“To mark the 100th anniversary of Lovis Corinth’s death, the Alte Nationalgalerie is staging a comprehensive exhibition that addresses the fate of both Corinth’s artworks and those of his wife, the painter Charlotte Berend-Corinth, in the collection of the Nationalgalerie. The exhibition focusses on the various provenances of the artworks on display: the holdings of the Nationalgalerie are supplemented by artworks that were transferred to other museums as part of the Nazis’ “degenerate art” campaign and have now been returned on a temporary basis specifically for this exhibition. Alongside Max Liebermann and Max Slevogt, Lovis Corinth (1858–1925) is considered one of the most prominent representatives of the German Impressionist movement. Home to more than 20 of the artist’s oil paintings, some of them large-format, the Nationalgalerie boasts an extensive and significant collection of Corinth’s works. However, the routes by which these objects found their way into the Nationalgalerie’s collection are frequently characterised by their loss and in some cases their return: a selection of the paintings in question were seized in 1937 as “degenerate” artworks, before being unexpectedly returned in 1939, while others were only able to be reacquired much later; …”
In Sight! Lovis Corinth, the Nationalgalerie and the “Degenerate Art” Campaign
Friday, 18. July — Sunday, 2. November 2025
- regular 14,00 EUR
- reduced 7,00 EUR
- daily 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.
- closed on mondays
Alte Nationalgalerie
Bodestraße
10178 Berlin Mitte
Bodestraße
10178 Berlin Mitte
More exhibitions: November 2025 | December 2025 | January 2026