In the mid-1980s the Berlin entrepreneur Erich Marx offered his private collection of contemporary art to the city. The
Berlin Senate decided in 1987 to establish a museum of contemporary art in the former railway station. The
Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation agreed to operate the museum as part of the
National Gallery. A competition for the renovation of the station was announced by the Senate in 1989, and was won by the architect Josef Paul Kleihues. Between 1990 and 1996, Kleihues refurbished the building, and in November 1996 the museum was opened with an exhibition of works by
Sigmar Polke. The
Museum für Gegenwart exhibits modern and contemporary art. Permanent loans from the Marx collection, including works by artists such as
Joseph Beuys,
Anselm Kiefer,
Robert Rauschenberg,
Cy Twombly and
Andy Warhol, are on permanent display. An emphasis of the Nationalgalerie collection is art on video and film, including a collection of 1970s video art—a gift of Mike Steiner—and the Joseph Beuys media archives. Since the museum opened in 1996,
Dan Flavin’s
Untitled (1996) has been illuminating the building’s windows and stone façade in neon green and yellow lights.
Rieckhallen In 2004, another part of the building complex, the former Güterbahnhof, which is connected to the Hamburger Bahnhof, was rebuilt as an exhibition hall, the
Rieckhallen, for the
Friedrich Christian Flick Collection. Between 2004 and 2010, the
Museum für Gegenwart exhibited parts of the
Friedrich Christian Flick Collection, whose main focus is on the late 20th century. The collection contains large-format works by
Paul McCarthy,
Jason Rhoades,
Rodney Graham,
Peter Fischli and David Weiss, and
Stan Douglas, including elaborate installations and complex filmic spaces. Due to its connection with the
Flick family, the display (which had been rejected by the city of
Zurich) gave rise to protests in 2004. Flick nonetheless agreed to lend 1,500 works to the Berlin State Museums, initially for seven years. The first show included about 400 works. Flick then extended the loan for another ten years to 2021. He also invested 8 million euros into having architects
Kuehn Malvezzi renovate the Rieckhallen, the former depot of the German Imperial Railway, to showcase his works. In 2020, the museum building's owner – Austrian property company
CA Immo – announced plans to demolish the Rieckhallen after the rental contract expires in September 2021. The planned demolition prompted Flick to end the loan of his collection. Shortly after, the
Federal Agency for Real Estate (BIMA) entered into negotiations to buy the Hamburger Bahnhof. By November 2022, the federal government paid €66 million ($68 million) for the Hamburger Bahnhof and the state of Berlin bought the Rieckhallen for around €100 million ($103 million) via a combination of funds and a land swap.
Directors • 2001–2016: Eugen Blume • 2016–2021: Gabriele Knapstein • 2022–present: Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath ==See also==