Visit
Exhibition venue
Alte Kelter Fellbach, Untertürkheimer Straße 33
From Stuttgart by public transport: S-Bahn S2 (direction Schorndorf) and S3 (direction Backnang) to Fellbach station or U1 to the last stop Fellbach Lutherkirche; continue with bus line 60 (direction Untertürkheim) to Alte Kelter.
If you come by car, there are parking spaces behind the Alte Kelter. Unfortunately, there will be no parking spaces available here on the opening day. We recommend car park P3 Max-Graser-Stadion, Schillerstraße 30, approx. 10 minutes' walk.
Duration of the exhibition
4th of June to 3rd of October 2022
Opening hours
Tue to Fri 2 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Thu 2 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Sat and Sun 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Whitmonday, June 6th: 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Open days with free entry
3rd July 2022, 2nd and 3rd October 2022
with the kind support of LOTTO Baden-Württemberg
Entrance fees
Adults 10 euros
Reduced 5 euros (pupils, students, unemployed, BonusCard holders)
Children up to 12 years free
Group ticket for groups of 10 or more people: 8 euros per person
Season ticket 25 euros
Guided tours
Public guided tours:
Thursdays 7 p.m., Sundays 11 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Thursday, June 30th: 5 p.m.
Entrance fee plus 2 euros per person
In addition, themed guided tours were offered, which are based on the RESONANCES series of events.
Special tours for groups by appointment at the Cultural office, phone 0711/5851-364
Entrance fee plus 2 euros per person
Guided tours for Fellbach school classes free of charge;
External school classes 2 euros per student
Barrier-free guided tours
Guided tours with a sign language interpreter:
Thu June 23, 7 p.m. and Sun July 24, 11 a.m
Please register at kulturamt@fellbach.de
Guided tours for people with visual impairments:
Sat 17 September and Sat 24 September, 11 a.m
Please register at kulturamt@fellbach.de or 0711 5851 364
Guided tours in easy language:
Dates on request. Texts are also available at the checkout.
Locations
Alte Kelter
Built in 1906 and inaugurated in 1907, the Alte Kelter was the largest of its kind in Württemberg at the time. Unused for a long time, it was reopened in September 2000 after careful renovation as a multifunctional house of culture. With around 2500 square metres of exhibition space, the Alte Kelter has one of the largest exhibition rooms in southern Germany. The building combines the functionality and sobriety of purpose-oriented industrial architecture with the craftsmanship of timber frame construction. Particularly imposing is the enormous, openly visible roof truss that covers the entire 3000 square metre area. The Japanese artist Katsuhito Nishikawa created 24 mobile partition walls especially for the Alte Kelter, which - depending on the event and requirements - allow free interior design variations
Path of Contemplation Fellbach
4851'05.6N 916'22.3E
Wanderparkplatz Obere Hau
70736 Fellbach
The „Besinnungsweg Fellbach“ is an unusual project that brings together nature, art, religion and philosophy at selected locations on the northern edge of Fellbach. Twelve places of contemplation, which are intended to encourage people to pause and reflect on religious and ideological questions, are each assigned a theme that is illustrated by quotations from literature, religion or philosophy. Nine places of reflection have now been completed. The invited artists are required to include the scenic surroundings of the respective place of contemplation as part of the artistic statement in the work. The path is supported and supervised by the Förderverein Besinnungsweg Fellbach e.V., founded in 1999, which selects the artists in consultation with the cultural office of the city of Fellbach and realises the artworks largely on its own according to their specifications.
Gallery of the city of Fellbach
Marktplatz 4
70734 Fellbach
In its own rooms directly in the town hall complex, the Gallery of the City of Fellbach presents contemporary fine art on two floors and 250 m². The gallery opened in October 1997 with works by the painter Karl-Georg Pfahler. Works by renowned artists such as Arnulf Rainer, Inge Mahn, Timm Ulrichs, Henk Visch, Jürgen Brodwolf, Heather Allen, Stephan Balkenhol and Anja Luithle, to name but a few, have been shown. Exhibitions are also always held in the context of the Triennale. With reference to the American photojournalists of the first hour (Johanna) Hansel Mieth and Otto Hagel, who came from Fellbach, one focus of the exhibition programme is on photography. Artists from the region are also offered a forum. Sculpture in public space, namely the cooperation with the Förderverein Besinnungsweg Fellbach e.V., is part of the gallery's work.