Berlin blog / Culture
Highlights from Berlin’s museums, galleries, and cultural outings.
MUSEUMSPASS
Thursday, April 5, 2018
The Museumspass is a special card which allows free access to most of Berlin's museums and is valid for up to 3 consecutive days.
Pergamon Museum
Thursday, April 5, 2018
This is the most important museum in Berlin‘s Museum Island and the most visited in the city.
The Martin-Gropius-Bau
Tuesday, September 26, 2017
The Martin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin presents high-quality international exhibitions of contemporary art, photography and cultural history.
Dalí: The exhibition at Potsdamer Platz
Monday, September 25, 2017
On the 5th of February 2009 the cultural highlight “Dalí – Die Ausstellung am Potsdamer Platz” opened its doors right in the pulsating heart of Berlin. The work of one of the most sophisticated and contradictory artists of the modern age, Salvador Dalí, is brought to the general public in a museum with permanent exhibition in Germany.
Art Laboratory Berlin presents No Human Agents
Friday, September 22, 2017
Opening: 29 September, 2017 8PMArtist Talk with Heather Barnett and Saša Spačal: 30 September 2017 3pmExhibition runs: 30 September - 26 November, 2017 The interdisciplinary event series “Nonhuman Agents” takes into account recent philosophical approaches which question anthropocentrism. These discourses emphasize non-human perspectives...Pfefferberg Theater
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Right in the heart of Berlin's beautiful Prenzlauer Berg lies a very charming theatre: "Pfefferberg Theater".
coGalleries: Your Berlin Art Experience
Tuesday, May 9, 2017
coGalleries is an on- and offline art platform which provides studio visits, art workshops and creative nite outs.
Exhibition: "In What’s Missing, Is Where Love Has Gone"
Friday, April 28, 2017
DECAD presents Christopher Petit's exhibition: "In What’s Missing, Is Where Love Has Gone"
15 March – 20 May 2017
Decad is a not-for-profit art space located in Berlin-Kreuzberg taking focus on the mutual influence of contemporary art and critical discourse within the public sphere. Their programme comprises four chapters: bi-weekly artist talks and critical lectures; ten-week exhibitions organised by guest curators; a research library on the socio-political significance of visual culture; and an archive on socially-engaged art practice.