Exactly 100 years ago, the first women were allowed to participate in
regular art courses at the Berliner Kunstakademie. While such a late
date is no cause for celebration, it nonetheless offers the opportunity
to consider the works of these women painters and sculptors, who
triumphed against adversity to break into the art world and succeeded in
having their works included in the Nationalgalerie's collection. Among
them are Sabine Lepsius's self-conscious self-portrait, Maria Slavona's
impressionistic view of the houses of Montmartre, and Caroline Bardua's
spectacular paintings. Even more than the painters, the sculptors
encountered opposition to their artistic activities. The powerful works
of the German-American sculptor Elisabeth Ney and the Berlin artists
Kathe Kollwitz and Renee Sintenis gave the lie to such prejudices.
Alongside these well-known names, the catalogue and exhibition also
invites visitors to discover lesser known figures, some of whom are
being shown in the Alte Nationalgalerie for the first time.