Bröhan-Museum

Schloßstraße 1a
14059 Berlin-Charlottenburg
Tue–Sun 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

The Bröhan Museum is an internationally renowned museum specializing in Art Nouveau, Art Deco and Functionalism (1889–1939). The museum bears the name of its founder, Karl H. Bröhan (1921–2000), who gifted his extensive private collection to Berlin on the occasion of his 60th birthday.
The collection is divided into the main areas of decorative arts and painting. The rooms illustrate the development from Art Nouveau (Jugendstil) – as a precursor of modernism – to Art Deco and Functionalism. The museum's porcelain collection is also extraordinarily rich and includes works from manufacturers in Berlin, Copenhagen, Meißen, Nymphenburg, Sèvres and Rörstrand.
Paintings of the Berlin Secession by Karl Hagemeister, Willy Jaeckel and Walter Leistikow are also part of the museum's collection. The permanent exhibitions are rounded out by special exhibitions – mostly in cooperation with international institutions – as well as cultural and scientific events.

→ website of the institution
Bröhan-Museum, exterior view © Photo: Martin Adam, Berlin

Bröhan-Museum, exterior view © Photo: Martin Adam, Berlin

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