Hamburger Bahnhof/Museum fur Gegenwart, (Museum for Contemporary Art), Berlin.
Occupying the former Hamburger Bahnhof, one of the city's first terminal stations, The Museum for Gegenwart is one of the city's major art venues.
Across the road is the new train station, the Hauptbahnhof (Central Station), a five-level glass and steel building, designed by architects Meinhard von Gerkan and Volkin Marg which opened in 2006. It's Europe's largest ever train station handling around 350,000 travellers and 1800 trains per day.
Berliners have christened it the 'glass cathedral'.
We took a wrong turn on our way to the museum and ended up at the back which gave us a chance to see the rear of the great hall
and this sculpture, Baked Master's Basket, by Urs Fischer (1973)
We eventually found the main entrance
Georg Baselitz, Volk Ding Zero, 2009
Robert Indiana, Imperial Love, 1928
Inside, the great hall is magnificent
We had a look at some of the works in their permanent collection:
Robert Rauschenberg, Red China Green House, 1984
Robert Rauschenberg, Stripper, 1962
Robert Rauschenberg, Stage Coach, 1986
looking closer
looking closer
Roy Lichtenstein, Coastal Village, 1987
Roy Lichtenstein, Reflections on 'The Artist's Studio', 1989
Robert Rauschenberg, Mine, 1984
Robert Rauschenberg, Mule Deer, 1977 (the middle panel of this painting is a mirror, so the reflection you can see is me)
a side view (with reflections of the gallery in the middle)
The Frightened Gods of Fortune, 1981
looking closer
Wilhelm Lehmbrueck, Kopf eines Denkers (mit Hand), (Head of a Thinker, with Hand), 1918
We then had lunch
in the museum's café which was blissfully empty.
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