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Tuesday, November 25, 2025 |
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| "Haunting: 40 Years of the Museum of Decorative Arts" opens at Berlin's Kulturforum |
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Museum of Decorative Arts (detail), ca. 1985, Photo: KGM Archive, photographer unknown.
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BERLIN.- The Museum of Decorative Arts (Kunstgewerbemuseum, KGM) at Berlins Kulturforum has opened a deeply reflective and boldly experimental exhibition marking its 40th anniversary. Titled Heimsuchung: 40 Years KGM at the Kulturforum, the show invites visitors not into a simple retrospective, but into what the museum calls a kind of cultural séancea space where the echoes of the past meet the questions of the future.
Opened on November 14, 2025, the exhibition unfolds across multiple galleries and positions the museums complex history not as a completed narrative, but as an open field of possibilities. Instead of celebrating its anniversary with nostalgia, the KGM asks visitors to listento the institutions past, to its present, and to the unwritten futures that will shape the next decades of its existence.
A Museum Shaped by Division and Vision
Founded originally as an institution dedicated to shaping the taste and craft of artisans, the Museum of Decorative Arts has lived through constant transformation. Its identity was reshaped by Berlins historical divides: for years, the museum operated two locationsits current home at the Kulturforum in the former West and Köpenick Palace in the East. The exhibition acknowledges these parallel histories, using them to illuminate the museums own layered and sometimes contradictory past.
Rather than presenting a neat timeline, the curators have woven together objects from the collection, archival material, educational models, and early teaching tools. These fragments reveal the museums evolution from a 19th-century instructional institution to a 21st-century cultural space wrestling with questions of representation, relevance, and accessibility.
Architecture as Storyteller
A significant portion of the exhibition revisits the long, turbulent construction history of the building designed by architect Rolf Gutbroda project that unfolded over nearly two decades. Visitors encounter materials that explore the tensions between preservation needs, architectural ambition, and the museums responsibility as a democratic educational space.
One highlight is Gutbrods innovative mediation gallery, designed to bring learning and interpretation into the heart of the museum. This architectural feature becomes a symbol of the museums broader missionan attempt to create a place where objects, people, and ideas meet on equal ground.
The Future on Display
Unlike most anniversary exhibitions, Heimsuchung looks forward as much as it looks back. With major renovations, a conceptual reorientation, and a new vision for public engagement ahead, the museum uses the exhibition to pose open questions:
What should a decorative arts museum be today? And who is it for?
In this spirit, the exhibition becomes an invitation rather than a conclusion. The curatorial teamAnn-Kathrin Illmann, Carina Kitzenmaier, Dr. Claudia Kanowski, Kevin (Finn) Strüder, and Dr. Sibylle Hoimanposition the public as an active participant in shaping the museums next chapter.
A celebration of memory, imagination, and possibility, Heimsuchung offers a rare gift: a museum willing to haunt itself, challenge itself, and rethink itself in real time.
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