Category Archives: News

Family Matters: Contemporary perspectives – opening programme, October 27th, 2025

Family is diverse, ever-changing, and full of surprises. Beyond traditional structures and role models, new perspectives emerge on what family can be. Several temporary exhibitions within the thematic year “In Relation: Family” explore non-normative approaches to family – both artistically and historically.

Relationships often form where there are no stable social structures or political protections. Nothing as Our Ground  is the title of the exhibition curated by Minh Duc Pham and Hai Nam Nguyen – a title that points to the realities of queer and migrant experiences. Contemporary photography, video, and installation works reveal how people live, across generations and borders, in ways that are diverse and sometimes contradictory, challenging traditional notions of family. The exhibition features works by Corç George Demir, Jaewon Kim, Su-Ran Sichling, Nhu Xuan Hua, Iden Sungyoung Kim, Sunil Gupta, Cheryl Mukherji, Vuth Lyno, Leonard Suryajaya, Sarnt Utamachote, and Rana Nazzal Hamadeh.

The exhibition Making Kin brings together artists from nine countries whose works share a decolonial perspective on marginalized forms of knowledge and relationships. We are all embedded in dynamic webs of relation – with other humans, animals, plants, spirits, the cosmos – and even with our office chairs. Making Kin is curated by Kerstin Pinther and Ute Marxreiter, Ethnological Museum / Museum of Asian Art Berlin, and features works by Catherine Blackburn, Aziza Kadyri, Mae-ling Lokko, Meryl McMaster, Caroline Monnet, Katja Novitskova, Soe Yu Nwe, Odun Orimolade, Judith Raum, Cara Romero, Zina Saro-Wiwa, and Haegue Yang.

“How deeply does the state intervene in private life?” is the question posed by the exhibition All Under Heaven. It focuses on the tension between family and state in 20th-century China and Korea – between ideology, care, and control. The exhibition is curated by Maria Sobotka, co-curated by Lu Tian, Museum of Asian Art Berlin, and presents works by He Chongyue, Mao Tongqiang, Jane Jin Kaisen, Mirae kate-hers Rhee, and Siren Eun Young Jung.

Fourteen monumental statues of Brandenburg electors from the 17th century are part of the permanent exhibition on the history of the site. However, only one half of the family was represented in this dynastic display – women were absent. The intervention Relevant to the System: Women in Ruling Families introduces four princesses from four centuries, positioning them alongside and in opposition to the sculptures. The installation sheds light on the different degrees of agency available to Hohenzollern women within the dynastic system.

Also present is filmmaker Marina Gning, whose documentary series on father-daughter relationships in Senegal has been on view on the ground floor since October.

6pm
The evening opens with a spoken word performance by AVRINA, followed by welcome remarks by Hartmut Dorgerloh, General Director of the Humboldt Forum, and Raffael Gadebusch, Head of the Museum of Asian Art. Minh Duc Pham, Hai Nam Nguyen, Kerstin Pinther, Ute Marxreiter, Maria Sobotka, Marina Gning, and Alfred Hagemann will introduce the exhibitions in brief conversations.

Following the opening on the 1st floor of the Stair Hall, curator and artist tours will take place in the respective exhibitions on the 3rd floor:

7–7:20pm
Nothing as Our Ground – Room 312
with Minh Duc Pham, Hai Nam Nguyen, Corç George Su-Ran Sichling and Cheryl Mukherji
Relevant to the System: Women in Ruling Families – Stair Hall, 3rd Floor
with Alfred Hagemann and Katja Gimpel

7:30–7:50pm
Making Kin – Room 304
with Kerstin Pinther, Ute Marxreiter, Soe Yu Nwe, Catherine Blackburn and Judith Raum
All Under Heaven – Room 319
with Maria Sobotka, Mirae kate-hers Rhee, Lu Tian

The exhibitions can be visited free of charge during the opening.
Additional events and exhibition tours will take place on November 28.

Publication: Family Matters. Global Stories about Affiliation, Disruption, and Belonging

Family. Everyone has one, and each one is different. This unconventional book challenges traditional notions of the nuclear family by presenting voices from around the world in a series of “snapshots.” It asks: Who belongs to the family? What economic and social functions does the family fulfill? What shapes the family, and how does it shape us? Key questions being discussed in local settings around the globe demonstrate how complex and diverse – but also how similar – the idea of the family is across cultures. This is an invitation to reflect on one’s own concept of family.

Order here:

Family Matters. Global Stories about Affiliation, Disruption, and Belonging.

Hardcover, 296 pages, Hirmer Verlag, 39,90 €.

