mult. Hasso Plattner, founder and patron of the Museum Barberini. Outlook 2017/2018 Impressionism: The Art of Landscape Modern Art Classics: Liebermann, Munch, Nolde, Kandinsky January 23 – May 28, 2017 From Hopper to Rothko: America’s Road to Modern Art June 17 – Oct. 3, 2017 The summer exhibition focuses on the development of American art from Impressionism to Abstract Expressionism represented by masterpieces from The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C., America's first museum of modern art. Behind the Mask: Artists in the GDR Oct. 28, 2017 – Feb. 11, 2018 The exhibition explores the various ways East German artists walked the fine line between their position as role models and their withdrawal from society, and between the collectivism prescribed by the state and their own creative individuality. SERVICE INFORMATION Mon & Wed–Sun: 11 a.m. – 7 p.m., first Thu in the month: 11 a.m. – 9 p.m., closed Tue Mon–Fri (except Tuesday) for kindergartens and schools upon prior registration: 9 – 11 a.m. Admission: € 14 / Reduced: € 10 / Children and teens under 18: free Book tickets online at www.museum-barberini.com Museum Barberini Humboldtstraße 5–6 (Alter Markt), 14467 Potsdam Office Address: Friedrich-Ebert-Str. 115, 14467 Potsdam T +49 331 97992-185 [email protected] www.museum-barberini.com 4. Dr. Ortrud Westheider, Curriculum Vitae Ortrud Westheider has been Director of the Museum Barberini since 2016. The art historian wrote her doctoral thesis on Max Beckmann. From 2006 to 2016 she was Director of the Bucerius Kunst Forum in Hamburg, which is supported by the ZEIT-Stiftung Ebelin and Gerd Bucerius. She began working at this newly founded exhibition institute in 2002 as curator. While there, she designed numerous shows, including the exhibition trilogy 150 Years of American Art: 1800–1950 (2007–2009). In addition, she curated the exhibitions Max Beckmann: People by the Sea (2003), Frida Kahlo (2006), New York Photography 1890– 1950: From Stieglitz to Man Ray (2012), Rodchenko: A New World (2013), Mondrian: Color (2014), and Picasso: Window to the World (2015). “There is nothing more exciting than encountering original works of art. Let us show you.” (Ortrud Westheider)