Independent Collectors

Dirk Lehr Collection

A look inside the Berlin-based collection that refuses to follow trends.

CHRISTOPHER WINTER, They're Out There, 2005. Courtesy the artist
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, They're Out There, 2005. Courtesy the artist

Not one for allowing either himself or his collection be influenced by trends or concepts, Dirk Lehr is a collector who takes comfort in knowing what he likes. Based in Berlin, the trademark lawyer’s collection has a heavy focus on contemplating painting but Lehr makes sure to never find himself limited to one medium, artist, or style. Here, Lehr presents a selection of works from the Dirk Lehr Collection and tells us about how he started collecting and what continues to fuel his passion for doing so.

“I am forty-nine years old and living and working in Berlin as a copyright and trade mark lawyer for more than twenty years now. I was born and raised in the south of Germany, in Heidelberg to be precise, and it is there where I studied law. Over the years I wrote several books that dealt with subjects concerning copyrights, trademarks and competition law and a biography about Mr. Hermann Krages – the most hated, most discussed and most influential stockbroker after World War II in West Germany. I also wrote for the German issue of the Financial Times about the art market from 2001 to 2005.

My interest in collecting started in 1988, when I was eighteen, working part-time in a local art gallery, and had just bought my first artwork. From this moment on everything was about the next piece to acquire. At the beginning I was very into pop art, perhaps because I am generation MTV, a pop kid if you will. And Andy Warhol, of course. I love his “death&disaster” series and I’m very happy to have the opportunity to have a look at one of his electric chairs every day; it fits very well in a kitchen with all the electricity in there. But the most influential artist for me was Robert Rauschenberg, who I’m very happy to have works by him in my collection.

For me, it’s important to collect what I like. It can be photography, like the works of Andreas Gefeller who became a very close friend of mine, conceptual art, like by Robert Barry or a fine art print, like by Rainer Eisch. I find the idea of following a trend or a specific concept trite, and I never wanted to be limited by a trend, a concept or even by myself.

I am very interested in contemporary painting. I am curious to see how artists are dealing with this subject in the present – a subject which is said to be “old fashioned” because everything is supposed to be already said and done. Birgit Jensen for example, a Düsseldorf based painter is using the technique of silkscreens. In her case the painting process takes place on the foil that is used for the printing screen, something that is a unique position amongst painters. The British artist Rowena Dring is sewing “paintings” from pieces of fabric and her painting process takes place on the computer, and the work of British artist Christopher Winter oscillates between comic and realism. Three painters, three different techniques, but each of their works have something in common: they appear “flat” and flawless in their own way, something that I appreciate very much. Miriam Vlaming and Jan Holthoffs work is the complete opposite – it looks very washy. I like their dilapidated and somewhat rotten aesthetic. You can phsyically see the torture on the canvas and the development process. For me, painting isn‘t dead or behind the times – it can absolutely be very fresh and surprising.”

Dirk Lehr, Berlin

CHRISTOPHER WINTER, The Trophy Tree, 2008. Courtesy the artist
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, The Trophy Tree, 2008. Courtesy the artist
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, They're Out There, 2005. Courtesy the artist
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, They're Out There, 2005. Courtesy the artist
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, Uppers and Downers, 2009
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, Uppers and Downers, 2009
PETER WILDE, Merkel 1, 2012. Courtesy the artist
PETER WILDE, Merkel 1, 2012. Courtesy the artist
PETER WILDE, Merkel 4, 2012. Courtesy the artist
PETER WILDE, Merkel 4, 2012. Courtesy the artist
PETER WILDE, Merkel 5, 2012. Courtesy the artist
PETER WILDE, Merkel 5, 2012. Courtesy the artist
MAX DIEL, Umbrella, 2018
MAX DIEL, Umbrella, 2018
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, Fall Out, 2012
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, Fall Out, 2012
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, Hybrid V - Zebra Leap, 2016. Courtesy the artist
CHRISTOPHER WINTER, Hybrid V - Zebra Leap, 2016. Courtesy the artist
ROWENA DRING, Nha Trang Lily Pond No. 5, 2006. Courtesy the artist
ROWENA DRING, Nha Trang Lily Pond No. 5, 2006. Courtesy the artist
JAN HOLTHOFF, Paranoid, 2011. Courtesy the artist
JAN HOLTHOFF, Paranoid, 2011. Courtesy the artist
MIRIAM VLAMING, Woman Insane, 2013. Courtesy the artist
MIRIAM VLAMING, Woman Insane, 2013. Courtesy the artist
MIRIAM VLAMING, Zeremonium, 2015. Courtesy the artist
MIRIAM VLAMING, Zeremonium, 2015. Courtesy the artist
BIRGIT JENSEN, DCLV II, 2004. Courtesy the artist
BIRGIT JENSEN, DCLV II, 2004. Courtesy the artist
BIRGIT JENSEN, LVN I, 2006
BIRGIT JENSEN, LVN I, 2006
ANDREAS GEFELLER, Swimming Pool, 2008. Courtesy the artist
ANDREAS GEFELLER, Swimming Pool, 2008. Courtesy the artist
ANDREAS GEFELLER, Leaves, 2007. Courtesy the artist
ANDREAS GEFELLER, Leaves, 2007. Courtesy the artist
BIRGIT JENSEN, ZVA I, 2005. Courtesy the artist
BIRGIT JENSEN, ZVA I, 2005. Courtesy the artist
BIRGIT JENSEN, HKK I, 2005. Courtesy the artist
BIRGIT JENSEN, HKK I, 2005. Courtesy the artist
BIRGIT JENSEN, LA XXII, 2002
BIRGIT JENSEN, LA XXII, 2002