Object of the Month: Humboldt diverse – Gerald Matzner’s terracotta busts and the idiosyncrasy of form

Object of the Month 11/2025

Since 2009, the HU’s portfolio of Humboldt busts has been supplemented by modern adaptations by Austrian sculptor Gerald Matzner (1943-2018). From a series of 15 busts of Alexander and Wilhelm von Humboldt, which Matzner created based on models by Christian Daniel Rauch (1851) and Bertel Thorvaldsen (1808), Der abgewickelte Humboldt (The Unravelled Humboldt) and Die Brüder Humboldt (The Humboldt Brothers) were acquired for the university’s art collection. In accordance with the title of these busts from the ‘Metamorphoses’ series, the brothers are clearly removed from the original portraits. The thin-walled clay sculptures, each with its own pedestal, were painted after firing, and signatures and dates can be found on their surfaces.

A photograph of Alexander von Humboldt's bust on a pedestal in front of a wall
after Christian Daniel Rauch, Alexander von Humboldt, painted plaster, 2002 (copy of the original from 1851), Inv. No. P 182
Photograph of a bust of Wilhelm von Humboldt on a pedestal, viewed at a slight angle in front of a wall.
after Bertel Thorvaldsen, Wilhelm von Humboldt, plaster, 2001 (copy of the original from 1808), inv. no. P 179
Photo of a colourful terracotta bust on a pedestal in front of a wall
Gerald Matzner, untitled (The Braided Humboldt), terracotta, 1993, inv. no. P 200

Eight additional busts were added to the art collection through a donation from the artist’s widow. The spectrum of techniques used, from reshaping and wrapping in ribbons to adding attributes until the model is almost unrecognisable, gives an insight into both the diverse biographical and scientific life of the Humboldts and the imagination and expressiveness of the artist, who was trained in Vienna and Berlin and worked for many years as a freelance artist in Berlin. Not only are the subjects closely associated with the university, Matzner began his series of sculptures in 1990 – at a time when the liquidation of Humboldt Universität was on the agenda. It is, so to speak, an artistic commitment to the two scholars and their ideals, but also to the tradition of Humboldt Universität and its continuation into the present and future. Matzner himself was drawn to Berlin by the student revolts of 1968. He worked primarily in terracotta, although in the 1980s he began to produce larger formats for public spaces, including the Corinthian column for the Rostlaube building at Freie Universität Berlin and the series of pocket pyramids.

The titles alone – such as Humboldt bucht eine Reise (Humboldt books a trip), Im Insektenschwarm (In the swarm of insects), Nach Worten ringend (Struggling for words), Die Vermessung des Alexander von Humboldt (The measurement of Alexander von Humboldt), Humboldt mit Reisetasche (Humboldt with travel bag) or Abgewickelter Humboldt (Unravelled Humboldt) – refer to the creative and sometimes ironic treatment of these great men. The Humboldts are populated with plants, animals such as frogs and beetles, but also with bags, telephone receivers and garden gnomes. Amusing, sometimes sombre, not always immediately aesthetically appealing, the busts are intended to stimulate reflection. What do the scientific curiosity and industriousness of the Humboldts mean to us today? Which of their achievements do we recognise in the narrative portraits, and what impact do they (still) have? Furthermore, the alienations refer us back to ourselves; Matzner’s distortions are ‘the “natural cast” of our civilisation, the portrait […] of our world, frightening and bitterly amusing’ (Sperlich 1991, p. 24).

Photo of a colourful terracotta bust with telephone receivers wrapped around its head
Gerald Matzner, Abgewickelter Humboldt (Unravelled Humboldt), terracotta, circa 1990, Inv. No. P 243
Photo of a terracotta bust populated with dwarves and measuring instruments
Gerald Matzner, Vermessung des Alexander von Humboldt (Surveying Alexander von Humboldt), terracotta, circa 1990, Inv. No. P 339

The fact that some of the busts are located in the so-called Humboldt Cabinet in Adlershof, a technological science centre that emerged long after the Humboldts’ time and has had an even greater impact on today’s world, would have pleased both the subjects and the artist.

Author: Christina Kuhli

Literature:
Sperlich, Martin: Gerald Matzner oder der Stil „Rustique“ oder das Irdene und das Irdische des Naturabgusses, in: Die ganze Welt ist rötlich braun. Skulpturen von Gerald Matzner. Werkverzeichnis, Berlin 1991, pp. 19-24.

New associate members at the Zentrum für Kulturtechnik

October 2025 cohort

We are delighted to welcome another cohort of new associate members to the Zentrum für Kulturtechnik. The aim of networking researchers who already collaborate with us or have interfaces with our departments is to strengthen interdisciplinary exchange within the HU.

The following were admitted at the ZfK Zentrumsrat meeting on October 15, 2025:

  • Prof. Dr. Monika Ankele, Berlin Museum of Medical History 
  • Prof. Dr. Ignacio Farías, Department of European Ethnology, Georg Simmel Center for Urban Studies
  • Prof. Dr. Valentina Forini, Department of Physics
  • Prof. Dr. Tobias Krüger, Geography Department, IRI THESys
  • Dr. Jonas Tinius, Department of European Ethnology, Berlin-Brandenburgische Landesstelle für Alltagskultur
  • Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Verhoeven, Department of German Studies and Linguistics

Welcome! We look forward to the collaboration.

