Independent Collectors

Gudrun & Bernd Wurlitzer

On the occasion of the sixth edition of Berlin Art Week, Gudrun and Bernd Wurlitzer will be opening up their home and private collection to the public.

ANNA VOGEL, Two Pigment Prints, 2014; JÜRGEN DRESCHER, Sprechblase, 2011
ANNA VOGEL, Two Pigment Prints, 2014; JÜRGEN DRESCHER, Sprechblase, 2011

On the occasion of the sixth edition of Berlin Art Week, Gudrun and Bernd Wurlitzer will be opening up their home and private collection to the public. Offering an intimate view on emerging and established European artists, the Berlin-based collecting couple fell into collecting by chance – originally acquiring works from artists’ friends before realising they had amassed one of the city’s most exciting contemporary art collections. We caught up with Gudrun and Bernd to speak to them about their collection, what it’s like to allow strangers into their home, and what they are looking forward to at Berlin Art Week.

During this year’s Berlin Art Week you will be opening the doors to your private residence, which is also home to your private collection. What does it feel like to make something so private accessible to the public?

BERND WURLITZER: Good! It is always a pleasure to have conversations with the visitors about our art. That’s how we handle it.

For many collectors the artworks in their collections come with a personal story – be it about how they acquired the piece, their relationship to the artist, or even the decision as to where it hangs in their home. How does it feel to share this information with strangers when they are in your collection?

GUDRUN WURLITZER: We love to share it! Our visitors can ask any questions that they want. If it’s helpful to them we will supply all the answers – if we can! And we can tell funny stories too, like when an admittedly huge painting by Michael Kunze did not fit through our front door. Instead, we had to de-frame it, and it still got stuck. In the end the caretaker had to remove part of the door frame to move it in.

What is the most important piece, in terms of emotional connection, you have in your collection and why?

BW: We buy artworks because we fall in love with them – so emotions are spread all over. But the most pampered artworks are certainly our two huge portraits by Thomas Ruff, which we gave as gifts to each other on occasion of our wedding. In our former flat in Cologne we hung them in the nursery room, so when the children woke up they could see mom and dad right away in superhuman size.

MICHAIL PIRGELIS, Handlines II, 2017; OKKA-ESTHER HUNGERBÜHLER, Springbrunnen 4. Photo: Wurlitzer Collection
MICHAIL PIRGELIS, Handlines II, 2017; OKKA-ESTHER HUNGERBÜHLER, Springbrunnen 4. Photo: Wurlitzer Collection

Once you live with art, you can’t imagine how it is without it.

GUDRUN WURLITZER

STEPHANIE STEIN, Schon Bald, 2015. Photo: Wurlitzer Collection
STEPHANIE STEIN, Schon Bald, 2015. Photo: Wurlitzer Collection
ANNA VOGEL, Two Pigment Prints, 2014; JÜRGEN DRESCHER, Sprechblase, 2011
ANNA VOGEL, Two Pigment Prints, 2014; JÜRGEN DRESCHER, Sprechblase, 2011

This year the Berlin Art Week is working together with 14 Berlin private collections, including the Wurlitzer, as part of their programme. Do you have a personal favourite from the list?

BW: The Haubrock Foundation and The Feuerle Collection. Both are very different!

What are you particularly looking forward to at this year’s Berlin Art Week?

GW: The Berlin Art Fair, of course! Finally a fair in the city again. Let’s see how the cooperation with Art Cologne works. I have always loved Art Cologne and was even friends with its founder, Hein Stünke, who invited me to his monthly gallery dinners when I worked as young architect in the office of Gottfried Böhm opposite to his house in Cologne. Yes, I’m biased! Good luck, “Art Berlin Cologne” – ABC!

In addition to the permanent collection, you will also be showing an exhibition during Berlin Art Week at the Wurlitzer Collection. Can you tell us a little bit about what we can expect to see?

