Things to do
EXHIBITIONS IN NEUSS
A variety of art venues and museums hold frequent exhibitions in Neuss. Highly talented and famous local artists are shown as well as some of the world’s best.





Art venues and museums in and around Neuss regularly present selections of their fine pieces in well presented exhibitions. Unable to show their extensive works simultaneously, these opportunities reveal well researched and comprehensive insights.
They often exhibit fascinating and rare works from across the globe with exhibitions of loaned works of art.
The Clemens Sells Museum and its affiliates offer free entry on each first Sunday of the month.
By Vincent Green, Feb 29 2020
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| 1IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 2IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 3IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 4IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
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| 5IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 6IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 7IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 8IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 9Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 10Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 11Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
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| 12Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 13Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 14Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 15Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 16Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 17Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
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| 19Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 20Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 21Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 22Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 23Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 24Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 25Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| ||||
| 26Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 27Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 28Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 29Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18Wachhaus #18: Hanna Maxi: Each one had a name as long as it lasted
Hanna Maxi is developing a site-specific, intuitive arrangement of various works created during her time at the Kunstakademie in the Wachhaus at the Raketenstation. Among other things, her installation features modular paper works that she assembles as fragments into something larger, modular like a type case that can be rearranged again and again.
Raketenstation
IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 30IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
| 31IncarnateIncarnate Incarnate, a collaborative exhibition by Langen Foundation and Julia Stoschek Foundation Incarnate invites viewers to explore a continuum between material and immaterial worlds, and to discover surprising overlaps between spiritual inquiry and media aesthetics. While staging encounters between devotional art and onscreen figures the exhibition challenges distinctions between ancient and contemporary insight.
From Asterix to Cupid
The fascination for antiquity remains unbroken to this day. But how has the view of this era changed over the centuries? Paintings and sculptures, drawings, prints and comics provide information about antiquity as a rich source of inspiration and its diverse influences on myths and fashion, architecture and sculpture. Works from the 16th to 20th centuries from the collection of the Clemens Sels Museum Neuss once again demonstrate what »Antiquity Reloaded« can mean.
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EVENTS IN NEUSS
Barely a week goes by without an event or activity happening in Neuss. Two major annual events take place here every year that have attained both national and international renown. Choose authentic performances at the Shakespeare Festival or powerful emotional displays at the International Dance Weeks.
City guides for expats
Amazing Capitals Neuss is full of insights for international residents. It is dedicated to helping internationals make choices, settle and participate. Enjoy the city!

