After more than 20 years of successful communication in the permanent exhibition ‘Helmut Newton's Private Property’ on the ground floor of the Museum of Photography, the Helmut Newton Foundation has decided to expand the exhibition concept and radically change the previous presentation. The basic idea of providing information about the life of Helmut Newton and his wife June in this space remains unchanged.
The temporary exhibitions on the first floor also continue to contextualise the work of Helmut Newton and Alice Springs twice a year, sometimes as solo exhibitions, sometimes as group exhibitions.
The intermediate step in the transformation of the previous permanent exhibition offers a cinematic ‘intermezzo’ with Helmut Newton in an overwhelming film room. On the ground floor, eight video projectors project a film onto four screens.
The film is based in part on the film portrait created three years ago for a major Newton exhibition in A Coruña, produced by Profirst International in collaboration with the Martin Salvador Studio for the MOP Foundation there. It is supplemented by previously unseen footage. Various sources were used for this, including material from June Newton, which was recently processed and digitised in the museum's own archive. For the first time, visitors in Berlin can now see interviews with a dozen contemporary witnesses, including Philippe Garner, Carla Sozzani, Jenny Capitain, Violetta Sanchez and Matthias Harder, and experience Newton's work in a whole new way. The film is edited into an endless loop and offers interested visitors a surprising and content-rich experience.
At the rear of the exhibition space on the ground floor of the museum, there are still almost 100 exhibition posters by Newton on display, but in a different setting and supplemented by several posters from various Alice Springs solo exhibitions.
In the 16-metre-long display case below the posters, the vintage magazines featuring Newton's published work for the new temporary presentation ‘Intermezzo’ have been replaced by other fashion and lifestyle magazines and combined with magazine editorials by Alice Springs, including magazines such as Jardin des Modes, Elle, Vogue, Vanity Fair, Egoiste, Stern, The New Yorker, Photo and Paris Match. So at this point, the exhibition display remains the same, only the content changes. Slowly walking past the wall display case continues to reveal an intense insight into the development of fashion photography and the changing image of women in the Western world from the late 1950s to the beginning of the 21st century, including the revolutionary social upheavals of the 1960s and 1970s and their visual impact - even in fashion, which, as we know, reflects the spirit of the times.
Next to it, in the corridors of ‘Intermezzo’, large text panels with illustrated biographies of the life and work of Helmut and June Newton are presented, along with framed portrait photographs of the two founders of the foundation. And opposite the huge poster wall, a new curatorial idea begins, which is later repeated at irregular intervals under the motto ‘Spotlight: Behind the Frame’: An iconic photograph from the work of Helmut Newton or Alice Springs is brought into focus by illuminating its history of creation and distribution using contact sheets from the shoot, publications of the specific image, notes, preparatory Polaroids and comparable photographs. It begins with ‘Rue Aubriot,’ Newton's legendary fashion photograph from Paris, taken in the eponymous street for French Vogue in 1975, as well as the first photograph in Alice Springs' oeuvre: the smoking male model, an advertising image for Gitanes cigarettes, also taken in Paris in 1970. This miniature exhibition concept will later be continued by guest curators, enabling an external, fresh look at the work of Helmut Newton and Alice Springs. In this way, the Foundation and its archives will literally be opened up for a new encounter.
The future permanent exhibition of the Helmut Newton Foundation, which will be on display after the end of the cinematic interlude at the end of 2027, will then respond even more dynamically to the different aspects of both photographic works. As part of the later presentation, we will also encounter some of the popular personal items belonging to
Helmut and June Newton again, but in a completely new display and supplemented by audio or video commentary.
Additional information
The exhibition will be open from April 24, 2026. Until then, the Helmut Newton Foundation will remain closed.
The Museum of Photography building will open its lobby and the exhibition “Under the Roof” on April 16.
Opening hours:
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Thursdays 11 a.m. – 8 p.m.
Closed on Mondays
The Museum of Photography building will open its lobby and the exhibition “Under the Roof” on April 16.
Opening hours:
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Thursdays 11 a.m. – 8 p.m.
Closed on Mondays
Accessibility
The museum and exhibition rooms are accessible to all visitors.