Tag: Museumsinsel

Nefertiti’s New ‘Heimat’ – Neues Museum in Berlin Open Again

The Neues Museum will reopen on 17 October after being closed for more than 70 years. It will be a great moment in German history as well as a major milestone for world culture. The collection of ancient world objects is outstanding, and their presentation helps place them in the context of their original era, whilst adding to our understanding of the world in which we now live.

Neues Museum Main StairsThe renovation of the 8,000 square meter museum cost about 220 million (about $328 million and a lot more than the brand new build the New Acropolis Museum, which reportedly cost $200 million).

There are more than 9,000 objects on display with large collections from pre-history and ancient Egypt. The collections are mainly shown thematically, often by contrasting objects, which works well and engages the visitor. The Neues Museum is part of the Berlin Museum Island which now can be considered to be one of the best – if not the best – ancient world destinations in Europe.

Neues Museum Re-Opens, Germany Re-Connects History

nefertiti unveiled neues

Enter the Neues Museum and be ready to travel across time. Run your hand across the Soviet bullet holes in the exterior walls, and think about what this building has witnessed since it first opened in 1859. Consider the Prussian ambitions that ended in Nazi realities. Does history endlessly repeat itself, from power and rebellion in the era of Akhenaten to the time of the Romans to lives of the Romanovs?

We have won this building back from ruins, says Michael Eissenhauer, General Director of the National Museums in Berlin (SMB). Perhaps Germany, a leading world economy already, can mark also having won itself back too with this opening, 20 years on from pulling down the Wall. In the 19th century, Bismark wanted to show the world that Germany was among the world powers by having it’s own collection of masterpieces across history. What Germany could never achieve in War it may have gained in Peace.

The Renovation of the Neues Museum

Clearly thrilled to finally be able to share the Neues with the public, Eissenhauer explains: No one could have expected this complete renovation to have happened. Neues is part of five historical buildings that were like a row of pearls, but all damaged during the War. The first shell hit the Neues Museum in 1943 near where the minimalist main staircase now carries you up toward the Nefertiti Dome gallery (watch a slideshow of the Queen on display in room 210). By 1945 an entire third of this architecturally significant 19th century building was destroyed. The building lay in weed-infested shambles for more than 40 years.

David Chipperfield, the UK architect who won the competition for the design, had an almost unsolvable task, continues Eissenhauer. How to restore the builidng while maintaining the work of the original architect Friedrich August Stler. When we started the renovation there was a tree in the middle of the site that was more than 30 years old

The German Democratic Republic (Die Deutsche Demokratische Republik, DDR) made some attempt to redevelop the Museum complex, but mainly all they were able to do was open the Pergamon Altar (which actually I saw in 1985).

Neues Press Conference 1 text

Eissenhauer credits Chipperfield with staying true to the spirt of the technical innovations that the building reflected back in the 19th Century (see a collection of images of the Neues before the War here):

Chipperfield was able to withdraw himself from the need to make his own statement in the renovation. Instead he treated the design with great respect and focused on the functions that the new rooms had to deliver.

But it is not an easy design to appreciate on a first visit. Eissenhauer shared with me that his initial impression was not very positive. At first I even felt very lost entering room 108. The function though is to store tombs and now that the artefacts and walls are installed everything fits. Architecture has delivered the purpose of the room without getting in the way of the content. I must say though that I shared his first impression and room 108 and the rest of the new sections left me cold compared to the restored areas. So another good reason to go back! Maybe it gets even better.

More images from the press conference at the Neues Museum:

neues conference pano 1 full
Panorama view of the Greek Courtyard at the Neues Museum where the re-opening press conference was held on 15th October 2009

neues eissenhauer 1Michael Eissenhauser, General Director National Museums Berlin (left), Matthias Wemhoff, Director of Museum of Prehistory and Early History (right)

neues seyfried
Friederike Seyfried, Director Egyptian and Papyrus Collection at Neues Museum (center) Hermann Parzinger, President of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation (right), Andreas Scholl, Director Classical Antiquites (left)

The strongest visual impression I want to share is the stunning juxtaposition of the ancient Egyptian sculptures against the rich, textured walls which are quasi-restored/decorated in remains from the original building. I have tons of photos (see them here) showing the simplified Egyptian styles against really almost ‘shabby chic’ style walls . The mash-up of the straight-edge modern with the classical column peppered with more Soviet bullet holes overwhelms you in the great staircase in the center of the building. This place seems to be the heart of the design. It hits us with many signals from our learnings, notions and forces us into a new space where we can experience the impact of this significant collection fresh. Neues has the feel of an eccentric’s vast castle and you are a welcomed visitor.

