• Stadt Nürnberg - Kulturreferat/Projektbüro, Gößwein
    Blue Night, Nuremberg ©Stadt Nürnberg - Kulturreferat/Projektbüro, Gößwein (David Häuser)
  • Museums Night, various towns and cities ©Sergej Horovitz
  • except Sunday Werbeagentur
    Hamburg Art Week ©except Sunday Werbeagentur
  • Hannover Marketing und Tourismus Gesellschaft
    Sprengel Museum, Hannover ©Hannover Marketing und Tourismus Gesellschaft
  • UNESCO World Heritage Day, various towns and cities ©Bildarchiv Monheim GmbH Monheim
  • Tourismus+Congress GmbH Frankfurt am Main
    Museum Embankment Festival, Frankfurt ©Tourismus+Congress GmbH Frankfurt am Main (Gösta A.C. Rühl)
  • Tourismusverband Vorpommern e.V.
    Kunst : Offen, various towns and cities ©Tourismusverband Vorpommern e.V.
  • © Städel Museum
    Städel Museum, Frankfurt © Städel Museum (Norbert Miguletz)
  • Düsseldorf Cologne Open Galleries, Düsseldorf/Cologne ©Guido Leifhelm
  • Tomas Riehle, artur images
    Ludwig Museum, Cologne ©Tomas Riehle, artur images
  • Scholvien
    New National Gallery, Berlin ©Scholvien
  • © Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, 2006
    Schirn art gallery, Frankfurt © Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, 2006 (Norbert Miguletz)
  • © Hamburger Kunsthalle
    Hamburg Kunsthalle © Hamburger Kunsthalle (Ralf Suerbaum)
  • © Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Bonn
    Federal Art Gallery, Bonn © Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Bonn
  • Museum Folkwang
    Folkwang ©Museum Folkwang (Bernd Thissen)
  • dOCUMENTA (13)
    documenta, Kassel ©dOCUMENTA (13) (Nils Klinger)
  • Festival of Lights, Berlin ©Christian Kruppa
  • Initiative Münchner Galerien
    Open Art ©Initiative Münchner Galerien (Dimitri Davies)
  • Berlin Biennale for Contemporary Art ©Marta Gornicka
  • © Kunstwerk Carlshütte
    NordArt, Büdelsdorf © Kunstwerk Carlshütte
  • European Media Art Festival, Osnabrück ©Kerstin Hehmann
  • © Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
    Stuttgart State Gallery © Staatsgalerie Stuttgart
  • KunstFestSpiele
    KunstFestSpiele Herrenhausen, Hannover ©KunstFestSpiele (Mahramzadeh)
  • © imago
    Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich © imago
  • Tourismus+Congress GmbH Frankfurt am Main
    Luminale, Frankfurt ©Tourismus+Congress GmbH Frankfurt am Main (Holger Ullmann)
  • © Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig
    Museum of Fine Arts, Leipzig © Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig (Alexander Schmidt)
  • Ruhr Tourismus
    ExtraSchicht – late-night industrial heritage, various towns and cities ©Ruhr Tourismus (Nielinger)
  • Kunstpalast Museum, Düsseldorf ©Stefan Arendt
  • © 2012, Darmstädter Tage der Fotografie
    Darmstadt Photography Festival © 2012, Darmstädter Tage der Fotografie
  • Ostrale
    Ostrale, Dresden ©Ostrale
  • © Michel Francois
    Ruhrtriennale, various towns and cities © Michel Francois
  • Gallery Weekend, Berlin ©Nick Ash
  • Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister
    Old Masters Gallery and New Masters Gallery, Dresden ©Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister
  • aquamediale®, Lübben ©Carolin Wendel

Starzy mistrzowie i gwiazdy jutra:
wystawy sztuki

Już Friedrich Schiller wiedział, że „wszelka sztuka służy radości“. Jednak największą radość sprawia wtedy, gdy dzieła sztuki i artyści opuszczają swoje pracownie i warsztaty, aby zaprezentować się i być podziwianym na niezwykłych wystawach w całym kraju.

The Städel Museum in Frankfurt , also known as the Städel Institute of Art and Municipal Gallery, is one of the leading art museums in Germany. It was founded in 1816 by the great patron of the arts from Frankfurt Johann Friedrich Städel and the collection has been housed in its current location since 1878. The Städel Museum is one of the main attractions along Frankfurt's 'museum embankment' . The breadth and wealth of museums and galleries overlooking the banks of the Main here are unique in Germany.

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There's no better way to observe the Ruhr region's transformation from industrial centre to cultural hub than at the Ruhrtriennale. Music, theatre, literature and dance have colonised the space where chimneys once smoked and blast furnaces sent red light flickering all around. From the outset, the idea of linking a multi-genre festival with the Ruhr valley's industrial heritage was greeted with enthusiasm by the media, audiences and artists alike.

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World-class art is on show at the Sprengel Museum, which opened in 1979 in Lower Saxony's regional capital Hannover . It ranks as one of the major museums of 20th and 21st century art, with German Expressionism and French modernism particularly well represented. Additions to its collection in recent decades reflect the key movements in modern art – from Kurt Schwitters to Niki de Saint Phalle.

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The Schirn building itself is a bit like a modern art work in the heart of Frankfurt's old quarter, a light, angular design contrasting with the grand, red sandstone cathedral and the Römer , the old town hall. This art gallery lies in the heart of the city – and is an important focal point in Frankfurt's cultural life. It is also one of the most celebrated galleries in Germany and in Europe.

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Upheaval and avant garde, form and functionality, rigour and beauty: modernism is a broad term that has shaped an entire century and remains influential today. Hardly any other museum has concentrated as exclusively on this era as Cologne's Ludwig Museum, whose collection starts in the early 20th century and traces developments right to the present day in remarkable breadth and depth.

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The fact that Düsseldorf , North Rhine-Westphalia's region capital, has an art museum of international renown today is thanks to the former Elector Palatine Johann Wilhelm II, who began to build an art gallery here in 1710. A generous patron, he was able to bring numerous artists to the court and transformed the city into a European centre for art. Although the Kunstpalast Museum itself was only founded in 1913, it would not be what it is today had the Elector not been such a passionate collector of art.

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The collections at the State Gallery in Baden-Württemberg's regional capital Stuttgart have been shaped by their roots in Württemberg's history but also by the international approach the gallery has adopted since the Second World War. Opened as the Museum of Fine Arts in 1843, the gallery became the New State Gallery in 1984, occupying a striking new building designed by British architect and Pritzker prize winner James Stirling.

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