Interested researchers at HU who wish to contribute to the profile of the Zentrum für Kulturtechnik with its three pillars of “Exhibiting/Mediating,” “Heritage/Collections,” and “Knowledge Exchange with Society” can find out more about secondary membership at the ZfK here.

A Decolonial Quartet on the Benin Bronzes: An Interview with Vincent Leonhardt

Insights into the Program “Learning and Teaching with Society”

The following interview was conducted by Marlene Lüdorff, who is a student assistant at the Centre for Cultural Techniques, with Vincent Leonhardt, a participant in the ‘Overloaded: Interimperial Entanglements of Material and Photographic Collections’ seminar in August 2025. The seminar, which was held in the summer term 2025, was run by Prof. Dr. Magdalena Buchczyk, Dr. Hanin Hannouch (Weltmuseum Wien) and Anna Szöke (Ethnological Museum Berlin)  at the Institute for European Ethnology. It was supported by the Learning and Teaching with Society funding programme from the office for „Knowledge Exchange with Society” at the Centre for Cultural Techniques, which made especially the closing event, Café Interimperial, possible.

 

Marlene Lüdorff: Could you tell me what the seminar Overloaded: Interimperial Entanglements of Material and Photographic Collections was about, and how this led to the idea of Café Interimperial?

Vincent Leonhardt: The Overloaded project focuses on the archives of European museums, demonstrating how imperial ‘baggage’ continues to impact collection practices. It explores the historical interconnections between the various colonial empires and their interimperial workings. It also considers the extent to which these connections strengthen the imperial system as a whole. During the seminar, we collaborated with the Weltmuseum Wien and the Ethnological Museum Berlin, examining various archival materials.

The idea for Café Interimperial emerged from the requirement for each seminar student to conduct a research project. This work always began with pieces from the archive and museum, providing a practical approach. With Café Interimperial, we wanted to present an exhibition of pieces that could be displayed in a museum and which would give visitors a broader perspective on historical events. Thanks to the Learning and Teaching with Society funding programme we were then able to present the Café Interimperial as a way of displaying the research results. Inspired by a Viennese coffee house, the Café Interimperial exaggerated the imperial aspect, creating a stark contrast with our postcolonial research. This created an interesting tension between the exhibition space and our research results.

How did you apply the ‘Learning and Teaching with Society’ programme approach to the seminar? In what ways did you engage with questions, knowledge and experiences from society?

It’s basically about understanding this colonial heritage and working with it, which is also one of the main topics at our Institute for European Ethnology. An example of this is the recent renaming of M-Straße to Anton-Wilhelm-Amo-Straße, a process that took many years to complete.

We also engaged in this social discourse. How did we come into contact with the questions, knowledge and experiences of society? Through our cooperation with the Objektlabor (at the Centre for Cultural Techniques) basically. This gave us the opportunity to facilitate a large-scale exchange with all kinds of people through Café Interimperial, and everyone was able to participate. This exchange was also very helpful for my project.

What topic or object did you focus on in the seminar, and how did you come across it?

I focused on postcolonial mediation through playful approaches, using the restitution of the Benin Bronzes as an example. I decided to develop a decolonial board game. The restitution and reinterpretation of colonial artefacts, such as the Benin Bronzes, remains a central issue. These bronzes were looted by British troops from the Kingdom of Benin (now Nigeria) in 1897, and are now in many European museums, including the Ethnological Museum in Berlin. Restitution has now begun there, with the cultural objects being returned and remaining on loan to the museum.

How did I come up with the idea? It began with a study of the Idia Iyoba, a commemorative statue of a queen mother. This is one of the star attractions of the Benin exhibition at the Ethnological Museum. First, I looked into its provenance, and then the idea developed from there. I wanted to do something more practical, and I had already developed a board game during my Bachelor’s degree. After receiving lots of feedback, I finally created a decolonial quartet comprising 32 cards. Each set of four cards features a Benin bronze, telling its own story. I applied Saidiya Hartmann’s theory of critical fabulation, a narrative technique that fills gaps in the histories of colonised societies with speculative narratives. Using this method, the eight objects from the Benin exhibition in Berlin can speak and tell their stories. Each quartet uses four cards to cover the origin, colonial looting, present and imaginative future of the respective object. By collecting a quartet, players can learn the story of Queen Mother Idia Iyoba, for example, from her own perspective.

