The 'Pinakothek der Moderne' is a
modern art museum, situated in the city centre of
Munich,
Germany. Together with the
Alte Pinakothek and the
Neue Pinakothek it is part of Munich's "
Kunstareal" (the "art district").

Pinakothek der Moderne, rotunda
The building

Pinakothek der Moderne, exterior
Designed by the German Architect
Stephan Braunfels, the Pinakothek der Moderne was inaugurated in September
2002 after seven years of construction. The rectilinear facade, dominated by white and grey concrete, is interrupted by large windows and highrising columns, the latter supporting the extensive canopied roof. Each of the four corners of the building, connected by a central
rotunda, is dedicated to a special collection. The Museum is thus divided into Art (Kunst), Architecture (Architektur), Design (Design) and Works on Paper (Graphik).
Collections
The Pinakothek der Moderne unifies the "Sammlung Moderne Kunst" ('National Collection of Modern and Contemporary Arts', which is under supervision of the Bavarian State Painting Collections), the "Staatliche Graphische Sammlung" ('National Collection of Works on Paper'), the "Neue Sammlung" ('New Collection': 'National Museum for Design and Applied Arts') with the "Architekturmuseum der Technischen Universität" (Munich Technical University's 'Museum of Architecture'), in one building and is deemed one of the most important and popular museums of modern art in Europe.

Henri Matisse "Still Life with Geranium" 1910 (first painting of Matisse acquired by a public collection)
Collection of Modern Art
In contrast to other cities Munich was not much affected by the Nazi regime's banning of modern art as "
degenerate art," since only a few modern paintings were already collected by the "
Tschudi Contribution" in 1905/1914. Since 1945, however, the collection, previously exhibited in the
Haus der Kunst, has grown quickly by purchase, as well as donations by individuals and several foundations. Various
art movements of the 20th century are represented in the collection, including
Expressionism,
Fauvism,
Cubism,
New Objectivity,
Bauhaus,
Surrealism,
Abstract Expressionism,
Pop Art and
Minimal Art.
The first floor of the west wing displays works of
Pablo Picasso,
Henri Matisse,
Georges Braque,
Fernand Léger,
Juan Gris,
Umberto Boccioni,
Robert Delaunay,
Joan Miró and
René Magritte as well as
Max Beckmann,
Lyonel Feininger,
Oskar Kokoschka,
László Moholy-Nagy,
Otto Dix,
Max Ernst,
Giorgio de Chirico,
Salvador Dalí and
Francis Bacon.
The museum also displays masterpieces of ''German
Expressionism'': representing painters of two early 20th century German artist groups,
Die Brücke (The bridge) and
Der Blaue Reiter (The blue rider), whose members included, among others,
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner,
Erich Heckel,
Karl Schmidt-Rottluff,
Emil Nolde and
Franz Marc,
August Macke,
Paul Klee,
Alexej von Jawlensky and
Wassily Kandinsky.
★ 'Contemporary Art' since the 1960s
:The museum also gives very profound insights into international contemporary art. In the first floor of the east wing the gallery displays works of
Lucio Fontana,
Alberto Burri,
Jannis Kounellis,
Andy Warhol,
Jasper Johns,
Robert Rauschenberg,
Robert Motherwell,
Franz Kline,
Antoni Tàpies,
Cy Twombly,
Willem de Kooning,
George Segal,
Richard Serra,
Dan Flavin,
Donald Judd,
Fred Sandback,
Joseph Beuys,
Blinky Palermo,
Henry Moore,
Marino Marini,
Per Kirkeby,
Georg Baselitz,
Gerhard Richter,
Sigmar Polke,
Bruce Nauman,
Marlene Dumas,
Günther Förg,
Jörg Immendorff,
Mike Kelley,
Martin Kippenberger,
David Salle,
Rosemarie Trockel,
David Hockney,
Hermann Nitsch and many others.
★ 'Video, Photos and New Media'
:The Pinakothek houses works of artists like
John Baldessari ("Man running/Men carrying box" 1988-1990),
Bruce Nauman ("World Peace (projected)" 1996),
Pipilotti Rist ("Himalaya Goldsteins Stube" 1998/1999),
Hiroshi Sugimoto ("World Trade Center, Minoru Yamazaki" 1997),
Bill Viola ("Tiny Death" 1993),
Sam Taylor-Wood ("Soliloquy III" 1998) and
Jeff Wall with his back-lit boxes ("Eviction Struggle" 1988; "A villager from Aricaköyu arriving in Mahmutbey, Istanbul September 1997")
Collection of works on paper
The Bavarian State collection of work on paper has its origin in the
Wittelsbach collections, especially in the print room collection of
Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria.
The ground floor shows alternating exhibitions of one of the most important collection of works on paper in Germany, with old German, Dutch and Italian drawings ( including masterpieces of
Albrecht Dürer,
Rembrandt,
Michelangelo and
Leonardo da Vinci ) and German and international drawings of the 19th - 21st century, e.g. from
Paul Cezanne,
Henri Matisse,
Paul Klee and
David Hockney.
Collection of design

Design in the Pinakothek der Moderne
The Collection of applied modernist art was founded in 1925. With around 70.000 objects of
industrial design,
graphic design and the arts and crafts the "Neue Sammlung" is today one of the world's leading museums of 20th century
applied art, and indeed the largest of industrial design. Parts of the expanded collection are exhibited in the basement of the Pinakothek der Moderne. Among others objects about motor vehicle design, computer culture, design of artistic jewelry and furnitures (e.g. the collection of chairs of
Michael Thonet) are exhibited.
Museum for architecture
The museum of the
Technical University of Munich started with a donation of King
Ludwig II of Bavaria for the newly-founded university in
1868 and is today the largest one in Germany. The museum shows altering exhibitions in the ground floor. The collection shows especially drawings, blueprints, photographs, models and computer animations about the work of notable architects like
François de Cuvilliés,
Balthasar Neumann,
Gottfried Semper,
Le Corbusier, and
Günther Behnisch.
External links
★
Pinakothek der Moderne - Homepage
★
Panorama Pinakothek der Moderne
★
Architekturmuseum - Homepage
★
Design Collection - Homepage
Gallery