Galerie Max Hetzler is a gallery for contemporary art with locations in Berlin, Paris and London.
History
The Galerie Max Hetzler was founded in Stuttgart in 1974.[1] In 1981, the gallery presented the first exhibitions of Martin Kippenberger and Albert Oehlen. In 1983 the gallery moved to Cologne, the centre of the contemporary art scene in Germany at the time, and pursued a programme with some of the most significant German and American artists from the 80's.[1]
From 1989 until 1992, Max Hetzler partnered with Luhring Augustine Gallery on establishing Luhring Augustine Hetzler in Los Angeles.[2] The 4,500 square feet (420 square metres) space was located in a refurbished building at 1330 4th Street in Santa Monica.[3]
Max Hetzler moved to Berlin in 1993, inaugurating a space in Charlottenburg in 1994.[4] The following year, a second space opened on Zimmerstraße, next to Checkpoint Charlie. This soon became the main gallery, where exhibitions by artists from different generations took place.
In the late 1990s, Max Hetzler joined forces with Jeffrey Deitch and Anthony d'Offay to invest heavily in the costly fabrication of Jeff Koons's Celebration series at Southern California-based Carlson & Company (including his Balloon Dog and Moon series),[5][6] and later, at Arnold, a Frankfurt-based company. The dealers funded the project in part by selling works to collectors before they were fabricated.[7]
At the end of 2013 Max Hetzler left the gallery space in Berlin-Wedding and opened two new spaces in Berlin-Charlottenburg.
In May 2014, the gallery inaugurated its first location outside of Germany, in the Marais district of Paris.[8]
In 2018 the gallery expanded further, opening a London location at 41 Dover Street in Mayfair.[9] That year, Max Hetzler's son, Max Edouard,[10] and Sarah Horner took over the gallery's management.[11]
Most recently, the gallery has launched two new spaces in Berlin. In May 2020, Galerie Max Hetzler opened a street level gallery, in a magnificent art nouveau building at Bleibtreustraße 15/16 in the former home of pioneering German avant-garde art dealer Alfred Flechtheim (1878-1937).[12] In November 2021, Galerie Max Hetzler inaugurated its latest space at Potsdamer Straße 77-87 with a solo exhibition by André Butzer entitled Rohe Milch.[13]
Artists
Galerie Max Hetzler today represents many contemporary artists, including: