Kode Bergen Art Museum presents A life in print, the most extensive presentation of Georg Baselitz’s prints to date, running from 3 October 2025 to 22 February 2026.

Kode Bergen Art Museum will present a major retrospective of Georg Baselitz, one of the leading artists of our time, celebrating six decades of the artist’s printmaking. Since the 1960s, Georg Baselitz (b. 1938) has been turning the world upside down with his art, and printmaking has always been an integral part of the German artist’s practice. Featuring nearly 250 works, A life in print will be the most comprehensive presentation of Baselitz’s prints ever assembled.

"It is a show that I wanted to witness, a show that had to happen," states the 87-year-old artist. "Throughout my career, printmaking has been of utmost importance to me. It is very exciting to see it taking centre stage for once."

A life in print, which has been curated by Cornelius Tittel in collaboration with the Baselitz Archives, will present all the main themes and motifs from Baselitz’s career, ranging from “The Heroes” of the mid-1960s through to his iconic depictions of eagles and his many portraits of his wife Elke. “A life in print will forcefully make the point,” states Tittel, “that no other artist since Picasso has done more for, and in, printmaking than Baselitz.”

Grouping works thematically, to reveal Baselitz’s recurrent returns to the same motifs over his long career, the exhibition will range from the artist’s first prints from the 1960s, etchings with aquatint that were inspired by Mannerist etchings he had seen in Florence, to recent etchings from 2024 that revisit the eagle motif and hark back to drawings first made by a teenaged Baselitz in the small East German town of Deutschbaselitz.

The exhibition will invite visitors to decode Baselitz’s artistic references, from the Mannerist painters of the Italian Renaissance to Edvard Munch—one of Baselitz’s acknowledged heroes. Notably, Kode houses one of the world’s most significant Munch collections, originally assembled by Norwegian industrialist Rasmus Meyer during Munch’s lifetime, and partly curated by the artist himself.

Baselitz has been a key figure on the international art scene since the 1960s. Renowned for his contributions to German Neo-expressionism, he is celebrated for his paintings, sculptures and his prints. His distinctive style often features distorted figures and inverted subjects.

Born in 1938, during Nazi rule, Baselitz draws on German culture, history and artistic traditions, with his work frequently reflecting broader societal and artistic challenges. He began exploring different print techniques in 1964 and has since considered them an integral part of his practice.

At a time when many of his peers favoured newer methods like offset and screen printing to create what were often large print runs, Baselitz rejected the zeitgeist by exploring centuries-old techniques such as drypoint, aquatint and woodcut. He explored large formats and small print runs.