See more from the collection here.

Berlin (52)

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This former techno-club has been home to the private collection and residence of Christian and Karen Boros.

haubrok projects

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The Feuerle Collection

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ARNDT Collection

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Elke and Arno Morenz Collection

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Collection Night

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Warhol and Works on Paper

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The Vague Space

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Boros Bunker #3

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Gudrun & Bernd Wurlitzer 2017

After the German reunion Gudrun and Bernd Wurlitzer witnessed the gallery scene in Berlin change dramatically.

me Collectors Room – Picha/Pictures

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How to Be Unique

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Kuhn Collection

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Archivio Conz x KW

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Haus N Collection & ROCCA Stiftung

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Kuhn Collection I

This exhibition is the first in a series in which Michael Kuhn and Alexandra Rockelmann share works from the Kuhn Collection on IC.

Recording Memories

Mimi Kolaneci shares parts of his collection

Haus N Collection & Wemhöner Collection

ach, die sind ja heute so unpolitisch

STUDIO BERLIN – Boros Foundation x Berghain

We are here with insight into the seductive new Berlin happening, STUDIO BERLIN, with an interview with Karen Boros and Juliet Kothe, Artistic Directors of the project.

me Collectors Room Berlin/Stiftung Olbricht

My Abstract World

Haupt Collection

Dreissig Silberlinge

Désiré Feuerle

Publicly accessible private collection in an old bunker.

Lapo Simeoni

Collectors who have a special bond with Berlin.

Timo Miettinen

Finnish collector talks about the impossibility of ignoring Berlin’s relevance in today’s art world.

Kai Bender

Collectors who have a special bond with Berlin.

Olaf Schirm

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From Sponsorship to Authorship

Creative workshops for brands who want to become great story-tellers.

Manfred Herrmann

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me Collectors Room – Private Exposure

For the fifth time, the Olbricht Foundation has invited London Metropolitan University students from the ‘Curating the Contemporary’ Master’s program in collaboration with the Whitechapel Gallery, to curate and develop an exhibition with works from the extensive art collection of Thomas Olbricht.

Safn

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Gute Kunst? Wollen!

Born into a family of textile merchants that spans over four generations and a long tradition of passionate art collecting Thomas Rusche’s passion for collecting art started early, with his first purchase at the age of 14. Over the years that followed, his passion for collecting has grown into a vast accumulation of 17th century Old Masters, contemporary painting, and sculptures.

Frisch Collection

The Berlin based couple, Harald and Kornelia Frisch, have been collecting idiosyncratic painterly and sculptural positions from different artistic generations free from market-based aesthetics since the 1960s.

Slavs and Tatars: Friendship of Nations

An exhibition from the Berlin-based collector Christian Kaspar Schwarm, featuring work from the art collective, Slavs and Tatars.

Queensize

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Barbara Klemm: Photographs

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I Have Nothing Against Women But…

A look inside the exhibition “I Have Nothing Against Women but Can’t You Ring at Another Person’s Door”

Collection Regard

En Passant

To the patrons of tomorrow

Laurie Rojas on the future of art patronage and how to nurture enthusiasm for good art, worldly sensibility, curiosity, and connoisseurship.

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What started off as an ambitious task back in 2012 to gather a world-wide list of the most exciting art collections, resulted in unique book that would radically increase the accessibility of private art to the general public.

The Rediscovery of Wonder

»Good art is rarely simple, but it is hardly ever incomprehensible, « says Christian Kaspar Schwarm, IC founder and avid collector who has never lost his excitement for complexity.