Hobrechtsfelder Sculpture Park - "Stones Without Limits"
As of 2001, a total of 120 sculptures were set up here by 100 artists from 30 nations. They flank 21 kilometers of paths that stretch around Gut Hobrechtsfelde with its old granary.
Stones without borders - for peace and humanity - is an international sculpture symposium that took place for the first time in the summer of 2001 in relation to Otto Freundlich, German painter and sculptor and author of art theoretical and philosophical writings, in Berlin-Buch. Freundlich, who died in 1943 in the German concentration camp Sobibor, was one of the first representatives of abstract art. Freundlich came up with the idea of a “street of sculptures Paris-Moscow” that unites people: une voie de la fraternité humaine, une voie de la solidarité humaine en souvenir de la liberation - “Path of human brotherhood, path of human solidarity in memory of liberation ". Most of the works created at symposia are set up in the landscape as well as in urban space or living and working areas, so that a number of individual locations and sculpture trails in Berlin and around Berlin in Brandenburg have now been created, including in the Rieselfeldern of Hobrechtsfelde, in Teltow, in Berlin-Buch Hobrechtsfelde zum Barnim, Berlin-Buch Ortsmitte, Panketal, Berlin-Mitte, in Brück am Rathaus and Belzig (sculpture park at the district hospital) and in Bernau in the city park A total of 120 sculptures have so far been made Stone and wood were created, some of them temporarily created, designed by over 100 artists from 30 nations. [1]