Highlights from Museum Berggruen / Neue Nationalgalerie
May 31–September 21, 2025
Parkes 2600
Australia
Hours: Monday–Sunday 10am–5pm
Modernist masterpieces are now on display in the National Gallery of Australia’s major new exhibition—Cézanne to Giacometti: highlights from Museum Berggruen / Neue Nationalgalerie.
Exclusive to Kamberri/Canberra, this landmark exhibition showcases works by some of the greatest artists of the 20th century, including Paul Cézanne, Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Henri Matisse, Paul Klee and Alberto Giacometti. Curated in partnership with Berlin’s Museum Berggruen, the works are presented alongside Australia’s national collection to examine how the revolutionary ideas of modern art spread and inspired developments in both European and Australian modernism.
Cézanne to Giacometti is on display from May 31 to September 21, 2025 and marks the first time works of art from this renowned German collection will be shown in Australia. Bringing together over 80 works from the Museum Berggruen collection with over 75 works from the National Gallery’s collection, the exhibition offers local audiences a rare opportunity to experience masterpieces that shaped the course of modern art—from here and abroad.
The exhibition begins with the revolutionary ideas of Cézanne, whose experiments with perspective, colour and form broke tradition and influenced generations of artists. His legacy is reflected in the work of Picasso, Matisse, Klee and others who pushed the boundaries of artistic expression in the 20th century. While many of these artists worked in Paris, their ideas spread globally and transformed Australian art in parallel.
Cézanne to Giacometti brings these global connections to life, presenting a genealogy of artists who have influenced one another across time, highlighting Australian art's connections to, and encounters with, the European avant-garde. Through an expansive exhibition experience, audiences will have the opportunity to explore artistic revolutions in perspective, colour, subject matter and materials that occurred over a 100-year period in Europe and Australia.
Fostered by Nicolas Berggruen, the son of Heinz Berggruen, during his visit to the National Gallery in 2023, this remarkable partnership with Museum Berggruen places works from their prestigious collection in dialogue with Australia’s national collection.
Nicolas Berggruen said: “As the Berggruen Museum collection journeys around the world, its stop at the exceptional National Gallery of Australia is a tribute to the enduring inspiration of Europe’s great modern masters. We’re honoured to bring these works into dialogue with the National Gallery’s remarkable collection and the vibrant cultural landscape of Australia."
Dr Nick Mitzevich, Director, National Gallery of Australia said: “Culture brings people together by sharing and exchanging ideas, stories and ways of understanding our place in the world. The Cézanne to Giacometti exhibition exemplifies the power of international collaboration. The exhibition highlights the connections between European and Australian art history, telling an expansive story of art in the modern era. While the physical distance between Europe and Australia is great, the personal and artistic connections between artists of both continents bridges this distance.”
This unique opportunity to bring one of Europe’s foremost collections of modern art to Australia is testament to the generosity of Museum Berggruen and the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin, Germany, and the members of the Berggruen family. The collection was assembled by prominent art dealer Heinz Berggruen (1914–2007), who, after fleeing Germany ahead of the Second World War, lived in Paris for more than 50 years and formed close relationships with boundary-pushing artists. After returning to Berlin late in life, he sold the majority of his collection to the German government, ensuring its preservation and public access.
Klaus Biesenbach, Director, Neue Nationalgalerie—Stiftung, Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin said: “As you explore Cézanne to Giacometti, I encourage you to engage with each artwork not just as an isolated piece but as part of a larger conversation—a dialogue that spans continents and generations.”
Exhibition organised in partnership with Berlin’s Museum Berggruen / Neue Nationalgalerie.
Media enquiries:
media@nga.gov.au