In a unique exhibition, MoMA, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, is presenting over 200 of his most important works of the 20th century for seven months in the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin.
The background to this unusual cooperation is extensive renovation work at the world-famous museum in New York. This offers a unique opportunity to view masterpieces by artists such as Cézanne, van Gogh, Picasso, Matisse, Dali, Kandinsky, Beckmann, Hopper, Pollock and many others from February 20th to September 19th, 2004 exclusively in the Neue Nationalgalerie at Potsdamer Platz to see in Berlin.
This exhibition of the century ranges from the late Impressionists to works of classical modernism and contemporary art. Berlin was able to assert itself against well-known competitors when awarding this exhibition. The good contacts between the two institutions and between MoMA boss Glenn Lowry and SMB general director Peter-Klaus Schuster were the deciding factor. The location of the exhibition in Berlin, the Neue Nationalgalerie, the architectural masterpiece of the late Mies van der Rohe, also played an important role. Mies van der Rohe's New National Gallery has rightly been described as the temple of modern art. With 'MoMA in Berlin', with the masterpieces of the Museum of Modern Art, this temple of modernity receives its complete content.
'MoMA in Berlin', this exhibition is a unique stroke of luck for Berlin. No city was more of a hub for classical modern art at the beginning of the 20th century. And no city has been left with as little of this wealth due to the horrors of the 20th century as Berlin. 'MoMA in Berlin' is therefore a look back at its best traditions for Berlin. At the same time, the Museum of Modern Art is returning to its roots with 'MoMA in Berlin'. In 1927, the founding director Alfred H. Barr visited the New Department of the Nationalgalerie in the Kronprinzenpalais. He was enthusiastic about Ludwig Justi's concept of a museum exclusively for modern art. At the same time, Alfred H. Barr was fascinated by the Bauhaus and its call for all arts to work together. It was therefore no coincidence that Barr chose Mies van der Rohe, the last director of the Bauhaus, as the architect for the first museum building at MoMA, which opened in 1929. In 2004, exactly on the occasion of its 75th anniversary, the MoMA in Berlin will present parts of its collection in the Mies van der Rohe building.