When I imagined the future, I considered different possibilities. For example, I imagined a cultural object that had been separated from its home country for so long that it had lost its will to live and was falling apart. Then there are also many objects in the Dahlem archive that no one can see. It may well be that these objects will never be seen in the future and will feel very lonely. However, I also considered other possibilities. Some pieces have already been returned to Nigeria, for example, and I presented this perspective too. I also presented a perspective in which all stolen artworks have been returned and are now in a museum. I used a character who criticises me as a student and researcher to demonstrate that I must treat these stories with care as a student, as they are not my history. However, through this colonial legacy, they are also my history, albeit from the perspective of the guilty party.

In Quartet, players swap cards. However, the game is designed to be decolonial because there is no winner. The aim is simply to collect cards and form quartets, which can then be read out loud. The cards also complement each other visually. As you play, you fill up the game board with cards. In doing so you also lay down your knowledge, I mean you retain it, but you also put the value of the object where it belongs, so to speak.

How can we imagine the exhibition of your project at Café Interimperial?

As students, we presented most of our research results in a multimodal way, so you can imagine it like this: I had a table displaying this board game, and visitors could sit down at the table. Once there were enough visitors, they could play the game and quiz each other using playing cards. Through this interaction, I, as the researcher, was able to learn more about my research and research question, and the visitors were able to learn more about Germany’s colonial heritage, providing them with food for thought. I also received a lot of positive feedback and identified areas for improvement in the game. It was a steep learning curve. Since Anna Szöke was also part of the seminar, I had the opportunity to display my game in the Room of the Benin Bronzes at the Ethnological Museum for a day. I went there on a Saturday and spent the whole day playing with people and talking to lots of visitors. It was a really good experience.

Could you briefly describe the general response of visitors to the game exhibition at the Ethnological Museum and the object lab at the Centre for Cultural Techniques?

The response has been consistently positive. However, at the museum where I was, for example, I encountered a much wider range of audiences, many of whom expressed critical views about restitution. They argued that these works are German cultural assets and that German museums take very good care of them. It was interesting to hear these different perspectives. These are very real perspectives which can also be seen in the political debate in the Bundestag, for example. It was interesting to discuss this with visitors and perhaps even change their minds.

One encounter in particular has stuck in my mind: an encounter with an elderly man. He looked at one of my cards. I remember talking to him about the game, and then about the card itself. He said that, because the card spoke to him so personally, he believed that restitution was a good thing and that all the figures should be returned. This confirmed to me that my playful approach can actively influence opinions and that I am on the right track.

What has happened with your project since Café Interimperial, and do you have any plans for how it will continue?

Yes, I am still in contact with the Ethnological Museum about continuing to play my game there on various days. For example, there is always a guided tour on Sundays where more time is spent in the room of the Benin Bronzes. This gives me the opportunity to meet people who are genuinely interested in the topic and are joining a guided tour. I have already invested a lot of time in this game, which is why I would like to write my Master’s thesis on the mediation of postcolonial heritage using playful theories.

Other than that, the people I met at the museum have given me the opportunity to start an internship at the Ethnological Museum. This will allow me to delve deeper into the subject and bring me closer to my professional future. The Ethnological Museum has provided tremendous support, motivating me to invest my time in this endeavour. I do not intend to put this project aside now, but would like to develop it further and continue exhibiting it. I would also like to apply for an exchange scholarship to Nigeria, for example, to collaborate actively with Nigerian museums on the project, as I enjoy this field of mediation very much.

Is there anything else you would like to say?

I would like to thank Prof. Dr. Magdalena Buchczyk, Dr. Hanin Hannouch and Anna Szöke for their excellent leadership of the seminar.

Learning and Teaching with Society in the Winter Term 2025/2026

We are delighted that nine seminars will be supported by the ‘Learning and Teaching with Society’ funding programme this winter semester! The seminars will receive seed funding of up to €1,000, as well as content-related advice and methodological support from the Knowledge Exchange with Society competence area.

If you are interested in applying for funding, you can find information about the previous call for proposals here. The next call for proposals will be published on this website soon and will be based on the previous one.

 

Click on the image below to view a digital version of our programme flyer:

The Seminars in the Winter Term 2025/2026

The seminars focus on learning together with society. In collaboration with artists, cultural institutions, and civic initiatives, students engage hands-on with topics such as migration, cultural heritage, environmental destruction and regeneration, as well as practices of remembering, presenting, and mediating. Central to the program is research-based, transdisciplinary work on socially relevant questions, with an emphasis on diversity, participation, and decolonization.

Together with children, young people, and diverse communities, the students develop performances, exhibitions, workshops, and audio walks. In doing so, they reflect on educational processes and experiment with new ways of learning and teaching both within and beyond the university. The courses aim to co-create learning as a collective, creative, and socially engaged practice.

In the following article, we will provide a comprehensive overview of the available seminars.