Schlieman and Looted Art and Artefacts

Perhaps this is also some legacy from Henrich Schlieman, the tycoon who went in search of Homer’s heroesand perhaps found them in Mycenae and Troy. At Neues, Schlieman finally gets the stage he deserves. Yet, Schlieman is a very controversial figure, as even the Museum Guidebook points out: Schlieman violated contractual agreements with the Turkish authorities by having [the Troy] treasure transported to his house in Athens. He was ordered to pay 10,000 gold francs, but actually paid three times that amount. As a result, the treasure and many of the other artefacts became legally his property. Even 30,000 gold francs seems like quite a good deal for a priceless treasure. The discoveries at Troy, possibly from King Priam, includes 8,830 items of gold, silver, electrum and copper. According to a sign at the Museum, many of these artefacts are still in Russia.

And what about the Russians – ahem, Soviets? Why are there so many digs at their sacking the collection at the end of the war? On relations with the Russians Eissenhauer advised that they are aware of the locations of all the missing objects from the Neues Museum that were sacked at the end of the War. The Germans have access to Schlieman’s discoveries at Troy in particular, but would like to see more free exchange of research.

Nonetheless, there are some plaques on the exhibition entitled Looted Art which would suggest that there are some stronger feelings within (at least amongst the people who write the tags for exhibits – there a some more sharp comments on tags at the Pergamon Altar also) that the Russians are holding the artefacts against international law. This is of course wobbly ground with respect to the Germans’ still questionable claim to the bust of Nefertiti – as well as invading countries during the War and other actions that were against international law as well.

German Chancellor Merkel will be making a formal opening speech on 16 October at the larger space over at the Pergamon Museum. No doubt she will take the chance to appreciate this moment in re-connecting Germany with the best parts of its own heritage as well as welcome the world to Berlin to discover the great heritage common to us all.

Bombs, Nazis and a Major Facelift: The History of Berlin’s Neues Museum

Neues Museum - Museumsinsel - Berlin

The Neues Museum (New Museum), the latest museum to benefit from the renovation programme on the Museumsinsel, first opened in Berlin in 1850. Built to display a collection of Egyptian artefacts as well as ethnographic, prehistoric and early historic collections, it was at the time the solution to a lack of storage space in the Altes Museum (Old Museum). Wartime damage and economic shortage kept the building shut for decades, until its long-awaited re-opening tomorrow.

Frederick William IV ordered the construction of the museum in 1841. Like the other four museums on the Island, it is a model of neoclassicism and museology in the 19th century. Friedrich August Stler, student of Altes Museum architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel, drew the plans. Due to the crumbly nature of the grounds, the museum is supported by more than 2000 piles. The setting of those deep, drilled foundations was at the time nearly unprecedented, making the construction of the monument a milestone in the history of both architecture and technology.

At the turn of the 19th century, the museum notably hosted gigantic casts of significant Egyptian statues. Making casts used to be a popular method in archaeology whereby researchers on the ground would mould significant findings before shipping the reproduction back to Europe. It allowed for closer study once the expedition was over.

German Egyptologists were particularly knowledgeable and respected the world round. It is thanks to one of them, Ludwig Borchardt, that the famous bust of Nefertiti can be exhibited in the newly reopened Neues Museum.

The Neues and Nazi Egyptology

Neues Museum - Museumsinsel - Berlin

When Hitler and the Nazis rose to power, a number of Egyptologists chose to follow the official programme. According to Thomas Schneider, a Professor at the University of British Columbia specialised in the fate of Egyptology under the Nazi regime, some of them did not hesitate to attribute Fuhrer-like behaviour to pharaohs.

Hitler showed a strong interest in Egyptian antiquity, and even tried to warp history. His plans for a revamped Berlin included a new museum in which his bust and Nefertitis would be close. He also vetoed the return of the Egyptian queens bust to Cairo.

The Neues Museum was closed in 1939. During World War II, the building suffered serious and extensive damage. Parts of it were in such state of ruin that they had to be destroyed in the 1950s. The museum was mostly a shell, used by the other four museums as a storage area.

Parts of the collection were also destroyed during air raids and fires between 1943 and 1945. Many of the casts, transferred to Berlins University, disappeared during the war. Most objects however were safely stored away. The most gigantic artefacts, difficult to move because of their size, were partially protected by sand bags.

Museums on Museumsinsel have been gradually renovated since the end of the war. Reconstruction of the Neues Museum however was held back by the economic shortages of East Germany, and so did not undergo proper reconstruction before the 1980s.

Original Features

Saturday October 17th will be the first time all five museums are open to the public in seventy years.

In 1997, two years before Museum Island was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List, architect David Chipperfield won an international competition to rebuild the museum. The restoration cost an estimated 200 million.

The famous bust of Nefertiti will surely be the most controversial, and famous, artefact on display. However, there new museum is home to a great collection of artefacts, including the intruiging ‘Berlin Golden Hat’ – a cone-line structure bearing astonomical symbols.

According to Associated Press, Chipperfield strove to include as much original material that survived wartime bombing and decades of exposure to the weather as possible. This includes a faux-Egyptian painted ceiling hangs over a room dedicated to the history of Egyptology and sarcophagi are exhibited below 19th-century murals depicting scenes from the Nile Valley.

The inauguration of the Neues Museum by Angela Merkel today will mark the first time all five museums are open to the public in seventy years.