Bad Frankenhausen: Museum juxtaposes Tübke with European Art
The Panorama Museum in Bad Frankenhausen has opened a new exhibition, "Man and World," which places Werner Tübke's works in dialogue with European art movements.

The Panorama Museum in Bad Frankenhausen launched a special exhibition titled "Man and World" on Saturday. The exhibition aims to artistically and art historically contextualize Werner Tübke's renowned "Peasants' War Panorama."
The museum is showcasing approximately 200 paintings from its collection. These include works by Tübke's contemporaries from the Leipzig School, as well as by European artists from the same period up to the present day. The initiative seeks to position Tübke's oeuvre within a broader European artistic landscape.
Museum director Gerd Lindner explained that the exhibition's goal was to identify and present artistic groupings in Europe that were comparable to the Leipzig School active at the time. Lindner noted that similar movements focusing on figurative painting emerged concurrently in various European countries, including France, Italy, the Czech Republic, Austria, and Slovakia.
Among the exhibited works is a painting by Leipzig artist Frank Hauptvogel, acquired through a donation from his heirs. Lindner expressed satisfaction with this acquisition, describing Hauptvogel as one of the foremost painters of the present era. The exhibition provides examples of the European artistic environments that surrounded and influenced Tübke.
The "Man and World" exhibition covers the period from the 1950s to the present, offering visitors a unique opportunity to explore Tübke's art in conjunction with contemporary European artistic phenomena and developments.