 

About the Nine Seminars:

1. Movement and Learning in Teaching for Primary Schools – circus/dance education and choreography

Bernadette Girshausen (Institute of Sport Sciences) *

Plakat für die Circusschow „Alice im Wunderland“ mit einer Frau im blauen Kleid, die Spielkarten hält, vor einem rosa-lila Hintergrund. Enthält Termine der Aufführungen 2025 in Berlin und Logos der Veranstalter.

In cooperation with the youth group “Showgruppe Altglienicke” and invited guest experts (circus artist, stage technician), a performance based on Lewis Carroll’s “Alice in Wonderland” is created in the style of nouveau cirque. The students are trying out  different disciplines and support the young people in developing the show. The performance will be shown in December at Cabuwazi Altglienicke.

Work-In-Progress Show

On 21 November at 4:30 p.m., we cordially invite you to a work-in-progress show at Objektlabor! Please register in advance by emailing wissensaustausch.zfk@hu-berlin.de.

 

2. Didactics of the German Primary Classroom

Prof. Dr. Petra Anders (Institute for Education Sciences) **

How can students grasp, develop, and discuss relevant theoretical models on reading and literacy development? By involving ZfK based guest artist Irina Demina, BA students engage in holistic, practical experiences in which they approach theories of learning choreographically. Following an apporach of community-based learning, they present their work to fellow students and school teachers opening up opportunities for reflection.

 

3. Literacy and Media Environments; Theater for Children and Young People

Maike Löhden (Institute for Education Sciences); Dr. Ada Bieber (Institute for German Literature)

In this interdisciplinary collaboration of two seminars, primary school teaching students are sensitized to various forms of theater practice and their application in specific contexts. Together with theater educators from Komische Oper and Gripstheater and with teachers and pupils of Wilhelm-Hauff-Grundschule in Berlin Wedding, the didactic-pedagogical potentials of theater as part of literary and cultural education in elementary school education are discussed and tested.

 

4. Law and Decolonization of Cultural Heritage in Europe

Dr. Vanesa Menéndez Montero *

The course adopts a transdisciplinary approach grounded in law and human rights to explore and deconstruct colonial legacies in the European cultural sphere. Both theoretical and practical sessions invite active student participation and reflection on how historical injustices have been (mis)represented in European imagery. Artists and experts are invited and indigenous positions integrated as a key source of knowledge. Final projects on decolonial practices will be presented at the Object Lab, ZfK.

 

5. Documenting Environmental Change: an Exploration into Audio-Visual Practices

Yasemin Keskintepe (Institut für Kunst und Bildgeschichte); Hanna Grzeskiewicz

This seminar explores how artistic practices respond to environmental destruction and regeneration, inquiring into ways of seeing and listening. Focusing on audio-visual projects that trace ecological change and its entanglements with social injustice, we ask how sounding and imaging techniques make destruction perceptible and contribute to regenerative practices. With guest inputs from artists, the seminar creates a transdisciplinary lab through readings, artworks, and discussion.

 

6. Artistic Responses to HIV/AIDS: Curating Exhibitions in Berlin

Samuel Perea-Díaz *

This seminar offers a critical examination of curatorial practice and exhibition-making in Berlin, with a focus on HIV/AIDS-related cultural production from the 1980s to the present. Through dialogues with artists and curators, and visits to organisations such as Schwules Museum, nGbK, and WeAreVillage, students will gain insights into evolving curatorial practices. Coursework includes the development of a conceptual exhibition proposal on art and HIV/AIDS.

 

7. Echoes Across Borders: Navigating the Musical Tapestry of Berlin’s Migration History

Dr. George Athanasopoulos (Institut für Musikwissenschaft) *

This seminar explores music and migration in Berlin’s cultural landscape. It includes reciprocal visits and collaboration with the Open Music School Berlin, a project run by the “Give Something Back to Berlin” Initiative, as well as a music-based workshop held at the Object Lab, co-led by musicians Kimia Bani and Yalda Yazdani.

 

8. Spatial Memory Practices in Berlin: Monuments, Voids, and Voices

Pablo Santacana López, Kandis Friesen *

The seminar explores contested spatial memory through monuments and voids, culminating in student-created audio walks in Volkspark Friedrichshain. Civic partners include Vincent Bababoutilabo (postcolonial memory work), artist Miriam Schickler (sound research), and Cashmere Radio (community radio station). Students collaborate with memory activists and cultural practitioners on site-specific works bridging academia and civil society through transdisciplinary knowledge-making.

 

9. Asia in Berlin: Curating (Im)material Heritage

Dr Mai Lin Tjoa-Bonatz, Felicitas von Droste zu Hülshoff *

Zusammen mit javanischen Kulturschaffenden wird eine Ausstellung zum Schattenspiel Indonesiens kuratiert. Schattenspielfiguren sind im Haus der Indonesischen Kulturen bis heute ein Bestandteil von Darbietungen. Basierend auf Theorien der Museumskunde und Provenienzforschung vermitteln die Expert:innen dieser traditionellen Praxis die sozio-kulturellen Hintergründe des Puppenspiels. Das Seminar reflektiert, wie diese Inhalte heute im Kontext von Diasporagemeinschaften in Berlin vermittelt werden können.

