In 1916, with World War I raging, the Kestner Gesellschaft was founded by citizens of Hanover, among them
Hermann Bahlsen,
August Madsack and
Fritz Beindorff. The new association was named after the Hanover diplomat, art historian, and archaeologist August Kestner (1777–1853). The aim of founding a second art association in Hanover was to keep pace with modernism and bring the international avant-garde to Hanover. Soon after it was founded, artists such as Wassily Kadinsky, El Lissitzky, Käthe Kollwitz, and Kurt Schwitters exhibited at the Kestner Gesellschaft. Under the first director,
Paul Küppers, and his wife Sophie Küppers, the Kestner Gesellschaft established itself as a place for cultural exchange. The first exhibition representing the starting point for this concept in 1916 consisted of
Max Liebermann's new work. Küppers stated at the time that the aim was to present artworks which "do not simply function as a relaxing amusement but instead have a stimulating and – if necessary – provocative and scandalizing effect". , who served as director from 1923 to 1924, also maintained close contacts with the international art scene. The influential exhibition organizer redefined the modern understanding of spaces for art and developed new ideas in art education. In 1936, the Kestner Gesellschaft was closed under pressure from Hitler's
Nazism. The director at the time,
Justus Bier, a Jew, presented artists
Erich Heckel,
Gerhard Marcks,
Christian Rohlfs and
August Macke – artists who were featured in the notorious
Degenerate Art exhibition in Munich only one year later. Soon after the war, the new Kestner Gesellschaft was opened in the Warmbüchenstraße in 1948 by Hanoverians with service to the public in mind, among them Hermann Bahlsen,
Wilhelm Stichweh,
Bernhard Sprengel and
Günther Beindorff, the director of the company
Pelikan. After World War II, took over the management in 1947, followed by . The new beginning for the Kestner Gesellschaft was faced with major challenges: The former building at Königstrasse 8 was destroyed, and a new location had to be found. In 1948 it was possible to reopen the institution in the exhibition spaces on Warmbüchenstrasse. In the decades that followed, the Kestner Gesellschaft grew into an international player in the art scene, thanks to pioneering exhibitions with Pablo Picasso, Marcel Duchamp, Sol LeWitt, Eva Hesse, Andy Warhol, and Rebecca Horn, among others. In the early 1970s the facilities were greatly expanded, but soon even these exhibition spaces could no longer accommodate the art. Most importantly, the building lacked the technical infrastructure for modern exhibitions. In 1997 the Kestner Gesellschaft moved to a Jugendstil building in the center of Hanover which once housed an indoor swimming pool. The building was renovated according to a design by the Hanover architects Koch Panse and was awarded the BDA Prize that same year. Since then, the Kestner Gesellschaft has shown contemporary art across over 1,300 square meters of exhibition space. There have been solo exhibitions by Thomas Ruff, Santiago Sierra, Barbara Kruger, Alex Katz, Karla Black, and Goshka Macuga, among others. The institution hit the headlines in 2005 when it exhibited a mud house created by Spanish artist
Santiago Sierra featuring a room with mud floor reminiscent of Hanover's
Maschsee, an artificial lake. From 2015 to 2019, institution’s first female director was
Christina Végh. In 2017, the third edition of the collection , which is collectively curated on a five-year-cycle by the three institutions Kestner Gesellschaft,
Kunstverein Hannover and
Sprengel Museum Hannover, took place. Under the heading "Produktion. Made in Germany Three", the exhibition focused on the conditions of producing art in Germany. As participating institutions, the
Schauspiel Hannover, the
Festival Theaterformen, and the KunstFestSpiele are contributing the first time. Adam Budak was the director of the Kestner Gesellschaft between 2020 and 2024. Budak developed a wide-ranging curatorial program centered on themes such as tenderness,
anabasis, and
amor mundi. His approach emphasized critical intimacy, performative space, and interdisciplinary dialogue. Highlights of his tenure include solo exhibitions by
Roger Hiorns,
Rebecca Ackroyd,
Samson Young, Klára Hosnedlová, and
Paula Rego, as well as group shows exploring the legacy of
El Lissitzky and the political thought of
Hannah Arendt. His directorship marked a period of increased international visibility for the institution, including its first participation in the
Venice Biennale and the receipt of the
Dezeen Architecture Award for the
Paula Rego exhibition. Locally, Budak strengthened ties with Hannover’s cultural scene through partnerships with institutions such as
the Staatsoper, Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien, and the Bund Bildender Künstlerinnen und Künstler. He also initiated structural and social innovations, including the Café Tender Buttons, a curated Bookshop, the Cinémathèque helping to open the institution to a broader and more diverse public. Eva Birkenstock is the new Director from August 2025. The list of artists whose works have been exhibited during the 75-year history – excluding the years of closure – reads like a "Who's Who" in the history of 20th- and 21st-century art, among them
Paul Klee (1920),
Wassily Kandinsky (1923),
El Lissitzky (1923) and
Kurt Schwitters (1924), both friends of the Kestner Gesellschaft,
Joan Miró (1952, 1956, 1989),
Jean Dubuffet (1960),
Marcel Duchamp and
Horst Janssen (1965),
Pablo Picasso (1973, 1993),
Wolf Vostell (1977),
Andy Warhol (1981 as his first retrospective in Germany, 2001)
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1986 as the youngest at age 25, 1989),
Georg Baselitz (1987),
Joseph Beuys (1975, 1990),
Richard Prince (1991),
Rebecca Horn (1978, 1991, 1997),
Antoni Tàpies (1962, 1998),
Jonathan Meese (2002),
Thomas Ruff (2003),
Peter Doig (2004), Rochelle Feinstein, (2016/17), James Richards, (2016/17) and Annette Kelm (2017). == Kestner Gesellschaft at the Goseriede ==