Galerie der Stadt Sindelfingen, Museum für zeitgenössische Kunst
The Galerie der Stadt Sindelfingen is an art museum in the town center housed in a 19th-century classical building with a modern octagonal extension. The space spans three floors and displays rotating exhibitions featuring paintings, sculptures, photographs, and mixed media works by local and regional artists.
The building was constructed in 1845 as a town hall and was converted into a museum in the 1980s by Berlin architect Josef Paul Kleihues. The octagonal extension, protected as a historic monument in 2016, created additional exhibition space for the Lütze collection and the city's art holdings.
The gallery carries the town's name and shows how Sindelfingen supports local artists. Visitors notice how regional work takes center stage in rotating exhibitions and how the public actively engages with contemporary creators.
The museum is centrally located on the town square and is easily reached on foot, with cafes and shops nearby. The entrance area provides information and makes it simple to navigate the three-story building.
The Lütze collection, a private collection of about 1,500 paper works founded in 1972, forms a core of the museum. It focuses on southern German artists from Munich, Stuttgart, and Karlsruhe, showing how a single collector shaped the art landscape of an entire town.
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