Museum Sunday
Free admission every first Sunday of the month!
Together with many other museums in Berlin, the Jewish Museum Berlin and ANOHA Children’s World participate in the Berlin-wide initiative of free-entry Sunday. On every first Sunday of the month, visitors have free admission not only to the core exhibition, but also the current temporary exhibition. Museum Sunday is an initiative of the State of Berlin in cooperation with the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media and the Berlin State Museum Association. Tickets can be reserved exclusively via the Museum Sunday website.
Every first Sunday of the month
Where
Jewish Museum Berlin
Lindenstraße 9–14, 10969 Berlin
On free-entry Sundays, you can take part in one of our tours free of charge:
Highlights of the Core Exhibition (in German)
This tour gives you an initial overview of the exhibition, as narrated from a Jewish perspective, through selected locations and objects.
Start: 11 am
Duration: 90 minutes
Tickets can be reserved several days in advance on the Museum Sunday website
In Good Neighbourhood (in German)
Modern Art at the Jewish Museum Berlin and the Berlinische Galerie
Start: Sun, 3 Nov and Sun, 1 Dec, 12 am and 2.30 pm
Duration: 120 minutes
Meeting point: in the foyer of the JMB
Tickets are available a few days prior to the Museum Sunday on the event’s website: museumssonntag.berlin
If there are no tickets left, it is still worthwhile to ask at the box office on museum sunday for unclaimed tickets.
The Jewish Museum Berlin and the Berlinische Galerie are located in close proximity to each other. On Museum Sunday, they invite you to take a dialog-based tour through both museums. This is centered around an examination of modern art, which closely links the two collections. For example, works by Max Liebermann, Lesser Ury, Julie Wolfthorn, Otto Freundlich and Felix Nussbaum can be found at both locations. All of these artists helped shape art in Berlin and all of them were ostracized by the Nazis. By bringing together the distinct points of view and collections of the two institutions, this two-hour tour will open up new perspectives on a piece of (art) history.
This event is supported by the Senate Department for Culture and Social Cohesion for the prevention of antisemitism and the promotion of interfaith dialog.