Plans to slash Berlinâs culture budget by tens of millions of Euros have led to a huge backlash, with leading venues saying they have been forced to cut performances and others warning they will be pushed into bankruptcy.
About 450 institutes that are reliant at least in part on state subsidies, from theatres and opera houses to nightclubs and galleries, have formed an alliance in an attempt to force a rethink over the â¬130m (£108.6m) cuts. At around 12 to 13% of the current annual budget, they have been described even by those proposing them as âbrutalâ.
For those fighting them, they spell disaster for a city famed the world over for its thriving artistic life. âThe cuts will permanently destroy Berlinâs cultural infrastructure,â predicts the alliance Berlin Is Culture (#BerlinIstKultur).
In its appeal to Berlinâs Christian Democrat-led (CDU) government, it says âdrastic programme cuts, layoffs and closuresâ are inevitable. At stake are not just jobs but âdiversity, excellence, resilience and social cohesion,â it warns.
On Friday, protesters against the cuts will gather close to the city hall at 3pm, from where participants will march to the Brandenburg Gate.
Thomas Ostermeier, the artistic director at the Schaubühne, a leading German stage with a reputation far beyond Berlin owing to its progressive programming, said the cuts would âopen up a new chapter in the cityâs historyâ in which culture âplay[ed] an ever less prominent roleâ.
The â¬2.5m savings to be made by the Schaubühne, he said, would lead to the closure of the theatreâs smaller experimental stage, the Studio, which has championed British playwrights such as Sarah Kane and David Harrower. It could also, he predicted, lead to the entire Schaubühne â which was founded in 1962 â facing âinsolvency by the end of next yearâ.
Ostermeier urged Berlinâs government to recognise how crucial culture is for the cityâs economy. âIf you destroy that, you are destroying even more than the culture. You are also destroying tourism, and the attractiveness for certain commercial companies to settle in this city is also reduced,â he told Die Zeit.
Oliver Reese, the director of the Berliner Ensemble in east Berlin, the spiritual home of playwright heavyweights Bertolt Brecht and Heiner Müller, said that âhorror scenariosâ lay ahead. âWe are in the process of cancelling five to six productions for 2025-26 and 2026-27,â he said. âIn the end, there will simply be less new art.â
Philipp Harpain, the artistic director of Grips, a childrenâs and youth theatre, said the â¬300,000 savings his house would be forced to make amounted to âmore than the entire artistic budget for 2025â, adding he had been warned that more cuts would come in 2026.
The sudden nature of the cuts has also been a shock; they will come into force in less than five weeksâ and give theatres little time to prepare.
Juli Zeh, a bestselling author, said âapplying the cutting shearsâ to culture was âpolitically incredibly dumbâ especially at a time when the far right â which has repeatedly called for art funding to be dependent on content and be more German-centric â was on the rise.
She addressed a recent protest concert at the Haus der Berliner Festspiele, which also heard words of support from the conductor and pianist Daniel Barenboim, the former general music director of the Staatsoper, and from the Berlin Philharmoniker, who were beamed in via a video link from New Yorkâs Carnegie Hall.
Ulrich Matthes, an award-winning actor who played the Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels in the 2004 film Downfall, said Germanyâs tradition of heavily subsidised theatre sustained by broad consensus, to ensure as wide a public access to the arts as possible, was the envy of the world. It was also crucial to underpinning democracy, he said.
âIt is an incredible democratic achievement that the state, the cities, the country, subsidise [German theatre],â he told Die Zeit. âAll these places where people come together and feel and think together are important, especially at a time when the [far-right populist] AfD [Alternative for Germany party] is constantly nibbling at culture with the aim of assimilating it at some point.â
Joe Chialo, Berlinâs senator for culture, has called the cuts âdrastic and brutalâ and said he will fight to reduce their impact. But veteran observers of Germanyâs cultural scene have warned they may yet be a harbinger of what is to come across the country. Chialo is widely tipped to become the next minister of state for culture under Friedrich Merz if, as predicted, the CDU wins Februaryâs federal election.