Hello! Who is there? Slovenian and German cell phone story(s)

September 17, 2023 until spring 2024

An exhibition on the Book Fair guest country Slovenia. In cooperation with the Slovenian Museum of Post and Telecommunications, we present the development of mobile communications in Germany and Slovenia.

With “Hello! Where are you? [Halo! Kje si?]”, people there called in on their cell phones when cell phones were brand new and they didn’t know where they were being called from. We answer the call in our showroom and ask back, “Hello! Who is this?” Using objects from the collections of both museums and selected histories of use, visitors will learn more about the technical milestones of mobile telephony and the development of Slovenian and German cell phone culture – from the changeable beginnings of mobile telephony in different political systems to the shared present and future of global communication.

Visitors can also join our collective conversation on site with their own cell phone story.

An argument A rapproachment

October 6th, 2023 until August 27th, 2024

“I don’t want to argue.” We have all heard or said this sentence at one time or another. But arguing is part of human communication. We encounter it every day: in the media, in political or social debates, in the family or in relationships. Arguing is important: it gives us the chance to understand each other, to exchange ideas and to get closer.

The exhibition “STREIT. Eine Annäherung“ opens with around 150 “controversial” objects, photographs, media and artistic positions. It shows not only from a historical, communicative and political perspective, but also from a personal one, which challenges arise in the dispute – and which solutions are possible.

Expotizer

Discover the contents of the exhibition on our Expotizer.

Four people sit in the permanent exhibition and chat to each other. Other people look at the texts on the walls and exhibits.

Media history|s told anew!

Our permanent exhibition

Follow us on a journey through the past, present and future of communication: on the basis of groundbreaking inventions, curious events and unusual fates, the permanent exhibition spans 2500 square metres from the cuneiform tablet to the data glasses.

44 thematic islands demonstrate the development on the basis of four central phenomena:

Acceleration, Railroad Mail, Permanent Exhibition, Museum für Kommunikation Frankfurt
(c) Anselm Buder/ MSPT

ACCELERATION – Our everyday life is characterised by stress and time pressure. We want to experience more, accomplish more and feel more in the time we have. This intensification speeds us up further. Digitization and mobility are contributing to and shaping the history of communication. Time has become the world’s scarcest resource – how do we deal with this development?

Networking: telephone exchange, permanent exhibition, Frankfurt Museum of Communication
(c) Anselm Buder/ MSPT

NETWORKING – Global networking began with shipping, railroads and telegraphy. Today, we network with people, information and things – mobile and in real time. The boundary to the digital world has become blurred. Does increased networking bring us closer together?

Control: Live broadcast, permanent exhibition, Museum für Kommunikation Frankfurt

CONTROL – Almost everything is available online and smart devices enable access anytime, anywhere. Digitization offers limitless opportunities, but in the process we leave our mark: our data is becoming a sought-after commodity for companies and states. How can we take advantage of this digital world without giving up control of our personal data?

Participation: Ost-Sandmännchen, permanent exhibition, Museum für Kommunikation Frankfurt
(c) Anselm Buder/ MSPT

PARTICIPATION – Newspapers, radio and television keep us informed about world events. Through the Internet and smartphones, we can now become an active part of digital communities: we share our opinions, experiences and news. Theoretically – because not everyone can or wants to participate. Global togetherness or digital exclusion?

There is no set itinerary. You can surf through the permanent exhibition in a similar way to the WWW and create your own personal links. At many interactive stations you can learn in a playful way, leave us your opinion, check your user behaviour or take away tips. In the art area, highlights of the collection and temporary exhibitions related to the phenomena of communication history await you

Exhibition view of the art rooms from the entrance perspective. Pictures and two display screens hang on the walls

Art Spaces

Highlights of the art collection and temporary exhibitions

Within the art section, we show highlights of the collection and temporary exhibitions related to the phenomena of the history of communication.

Permanent exhibition in the art spaces

The Museum Foundation’s art collection includes works of art from the 17th to the 21st century: Sculptures, objects and multiples through to the present day, photographic art and media art. These include outstanding works by artists such as Carl Spitzweg, Max Ernst, Franz Radziwill, Salvador Dalí and Joseph Beuys.

A small selection of the art collection is on display at the Museum of Communication in the Art Spaces area. At present, they include the well-known ‘Aphrodisiac Telephone’ by Salvador Dalí, often referred to as the lobster telephone, a piece by Joseph Beuys, a piece by Christo, and a sculpture by Markus Lüpertz, which recently entered the collection as a donation from Deutsche Post AG, as well as a piece by the Austrian artist Brigitte Kowanz.

Art in the museum

A permanent feature of the art presentation in Frankfurt House is also the work ‘Tribute’ by Jean-Luc Cornec. Originally created at a time when cables and tangled cords were as much a part of everyday telephony as dials, intercoms and earpieces, the curly wool of the sheep is quite simply art for younger viewers.

The media sculpture ‘Pre-Bell-Man’ is considered a symbol of the Frankfurt museum. The delicate work was extensively restored in 2019 and since then welcomes visitors again. A comprehensive publication, which you can purchase in our museum shop, has been produced for the re-creation of the work.

