This quiet, private museum is made up of three well-laid-out levels of international art nouveau and art deco pieces that businessman Karl Bröhan began collecting in the 1960s...
Schlossstrasse 1ANamed for the magazine started by Alfred Stieglitz, this magnificent courtyard space offers prime viewing of some of the 20th century's most important photographic work,...
Kantstrasse 149Since opening his gallery in 1967, Anselm Dreher continues the lonely task of championing hardcore minimalist and concrete works by newcomers and old masters such as Dennis...
Pfalzburger Strasse 80Long-time doyen Nothelfer quietly and importantly pursues his love of Informel and Tachist work, best exemplified by artists such as Walter Stöhner, Henri Michaux and Jan Voss.
Uhlandstrasee 184Originally the gallery of Rudolph Springer (one of post-war Berlin's seminal gallerists), this space is now run by his son and partner Gerald Winckler. The young pair show many...
Fasanenstrasse 13Käthe Kollwitz's powerful, deeply empathetic work embraces the full spectrum of life, from the joy of motherhood to the pain of death (with rather more emphasis on the latter...
Fasanenstrasse 24Heinz Berggruen was an early dealer in Picassos in Paris, and the subtitle of this museum, Picasso und seine Zeit (Picasso and his Time), sums up this satisfying and important...
Westlicher StülerbauShortly before his death in 2004, Berlin-born Helmut Newton, who served his apprenticeship elsewhere in Charlottenburg at the studio of Yva (now the Hotel Bogota), donated over...
Jebenstrasse 2Since her monumental first show of the Wild Bunch in 1978, Ingrid Raab has been a grand champion of young artists such as Paul Vergier and Christian Sauer as well as stalwarts...
Fasanenstrasse 27On the verge of opening as we went to press, the Scharf-Gerstenberg Collection is housed in the building used by the Egyptian Museum before it moved back to Museumsinsel....
Schlossstrasse 70