* The seminars mentioned above will be part of the Berlin Perspectives Programme.

** The seminars will be held in German.

 

Object of the Month: Under the watchful eyes of Fichte, Humboldt, Grimm & Co. – the lunettes from the former university library

Object of the Month 10/2025

The former six lunettes once adorned the reading room of the old university library at Dorotheenstr. 28 (formerly house no. 9) and thus represented the faculties and subject areas of the university.

Lunettes, which fill circular framed wall panels and are usually placed above doors or windows, are associated with the architecture due to their shape. In 1871-73, a new building was erected for the university library (after several other locations since the move from the Royal Library in 1839) and also artistically decorated, as was customary for public buildings at this time. This organic unity was lost when the library moved in 1910, as was the lunette for the natural sciences. The paintings initially ended up in the old musicology reading room and were only rediscovered there in 1997 during restoration work. They were subsequently housed in the respective faculties and in the Grimm Centre (the present-day Central Library).

While no information has yet been found on the creation and commission, the surviving drafts dated between 1874 and 1878 provide a good insight into the struggle for an adequate representation of the scientific disciplines. It can be seen from the first drafts that purely allegorical representations were initially trialled. Although these allegories were retained in the creative process, they were supplemented by portrait medallions of famous university scholars. In this way, a pictorial language that had been widespread since the late Middle Ages was chosen or adapted: the personification of the faculties in connection with a scholar. The fact that the decision as to which scholar best represented the respective discipline was not always free of conflict is evident in two specific cases. The order of the lunettes also seems to have changed, as the numbering of the designs from 1874 and 1877 differs.

In the lunette of philosophy, alongside Plato and Aristotle as young men reading and learning, are the medallions of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and the founding rector of the university, Johann Gottlieb Fichte. In the lunette of philology, which depicts the representation of language families, August Boeckh and the Grimm brothers were chosen as representatives of the discipline. The medical lunette was greatly reduced during the design process: Aesculapius with a snake baton occupies the centre of the image, framed by medallion portraits of Johannes Müller (the ‘father of medical science’) and initially Eilhard Mitscherlich. However, the chemist and mineralogist was apparently not wanted after all, as the draft already notes: ‘Mitscherlich fällt weg, dafür Schönlein’ (Mitscherlich omitted, Schönlein added instead). Accordingly, the lunette was then executed with a portrait of Johann Lukas Schönlein, a physician with wide-ranging scientific interests. On the lunette depicting jurisprudence, the medallion originally intended to feature only the portrait of Friedrich Carl von Savigny in the centre was supplemented by Carl Gustav Homeyer and the allegory of Justice was placed in the centre.

The development of the lunette of theology is particularly interesting.

Scan of an old sheet of paper with a design drawing of a lunette and inscription
Ludwig Burger, Theological Faculty lunette (Catholic), 1st draft 1874
Scan of an old sheet of paper with a design drawing of a lunette and inscription
Ludwig Burger, Theological Faculty (Protestant) lunette, 1st design 1874

The first two designs dated 1874 still envisaged separate denominational representation. Catholicism is depicted with a Cistercian monk copying manuscripts as a “preserver of earlier cultures”, supplemented by ecclesiastical symbols and the personifications of “symbolism” and “dogmatics”.

The Protestant confession shows Luther translating the Bible in the centre of the picture in a similar arrangement, with the cross, Bible, communion chalice and the Trinity as well as the personifications of ‘interpretation’ and ‘dogmatics’ next to him.

It is only in the third design, with the allegory placed in the centre and holding the open Bible in its hand, that the Protestant confession becomes dominant and is transferred to the executed lunette. As a representative of Protestant theology, she is flanked by the portrait medallions of Friedrich Daniel Ernst Schleiermacher, who also worked as an educational reformer and philosopher, and his colleague, the professor of church history August Neander. The reduction to one denomination for the Faculty of Theology appears to make perfect sense for its representation, as it has only been possible to study Catholic theology at Humboldt-Universität since 2019.

Photograph of a semicircular painting that served as a wall element
Ludwig Burger, Theology lunette, after 1877, oil/linen mounted on wood, inv. no. M 119

The removal of Catholic theology had finally freed up a pictorial field. The natural sciences were to be represented here. The design from 1877, which has survived in contrast to the finished lunette, contains two medallions with portraits of Alexander von Humboldt and the physician and naturalist Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg, who accompanied Humboldt on his journey through the Urals in 1829. Ehrenberg himself conducted research as a zoologist, ecologist and geologist, taught as Professor of the History of Medicine and Physiology in Berlin and held the office of Rector of Friedrich Wilhelm University in 1855/56. The many-breasted fertility goddess Artemis Ephesia fills the centre of the picture. Surprisingly, the finished lunette probably did not depict Humboldt, but the chemist and mineralogist Eilhard Mitscherlich, at least according to the inscription on the design. The great esteem in which the Berlin university lecturer and temporary rector of Friedrich Wilhelm University was held is also shown by the monument erected in his honour in front of the east wing of the university in 1894.