History of the art collection

The Museum Foundation’s art collection was founded almost 150 years ago; it consisted for a long time primarily of works with a direct subject matter related to postal operations and their history: paintings depicting stagecoaches, postal stations or letter delivery. In the 1980s, the collection was enriched by carefully selected purchases of high-quality works. By the time of the new museum building in 1990, the museum had turned away from documentary collecting and the presentation of works for communication became more important. With the establishment of the Museum Foundation in 1995, the reorientation of the museums became the broader range of topics. Communication now became the determining factor for all collections as well as exhibitions.

Changing exhibitions in the Art Spaces.

Exhibition view Stephanie Syjuco - Free Texts (2014-2020), "Feedback 5: Global Warning - Marshall McLuhan and the Arts", Museum für Kommunikation Frankfurt

Parallel to the permanent presentations, the museum shows artistic and media-cultural positions in the Art Spaces, in which the phenomena of the permanent exhibition – such as acceleration, participation, networking and control – are reflected.

You can find the temporary exhibitions here: Special exhibitions

Exhibition view from the permanent exhibition. A man stands in front of a media station and holds an earpiece to his right ear.
(c) Anselm Buder/ MSPT

21 Minds Think Future

New perspectives on communication in the 21st century

Will we have to buy privacy in the future? How will a child communicate in 30 years? How is the body used as an interface? In the Museum of Communication’s permanent exhibition, 21 personalities from business, science, civil society and politics present their perspectives on communication in the 21st century and the influence of digitalisation for discussion.

These experts will present their views on the possible trends of tomorrow’s communication in video statements and interviews.

How will a child communicate in 30 years?

Sound collage with answers from: Prof. Dr. Bernhard Pörsken, Thomas Arend, Peter Zoche, Yvonne Hochstetter, Dr. Barbara Hans and Prof. Dr. Regina Anmicht Quinn.

Are we losing control of our data in the digital world?

Answer by Yvonne Hoftstetter, lawyer and managing director of Teramark Technologies GmbH.

What distinguishes smart machines from conventional machines?

Answer by Prof. Sabina Jeschke, IT in Mechanical Engineering at RWTH Aachen University.

Will we have to buy privacy in the future?

Response from Prof. Dr. Thomas Schildhauer of the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society.

Do we have enough resources for the digital future?

Response from Prof. Dr. Harald Welzer, Futurzwei. Foundation for Sustainability.
Logo des Projektes Leben und Lernen X.0. Eine Figur eines Menschen besitzt einen Block mit zwei Sprechblasen als Kopf. Zum Kopf führen sechs verschiedenfarbige Striche hin.
(c) MSPT

Leben & Lernen X.0

The information and networking forum on the digital transformation!

The digital transformation is already rapidly changing our lives. This makes it all the more important to understand and help shape the opportunities and consequences of digitalisation. With Leben & Lernen X.0, the Museum für Kommunikation Frankfurt offers a forum for dialogue and the teaching of media skills with a focus on the topics of digital education, the future of democracy and the future of work.

The information and networking forum Leben & Lernen X.0 thinks about the present and future of communication with the museum’s visitors. Does Big Data threaten our privacy? What skills do we need in the age of strategically deployed fake news? Will artificial intelligences soon take over our work? What is digital education?

Diskutieren Sie mit uns den digitalen Wandel!

All Frankfurt residents are invited to discuss the effects of the digital transformation together with experts in workshops, citizens’ forums and with artistic perspectives, and to formulate their questions, demands and expectations. If you are interested in our events, write an email to lebenundlernen@mspt.de or visit our website: www.lebenx0.de

KLIMA_X

October 13, 2022 until August 27, 2023

We all know the burden of good resolutions: We want to eat less sugar, reduce our meat consumption, exercise more, stop smoking or take the bike instead of the car. Often we already know what would be healthy and good for us, but we find it difficult to implement. This is also true with regard to the climate crisis. We have already experienced heavy rain, hot spells and droughts, and climate scientists around the world have presented valid climate data. We know that we need to significantly reduce CO2 emissions to preserve our habitat. We know that we need to change our mobility, nutrition and consumption. We know that the issue affects us all – on a large scale, politics and business, and on a small scale, everyone in their personal lives. But why don’t we do what we know?

The exhibition explores these questions and invites visitors to explore their own type of change. Because everyone deals with change differently and has different perceptions of it. Freely according to the motto: paths are created by walking them.

Our cooperation partners

Exhibition in cooperation with the Hessian Ministry for the Environment, Climate Protection, Agriculture and Consumer Protection as well as the LandesEnergieAgentur Hessen (LEA) and the Frankfurt Environmental Office, among others.

Expotizer

The online presence for our new exhibition “KLIMA_X” is part logbook, part manual, and part museum chat. It will continue to grow until the start of the exhibition on October 13, 2022: We will report here on the exhibition project and keep a record for you of the activities we are launching in the run-up.

Accompanying program

The accompanying program as PDF

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