Berlin’s Château Royal Is a Buzzy New Space to Experience Contemporary Art—and Spend the Night

The hotel gave carte blanche to more than 100 artists, including Alicja Kwade, Thomas Demand, Tino Sehgal, and Danh Vo.

The new hotel Château Royal is open in Berlin. © Felix Brueggemann.

On Berlin’s Mittelstrasse, not far from the Brandenburg Gate, you’ll find a ca.-1850 building with a new, Sir David Chipperfield–designed roof, its bronze dome featuring a weathervane by the artist Cyprien Gaillard. At night, the facade glows with the warm light of lanterns whose multihued glass has been created by the artist Paul Hance.

The cloaked bronze statue standing guard outside—Alicja Kwade’s Self-Portrait as a Ghost—feels less hospitable, however.

“Two things can happen here,” said the local gallerist turned curator Kirsten Landwehr: “The art can simply be—without consciously registering a specific moment and what it does to you, it feels pleasant, you could even call it magic; or it speaks to you directly, in a way that can also be provocative and challenging.”

Designed by Irina Kromayer and Etienne Descloux, the hotel's exterior lanterns feature glass created by the artist Paul Hance. © Felix Brueggemann.

Designed by Irina Kromayer and Etienne Descloux, the hotel’s exterior lanterns feature glass by the artist Paul Hance. © Felix Brueggemann.

She was referring not to a gallery or museum, but to Château Royal, the city’s newest boutique hotel and perhaps most surprising new space to experience contemporary art.

But it is less surprising when you consider who is behind it. That would be Stephan Landwehr (Kirsten’s husband) and Moritz Estermann, the cofounder and longtime manager of Berlin’s beloved Grill Royal, respectively, along with Danish-Icelandic chef Victoria Eliasdóttir, who years ago ran the kitchen of Olafur Eliasson’s local studio (the artist is her brother), and more recently the city’s seasonally inspired Dóttir restaurant.

The dining room has a neon work by Karl Holmqvist, <i>Hurrah Die Butter ist Alle (“untitled”)</i>. © Felix Brueggemann.

The dining room has a neon work by Karl Holmqvist, Hurrah Die Butter ist Alle (“untitled”). © Felix Brueggemann.

The latter has come back to life inside the hotel, serving dishes like “In Beans We Trust” (smoked white beans, sautéed kale, tomatoes, and thyme oil with grilled brioche and house-made labneh) alongside an oversize neon work by Karl Holmqvist, Hurrah Die Butter ist Alle (“untitled”) (translation: “Hooray, the butter is gone”).

“Personally, I can’t imagine a room without art,” said Stephan, whose first Berlin venture—a framing workshop—fostered the community of artists and art worlders who frequent his establishments today. “When thinking about opening a hotel or restaurant, art was naturally going to play a role.”

Thomas Demand designed both the wallpaper, <i>Fold</i> (2015), and artwork, <i>Kinglet</i> (2020), in this guest room. © Felix Brueggemann.

Thomas Demand designed both the wallpaper, Fold (2015), and artwork, Kinglet (2020), in this guest room. © Felix Brueggemann.

So the couple tapped some 100 of their artist friends, including Cosima von Bonin, Simon Fujiwara, Damien Hirst, Anne Imhof, Masha Reva, Anri Sala, Tino Sehgal, and Danh Vo. Their contributions—paintings, sculptures, photography, videos, installations, even drapes—adorn Château Royal from the exteriors to the 93 guest rooms and suites, which have vintage and custom oak furnishings, herringbone parquet floors, and Bauhaus-inspired bathrooms with nickel, chrome, and handcrafted craquelé tiles.

The works have been curated—and often specially commissioned—by Kirsten in collaboration with Krist Gruijthuijsen, the director of Berlin’s KW Institute for Contemporary Art. “We gave carte blanche to all the artists,” Kirsten told Artnet News.

Karl Holmqvist created the suite's text-based work, <i>Summer is On</i> (2022). © Felix Brueggemann.

Karl Holmqvist created the suite’s text-based work, Summer is On (2022). © Felix Brueggemann.

While Thomas Demand created wallpaper, Christian Jankowski asked the site’s construction workers to draw castles in the sky; he is now turning four years of their work into a light sculpture. Meanwhile, Samantha Bohatsch is planning to do a sound performance in one of the guest rooms.

“There may be challenges in terms of installations, but there is never a question of whether or not an artist can impose their work on a guest,” Kirsten said. “They can. And if it’s too much, we have 92 other rooms.”

Château Royal is located at Mittelstrasse 41–44, 10117 Berlin, Germany.


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