BW: We will show three works of a completely new work group by Christian Jankowski. Raphaela Vogel, a very strong young artist, is represented with two sculptures. Stephanie Stein, student of Rosemarie Trockel, made a new work especially for our entrance hall. Sultan Acar, an artist with Turkish roots, lends out her amazing work – a highly elaborated carpet related to the Bodemuseum – as part of the installation. Twelve artists are in the show. I won’t reveal anymore – just come and see it for yourselves!

What was the selection process for choosing the artworks in the show?

GW: We had acquired new artworks and chose them as key points, finally adding some pieces we have had in our collection for a long time. The old artworks say hello to the new ones. Hopefully they get in good conversation!

On the 16th September 2017 during Berlin Art Week, the WURLITZER Berlin-Pied-à-Terre Collection will be offering guided tours around this very special private residence and collection. You can find information on all the private collections throughout Berlin Art Week HERE.

Berlin (52)

You are the Concept

Private sessions with IC founder and strategist Christian Kaspar Schwarm.

Julia Stoschek

Sergej Timofejev in conversation with Julia Stoschek: one of the most active and famous collectors of time-based art.

Boros Bunker #4

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

haubrok projects

Lollie Barr meets collector Axel Haubrok in Lichtenberg

Wurlitzer Berlin-Pied-à-Terre Collection

Gudrun and Bernd Wurlitzer have created a space where artworks sit comfortably alongside signs of everyday life

KUNSTSAELE Berlin

Geraldine Michalke provides one of the most dynamic sites for aesthetic exchanges in Berlin

The Feuerle Collection

Désiré Feuerle has turned a site of isolation and paranoia into a place infused with humanity, lightness and sensuality

Ingrid & Thomas Jochheim

The collector couple describes the discovery process, which has led them to around 700 artworks to date, as emotional

ARNDT Collection

Tiffany Wood and Matthias Arndt aim to collect works that create disturbance

PRIOR Art Space

Oliver Elst and Laura del Arco have built significant collections, both individually and together

Elke and Arno Morenz Collection

A collection about seven postwar avant-garde movements

Collection Night

A new twilight initiative takes places in Berlin to bring private collections together in a special programme.

Warhol and Works on Paper

Editions and works on paper from The Dirk Lehr Collection.

Art is a Window – Christian Kaspar Schwarm

Una Meistere in conversation in Berlin with IC founder Christian Kaspar Schwarm.

Dirk Lehr Collection

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

Yvonne Roeb

Inside the studio of the artist with the unusual collection.

Christian Kaspar Schwarm “Young Collections”

Inside the constantly growing and unconventional collection of the IC co-founder.

The Vague Space

The continuously contouring art collection from Independent Collectors’ co-founder.

Boros Bunker #3

A look inside the belly of Berlin's most known World War II Bunker.

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

"Picha/Pictures – Between Nairobi & Berlin" at Berlin's me Collectors Room features artworks by Berlin-based artists and children that live in Kibera, East Africa’s largest slum.

How to Be Unique

An exploration of the interlacing of textual, structural, and lingual elements and painting with a special emphasis on their material manifestations.

Kuhn Collection

Offering a bright perspective of young contemporary art.

Archivio Conz x KW

Archivio Conz presents “Pause: Broken Sounds/Remote Music. Prepared pianos from the Archivio Conz collection” at the KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin.

Haus N Collection & ROCCA Stiftung

Two collections joined forces to create a unique cultural experience in an abandoned car dealership in Kiel, Germany.

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

Collectors who have a special bond with Berlin.

From Sponsorship to Authorship

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

Manfred Herrmann

The Berlin based tax consultant Manfred Herrmann and his wife art historian Burglind-Christin Schulze-Herrmann have been collecting contemporary art for the last 30 years.

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

From a very early age, Pétur Arason enjoyed visiting artists in their studios with his father. Today, Arason has built up his own collection spanning more than 1 200 works.

Cindy Sherman – Works from the Olbricht Collection

Arguably one of the most important photographers of the late 20th Century, Cindy Sherman is not just a master of disguise but also a master at captivating her audiences.

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

Female Artists from the Olbricht Collection at me Collectors Room, Berlin.

Barbara Klemm: Photographs

A new exhibition from the Berlin collector Werner Driller.

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.

A Travel Companion to access private art

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.