Scan of an old sheet of paper with a draft drawing of a bezel and inscription
Ludwig Burger, lunette no. 2 (natural sciences), 1st design 1877

The lunettes of the former university library are classic representations of the faculties. From the original four faculties (theology, jurisprudence, medicine and philosophy), which already existed in the Middle Ages, further disciplines had been established, which were also included in the pictorial programmes. The planned rich iconography with allegories, personifications, famous representatives of the respective sciences, teacher-student relationships and numerous attributes of the subjects was reduced in the execution in favour of a clear schematic pictorial language that could also be easily recognised from a distance. The timeless personifications and the contemporary representatives of the subjects in a consistent scheme create an aesthetic continuity, while the various media levels (figures, fake stone, tendrils) also make art itself present. In contrast to the history painting, the lunettes are not narrative, but they also do not tell a story of rise and fall, so they are not valorising the rank of individual subjects or their representatives. Likewise, the usual hierarchy of placement has been cancelled out – there is no direction of reading, but rather a spatial allocation to the literature of the respective subject area.

Author: Christina Kuhli

Literature:

Angelika Keune: Gelehrtenbildnisse der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Denkmäler, Büsten, Reliefs, Gedenktafeln, Gemälde, Zeichnungen, Graphiken, Medaillen, Berlin 2000, p. 156f.;

Theater der Natur und Kunst. Theatrum naturae et artis. Exhibition catalogue, ed. by Horst Bredekamp, Jochen Brüning and Cornelia Weber, Berlin 2000, p. 60, cat. 2/34 (Anita Stegmeier);

Monika Wagner: Allegorie und Geschichte. Ausstattungsprogramme öffentlicher Gebäude des 19. Jahrhunderts in Deutschland von der Cornelius-Schule zur Malerei der Wilhelminischen Ära, zugl. Habil-Schrift Universität Tübingen (= Tübinger Studien zur Archäologie und Kunstgeschichte, Bd. 9), Tübingen 1989;

Karl Friese: Geschichte der Königlichen Universitäts-Bibliothek zu Berlin, Berlin 1910;
Karl-August Wirth/ Ute Götz: Fakultäten, die vier, in: Reallexikon zur Deutschen Kunstgeschichte VI, pp. 1183-1219.

Fluid Interdisciplinarities

Connecting Waters, Bridging Perspectives

Fluid Interdisciplinarities is a three-day festival which brings together researchers, artists, and practitioners to unpack water-related research and practices from October 23-25, 2025. The diverse program will  feature academic sessions and public events, including film screenings, walkshops and artistic interventions to foster knowledge exchange between science, art, and society.

Fluid Interdisciplinarities will take a special focus on rivers, such as the Spree, the Maas, the Brahmaputra, the Magdalena, the Nile, the Danube, and the Panke. These rivers will not remain one-dimensional and abstracted topics, but be enlivened through rich discussions, collaborative and participatory activities. This will be the focus of House of Rivers on Saturday October 25th, which is designedwith showcasing interactive discussions and artistic projects on water session.

The event is organized by the Integrative Research Institute on Transformations of Human-Environment Systems (IRI THESys) and artist Regina Hügli (One Body of Water), in cooperation with the IHE Delft Institute for Water Education,  the University of Montpellier, the Knowledge Exchange with Society team and the TA T – Tieranatomisches Theater at the ZfK.

Full program and registration information.

When: 23-25 October 2025

Where: Tieranatomisches Theater, HU Berlin, Campus Nord, Philippstraße 13/house 3, 10115 Berlin

Contact: Pauline Münch, pauline.muench@hu-berlin.de

Image: Lightdrawing by River Limyros, 2015, Copyright by Regina Hügli.

WisTanz at Primary Schools

During autumn break 2025, choreographer Irina Demina will collaborate with Prof. Valentina Forini, theoretical physicist at Humboldt-Universität to bring “WisTanz” to primary school children of Kolumbus Grundschule Berlin. They will co-create a workshop where the children experience within their bodies how the tiniest particles and the largest celestial bodies move, why gravity is so important, and what it feels like when ‘everything is connected with everything’.

The aim of the project is to connect scientific thinking with artistic forms of expression, especially movement and dance. Through this approach, the project seeks to foster curiosity, creativity, bodily awareness, and cooperative work.

The choreographer and artistic researcher Irina Demina (SCARBOD Lab) developed this project as part of her commission as Dance Artist in Residence at ZfK. The project is supported by the team for Public Engagement and Knowledge Exchange with Society at the Centre for Cultural Techniques.

