Museum

Hamburger Kunsthalle:

"RENDEZVOUS OF DREAMS. Surrealism and German Romanticism"

June 13 - October 12, 2025

One hundred years ago, the most renowned artistic movement of the twentieth century emerged in Paris: Surrealism. Sparked by a reconsideration of value systems in the aftermath of the First World War, it was a current that would shape the twentieth century like no other. Surrealism displayed a striking »elective affinity« in particular with German Romanticism. The supernatural and irrational, dreams and chance, a feeling of community and encounters with a changing natural world were vital sources of inspiration for German Romanticism and shaped international Surrealism differently a century later. Starting with André Breton’s First Surrealist Manifesto in 1924, fascinating parallels come to light with respect to fundamental questions, attitudes, motifs and even pictorial processes.

Max Ernst, Fille et mère

Bronze
44,2 × 26,7 × 29,2 cm | 17 1/2 × 10 1/2 × 11 1/2 in
€490,000.00

Selected Surrealist masterpieces by Max Ernst, Meret Oppenheim, René Magritte, Salvador Dalí, Valentine Hugo, Toyen, André Masson, Paul Klee and many more demonstrate that, alongside poets including Novalis, Achim and Bettine von Arnim, Friedrich Hölderlin, Heinrich von Kleist and Karoline von Günderrode, the great Romantic painters such as Caspar David Friedrich (1774–1840) and Philipp Otto Runge (1777–1810) also played an important role in the search for a revolutionary new art form in the twentieth century.

Surprisingly, even more direct references to German Romanticism emerged in the Resistance and among those surrealists living under occupation and in exile during the Second World War. In a broader sense, comparable basic ideas about the cosmos, nature, dreams, inner visions and community can be discerned in the activities of the Surrealists between 1924 and 1966.

Victor Brauner, Weiblicher Akt

Indian ink on paper with burn marks
22 × 13 cm / 8 11/16 × 5 1/8 in
€9,800.00

To mark the 100th anniversary of the advent of Surrealism, the epoch-spanning exhibition invites visitors to compare and contrast the diverse artistic, poetic, and intellectual facets of Surrealist art with the heritage of German Romanticism. The show brings together over 180 icons of Surrealism and over 60 core works of German Romanticism, presenting them alongside one another. In keeping with the multidisciplinary approach taken by both movements, the exhibits on display encompass paintings, drawings, sculptures, literature, films, photography and objects.

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