Skip to main content
Inside the Gemäldegalerie Kulturforum
Gemäldegalerie Kulturforum © visitBerlin, Foto: Pierre Adenis

Gemäldegalerie (Old Master Paintings)

A home for European masters

From Botticelli to Rembrandt to Dürer: in the Berlin Gemäldegalerie you can see masterpieces of European painting. The Haus am Kulturforum shows priceless paintings from the Middle Ages and early modern times: Graces by Rubens, biblical motifs by Botticelli or amazingly vivid portraits by Albrecht Dürer.

Tickets

The greatest European painters are represented in Berlin's Gemäldegalerie. This gallery within the Kulturforum (Culture Forum) displays priceless paintings from the Middle Ages and the early modernist period: works by Rubens, Biblical motifs by Botticelli or astonishingly vibrant portraits by Albrecht Dürer.

Art in the best light

The Gemäldegalerie opens in 1830. From the outset, visitors can see masterpieces here, including works by great artists such as Rembrandt and Botticelli. The collection loses many of its pieces to fire and misplacement during World War II, and with the division of Berlin, the Gemäldegalerie collection is also separated. Today, it's been reunited in the new museum building at the Kulturforum. The Museum showcases a permanent collection of 1,400 artworks. A tour takes you across 18 rooms and 41 cabinets. The gallery has a simple and modern design, and every room has a different coloured wall, providing the perfect background for the paintings. All rooms lead to the central foyer, which features a water installation by Walter De Maria. This central space is perfect for a short meditative rest.

Take a look at the ceilings in each room: you will notice that all the paintings are lit only by daylight, so the artworks almost appear to radiate their own light. One of these works is 'Amor Vincit Omnia' by Caravaggio; the winged boy is typical of the style of this master. Or 'Madonna in the Church' by Jan van Eyck: the Madonna, clothed in a crown and fine dress, bears the baby Jesus in a Gothic church. The painting with two monkeys is also famous. They sit chained, looking down upon a 16th-century port. The painting's creator was Pieter Bruegel the Elder, and it is entitled 'Two Chained Monkeys'. Even today, art critics are undecided over its meaning. 

Take time to see the famous paintings by Sandro Botticelli. Many of the women in his paintings are reminiscent of one of his most famous works, the 'Birth of Venus'. The same applies to the image 'Madonna with Child', and 'The Virgin and Child Enthroned'. Thomas Gainsborough captures the vitality of children in his portrait of the four Marsham siblings in 'The Marsham Children'. Try to decipher Bruegel's 'The Netherlandish Proverbs' - around 100 sayings are depicted in the painting. In the Gemäldegalerie, you also have the unique opportunity to see a work by Georges de La Tour. 'Peasant Couple Eating' is the only one of his works to hang in a German museum. One of the most famous paintings in the collection is 'The Man with the Golden Helmet'. Long considered one of Rembrandt's masterpieces, scholars now believe that it is in fact the work of another painter from his circle.

Unique treasures of the Gemäldegalerie

  • 'Amor Vincit Omnia' by Caravaggio (1602)
  • Vermeer's 'Woman with a Pearl Necklace' (circa 1663)
  • The Rubens Hall including 'Perseus Frees Andromeda' (1620)
  • The most important collection of Botticelli's work outside of Italy
  • 'The Man with the Golden Helmet'
Gemäldegalerie Berlin: Jan Vermeer van Delft, Young Lady with Pearl Necklace, c. 1662/1665
Jan Vermeer van Delft, Young Lady with Pearl Necklace, c. 1662/1665 © Gemäldegalerie/ SMB / Christoph Schmidt

See more art from the middle ages to modernity

Amongst the sand-coloured buildings of the Kulturforum, you will find the Kupferstichkabinett (Museum of Prints and Drawings), Germany's largest collection of graphic art. View over 500,000 prints and 110,000 drawings, sketches and pictures, including medieval book illustrations. In the Kunstgewerbemuseum (Museum of Decorative Arts) next door, there's gold and silverware, filigree-embroidered clothes and industrial design furniture. Take a leap back in time to the modern era at the Neue Nationalgalerie. 

Your visit

You can easily reach the Philharmonie by public transport to Potsdamer Platz U2, S1, S2, S25 and S26. Some regional trains also stop within walking distance. The bus lines M48, M85 and M29 also stop nearby. There are also parking spaces for bicycles.

Accessibility

The Gemäldegalerie was evaluated on 21 July 2015 by a certified surveyor for the "Travel for All" system and awarded a certificate by the inspection body.

  • Assistance dogs (guide dogs, guide dogs for the blind, etc.) are allowed.
  • Trained tour guides offer guided tours for deaf people (sign language).
  • Audio guides and an inductive hearing system for audio guides are available.

 

Tickets

Öffnungszeiten

Tuesday 10:00 – 18:00
Wednesday 10:00 – 18:00
Thursday 10:00 – 18:00
Friday 10:00 – 18:00
Saturday 10:00 – 18:00
Sunday 10:00 – 18:00

Certified for Accessibility for you

  • walking disability (partial)walking disability (partial)