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A historical building facade featuring an intricately designed archway with red brick and decorative elements, situated between two white residential buildings.

Sophiensæle, 2025, Image: Raisa Galofre

Since its founding in 1996, Sophiensæle has been one of the most important production houses for the independent performing arts scene in Berlin and beyond. For the 13th Berlin Biennale, the building that houses today’s Sophiensæle will become a “blueprint for Berlin”, exemplifying the history of the city over the course of the 20th century. It not only tells of the rise of social democratic forces and workers’ associations and their destruction by the National Socialist dictatorship, but also of the redevelopment of democratic principles and the occupation of spaces in the center of the city by artists.

Built between 1904 and 1905 as a craftsmen’s clubhouse, the building was originally dedicated to the education of workers, but soon developed into a meeting place for the revolutionary Left. Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, Erich Mühsam and Clara Zetkin spoke here; and it was here that Erich Mühsam warned against the rise of fascism in Germany in the early 1920s. After the NSDAP came to power, the craftsmen’s association was hastily banned and the clubhouse closed. A few years later, the rooms of the Sophiensæle–mainly the Festsaal–were misused during the Nazi dictatorship as a forced labor camp to produce propaganda leaflets for the fascist regime. Traces of this can still be seen on the walls of Sophiensæle today.

In the GDR years, the stage workshops of the Maxim Gorki Theater occupied the space until, in the autumn of 1996, Sasha Waltz and Jochen Sandig, together with Jo Fabian, Holger Zebu Kluth and Dirk Cieslak, reimagined Sophiensæle as an independent theater—by artists, for artists. Since then, Sophiensæle has become a platform for contemporary performing arts, embracing diverse artistic practices beyond genre boundaries and showcasing both emerging and established voices, with a blend of local and international perspectives.

Sophiensæle
Sophienstraße 18
10178 Berlin