Current events within Irina Demina’s residency:

30 September – ‘Folk Dance and AI. Rethinking traditions’: Performative encounter as workshop contribution to the 4th Symposium of the Oxford Berlin Research Partnership: Innovation – pathways to societal impact.

24–25 October – Moveshops ‘Be river, my friend’ as part of the conference ‘Fluid Interdisciplinarities’.

9 November –  ‘Berlin Science Week’: ‘Choreographies of Knowledge: Practices of Togetherness beyond now’ together with Manisha Biswas (HU, winner of the ‘Dance Your PhD’ competition).

 

Exhibition Opening, October 10, 2025: „On Water. WasserWissen in Berlin“ at the Humboldt Lab

Water is life, but it can also destroy. The exhibition “On Water. WasserWissen in Berlin” will show current research projects of the Berlin University Alliance (BUA) on the topic of water from October 10, 2025 in the Humboldt Labor. These will be flanked by artistic positions that deal with the element of water and vividly convey its versatility.

Water is ubiquitous – We drink it, bathe in it, experience it as rain, ice, or a river. And yet it remains contradictory, as it is both familiar and at the same time unpredictable. Sometimes there is too much of it, sometimes too little. Sometimes it flows, sometimes it’s lacking, sometimes it floods entire stretches of land.
As a result of climate change, growing cities, and global inequality, water has become a challenge. It cannot be controlled easily and raises questions about established practices. Water is not a passive object, but instead a dynamic element that demands new scientific perspectives and social negotiation. The On Water: WasserWissen in Berlin exhibition presents Berlin University Alliance (BUA) research projects that deal with water from a wide range of perspectives. They all aim to learn from its properties – such as its cycles, its adaptability, and its binding force – to find solutions for the future. The audio track provides deeper insights into the interplay between humans and water. In it, scientists explain why it makes sense to listen to water, as it knows more than we think.

Context
The present is characterized by too much or too little water: cycles and systems that have long been taken for granted are shifted, irritated and vulnerable.
The disruption of the aquatic balance also challenges science. The exhibition “On Water” shows that no science alone would be able to grasp the complexity of the interrelationships associated with it. It is often the interaction of the most diverse forms of knowledge that leads to an understanding and new solutions. This includes learning from each other, whether it be hard sciences or the exchange and discussion with people who have lived through traditions and experiences and bring their own form of knowledge. One of the great challenges of the future is to establish forms of dialog and cooperation that are suitable for meeting each other at eye level.

Structure of the exhibition
The exhibition develops its argument along lifeworld motifs of encounters with water: in the sea, on the coast, in the city, in the river, in the bath and so on. On all these levels, the aim is to balance out too much and too little water. The exhibition uses exemplary research projects to bring science to life and make it tangible. Researchers from the Berlin University Alliance, for example, deal with puddles in the city, with vortices in rivers and street fountains in Berlin, with the melting of glaciers in the Alps, the bathtub as a therapeutic place or life on and in rivers. The voices of the scientists can be heard in the form of an audio track in which they talk about their fascination with their research on and with water. This makes it possible to experience the diversity and complexity of water knowledge in Berlin. But not just limited to there: the exhibition also presents selected research projects that deal with solutions to water scarcity in Egypt and Kurdistan, taking local knowledge into account. In addition, a legal initiative will be shown that deals with the question of how the Spree could be given rights. Across the many research projects, there are signs of a changeing understanding of science that takes the dynamics and inherent logic of water seriously and also recognizes the limits of knowledge. Science is beginning to adapt to water.

Berlin University Alliance

“On Water. WasserWissen in Berlin“ is an exhibition in collaboration with the Berlin University Alliance (BUA). The Berlin University Alliance is a consortium of four institutions: the Freie Universität Berlin, the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, the Technische Universität Berlin, and the Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin. Together they shape the knowledge and innovation space across disciplines and institutions, thereby strengthening the multidirectional exchange with politics, art, culture, and society.

The exhibition “On Water. WasserWissen in Berlin”, together with the program lines “On Water. Dialogues” and “On Water. Parcours,” forms a focal theme of the Berlin University Alliance. More information on the concept, events, and contact details for experts in Berlin water research can be found here.

Further information about the Humboldt Laboratory and the current exhibition can be found on the website of the Humboldt Lab

The opening program for “On Water. Water Knowledge in Berlin” can be found on the Humboldt Forum website

Geschwisterzank

Family Matters: Contemporary perspectives – opening programme, October 27th, 2025

Family is diverse, ever-changing, and full of surprises. Beyond traditional structures and role models, new perspectives emerge on what family can be. Several temporary exhibitions within the thematic year “In Relation: Family” explore non-normative approaches to family – both artistically and historically.Relationships often form where there are no stable social structures or

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