Lehniner Institute for Art and Culture

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Lehniner Institute for Art and Culture

The Lehniner Institute for Art and Culture eV (LIKK) on Klostersee in Lehnin , Brandenburg , is a non-profit international culture and art center with its own sculpture park, gallery, studios and workshops, young art school and seminars. The institute was founded in 1991 as the Institute for Art and Crafts eV on the initiative of the painter and sculptor Eckhart Haisch . Since it was founded, the institute has organized various international exhibitions, symposiums, workshops, concerts and theater performances, and organized festivals in which the residents of Lehnin take part. The institute's seminar house also serves as a residence for guest artists, sculptors and musicians.

history

The Institut für Kunst und Handwerk eV was founded in 1991 on the initiative of Eckhart Haisch with Martin Schneider, Wilhelm Eichhorn, Karl Ludwig Alder, Werner Sandmann, Udo Furtmüller, Hans-Günter Pittelkow with the support of Regine Hildebrandt , Minister for Labor, Social Affairs, Health and Frauen (MASGF) and Hinrich Enderlein , Minister for Science, Research and Culture (MWFK) and was registered as the first employment promotion company in the state of Brandenburg. Although the art and cultural work were the cause and core of the project, the institute first began to work primarily as an educational institution . The concept behind the establishment of the institute was to train as many unemployed people from the region as possible and at the same time to create a cultural institution. After confirmation of the non-profit status, Regine Hildebrandt made the purchase of the property on Lehniner Klostersee possible through institutional funding. The project envisaged creating a supraregional, cultural center from the ailing sawmill with workshops, sheds, stables and stacks. At the same time, qualification measures were carried out during the construction and renovation of the buildings.

Gallery at the Klostersee

Since it was founded in 2003, the Galerie am Klostersee has shown more than a hundred exhibitions; There are around 6–7 exhibitions per year. In the former stable building of the sawmill there are three exhibition rooms with approx. 100 square meters. Changing exhibitions with works by the following artists and artist groups were held there:

Bert Jäger in the gallery at Klostersee
Jürgen Kehlig in the gallery at Klostersee
Reflection III by Christiane Conrad

Sculpture park

The former "pile surfaces" of the wood yard by the lake have been used as a sculpture park since 1992. At the first sculpture exhibition in the park, the French sculptor Jean Ipoustéguy showed 24 bronzes from different creative periods. Ipoustéguy is followed by exhibitions with works by Emil Cimiotti , Joachim Schmettau , Joshimi Hashimoto , Michael Schoenholtz , Werner Stötzer , Volkmar Haase and others. a.

There are currently 46 works by the following sculptors in the sculpture park:

Large standing woman by Hans-Joachim Dunkel
Big horse from Franz Gutmann
Sculpture park at the Klostersee

In the park

  • CW Loth , OT (oak, pigment, 1997)
  • Amador, L'homme fabricat (bronze, 1998)
  • Franz Gutmann , Großes Ross (bronze, 1999); Way Cross II (tubular steel, sandstone, 2005)
  • Hans-Joachim Dunkel, Large Standing Woman (Bronze, 2001)
  • Dietrich Schön, Akabakh (Eisenguss, 2001)
  • Thomas Reifferscheidt, Throne (Syenit, 2001); Gate (2002)
  • Robert Schad , EMFIM III (solid square steel 3/4, 2003)
  • Tiina Laasonen, Wordhouse (Wood, 2004)
  • Karl Menzen , Transformation I (Stahl, 2005); Maze II , (Stahl, 2017); Transformation cross; Blossom (Stahl, 2017);
  • Thomas Diermann, Seascape I (oak, 2005); Seascape II (oak, 2005); Chorus (oak, 2004)
  • Concentricity (two-part, stainless steel, 2007); Movement Jump (Stainless Steel, 1986)
  • Hubertus vd Goltz, encounter , 2008
  • Reinhard Haverkamp , Hand in Hand (aluminum, steel rope, 2007); Wind symbol II (aluminum, 2011)
  • Robert Schmidt-Matt, Mühle (Findling, Granit, 2012)
  • Stefan Sprenker, OT (2012)
  • Stefan Bohnhoff, Galaxy (painted steel, 2014)
  • Friedemann Grießhaber, Kleinhans (concrete casting, unique specimen, 2014)
  • Pomona Zipser, OT (wall work, currently restoration, 2014)
  • Robert Schmidt-Matt, Falter (Sandstone, 2014)
  • Alessandra Rudoff, OT (wood, 2016)
  • Kazys Venclovas, Silence (Ash, 2016)
  • Klaus Duschat , OT (Stahl, 2018); Boot (steel, 2017)
  • Sylvia Klara Breitweiser, History-Histeria-Histology (sandstones, 2 parts, peat)
  • Eckhart and Elias Haisch, Wurzelstadt (participation project)

In the water

In the Ufercafé

  • Eckhart Haisch, Transformation (1990/1); Faun sein (oil on canvas, 1989–90)
  • Lucio Auri, Mokka, Mokka (concrete, porcelain, paint, 2015)

In the guest house

  • Eckhart Haisch, Asino (oil on corrugated cardboard, 1987); Near the Cliffs (Oil on Lwd, 1988)
  • Nino Malfatti, Eber find (marble, bone, wood, 1988)
  • Aiga Müller, placemats with rolls (broken object, 2002)
  • Stefan Bohnhoff, Pinn Ball II (plywood, chalk ground , 2009)

Art school

Wooden sculptures in the young art school

The art school in the institute offers courses for children and teenagers as well as for advanced and adults. Professional artists and lecturers conduct creative workshops in the institute's studios. They create an open and free atmosphere so that the participants can discover their own, self-determined creativity.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Institute. June 17, 2019, accessed on February 17, 2020 .
  2. ^ A b Antje Berheide, Lore Ditzen, Wilhelm Eichhorn, Elisabeth Hämer, Markus Löffler: Lehniner Institute for Art and Culture / 20+ . Ed .: Lehniner Institute for Art and Culture eV Germany, ISBN 978-3-86833-092-2 , p. 46 .
  3. Gallery. January 2, 2019, accessed February 17, 2020 .
  4. Sculpture Park. January 25, 2019, accessed on February 17, 2020 .
  5. Young art school. May 14, 2019, accessed on February 17, 2020 .

Coordinates: 52 ° 19 ′ 39.6 "  N , 12 ° 44 ′ 45.7"  E