Kuratorium Preußischer Kulturbesitz

The Kuratorium Preussischer Kulturbesitz brings together companies committed to culture to support selected projects of the foundation as part of a strategic partnership.

Logo of the Kuratorium Preußischer Kulturbesitz

Prussian Cultural Heritage Board
© SPK / Polyform

Founded in 2014, the Kuratorium Preussischer Kulturbesitz is an association of culturally committed commercial enterprises. The aim of the Board of Trustees is to support the foundation in the realisation of selected projects as part of a strategic sponsoring partnership. The main focus here is on cultural education and mediation as well as digital transformation. The Board of Trustees also supports exhibitions, research projects and event series. The Board of Trustees of Prussian Cultural Heritage also supports the foundation in expanding its networking activities and provides its expertise on the strategic development of various topics.

The following internationally active companies are currently members of the Board of Trustees: Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA, Mercedes-Benz Group AG, Siemens AG, Würth Group and ZDF. The Chair of the Board of Trustees is Dr Helen Müller, Head of Cultural Affairs and Corporate History Corporate Communications at Bertelsmann SE & Co. KGaA. The Deputy Chairman is Prof. Dr Stephan Frucht, Head of Cultural and Sponsoring Programmes and Artistic Director of the Siemens Arts Program at Siemens AG.

Strategic support for sustainable projects

As a universal cultural institution, the SPK bears responsibility for its excellent collections, their preservation, research and, above all, communication. This is where the Board of Trustees comes in with its support.

Access and participation for all

The core objective of the commitment is to support public access and participation. The promotion of educational and mediation programmes is particularly important to the Board of Trustees. For example, the programme work at Haus Bastian with the project ‘Welcome to Museum Island! Welcome to Haus Bastian!’ and the successful summer programme “Connections” were realised with the help of the Board of Trustees.

The Kuratorium is currently supporting the 200th anniversary of the Museum Island.

It also supports the ‘Forum Hamburger Bahnhof’. This newly designed area of the Hamburger Bahnhof is permanently open to the public free of charge. The “Forum Hamburger Bahnhof” not only takes up the history of the building, but is above all intended to be a place of debate that invites visitors to help shape new concepts for the museum.

The innovative event series ‘Making Spaces: A Programming Series in Solidarity with Ukraine’ is also realised thanks to funding from the Board of Trustees. Here, Ukrainian art and culture take centre stage in talks and performances.

Another important concern of the Board of Trustees is to advance the Foundation's digital transformation. The large-scale, foundation-wide data portal ‘SPK Lab’, which went online in 2023, could only be realised with the help of the Board of Trustees. The web magazine was also made possible by the Board of Trustees.

Selected research projects are also funded by the Board of Trustees, for example on the subject of provenance research.

The Kuratorium is also involved in the Dahlem Research Campus and supports the ‘DenkRaum’ sub-project in particular. The magazine and the online programme entitled ‘In weit Ferne so nah’ (‘So close from afar’) complement the Kuratorium commitment to the Dahlem research campus.

Important exhibition projects are also part of the companies' funding portfolio: without the Board of Trustees, it would not have been possible to have the space on the third floor of the Humboldt Forum dedicated to Chinese court art designed as a permanent installation by architect and Pritzker Prize winner Wang Shu.

In 2025, the Kuratorium supported the special exhibition ‘The Bronzes from San Casciano dei Bagni. A Sensation from the Mud,’ which was shown in the James Simon Gallery, as well as the exhibition 'In Sight! Lovis Corinth, the Nationalgalerie and the “Degenerate Art” Campaign’ which can be seen in the Old National Gallery until January 2026. Highlights of 2026 with Kuratorium funding include the exhibitions ‘Built Community. Göbeklitepe, Taş Tepeler and Life 12,000 Years Ago,’ which will open in February, and the show ‘Cassirer and the Breakthrough of Impressionism,’ which will be on display from May.