Catering for guests
in the museum
YOUR EVENT
We offer you the opportunity to host events at Von der Heydt-Museum. Business meetings, receptions, presentations, dinners and cocktails before or after a visit to the museum become a special event that everyone will remember with pleasure.
MULURU – Café
Muluru was the name given by Eduard von der Heydt to the spectacular ‘museum lunch room’ in his private museum in the Dutch seaside resort of Zandvoort. Muluru now occupies the ground floor of the Von der Heydt Museum, following in the footsteps of this legendary location. Enjoy our freshly cooked daily lunch menu, or treat yourself to homemade tart and delicious coffee. We also offer a seasonal salad bar and delicious soups. At the weekend, you can enjoy our late riser breakfast, homemade quiche and weekly soup special. You can find details of our current offers on our website or on our social media channels.
Opening hours:
Daily 11 am to 6 pm,
Thursday until 8 pm
(Monday closed)
Events are possible at any time.
Other opening hours possible on public holidays
Information & Reservation:
Phone: +49 20271694400
or
Daniel Buren at Muluru
If you’re looking for a dining experience surrounded by contemporary art, look no further than the Muluru Museum Café (also known as the Museum Lunch Room). The interior of the square room with a central bar was designed by French painter and sculptor Daniel Buren (born 1938) in 1990.
Having studied sculpture and painting at the École des Métiers d’Art in Paris from 1957 to 1960, Buren is now considered one of the most important representatives of analytical painting and conceptual art. His unmistakable trademark is a striped pattern of different colours on a variety of backgrounds; the stripes are always 8.7 cm wide.
Buren was awarded the Praemium Imperiale in 2007 for his artistic work, among other honours. He participated in documenta three times, most recently at documenta 7 in 1982. His works can be found worldwide, from the Guggenheim Museum in New York in 2005 to the Skulpturenpark Waldfrieden in Wuppertal in 2022. Although many of Buren’s works are found in public spaces, Muluru has a permanent indoor installation.
For the Museum Lunch Room at the Von der Heydt Museum, Buren designed 8.7 cm wide stripes on a glass room divider. Running diagonally across the café, it immediately catches the eye. The room divider is accompanied by mirrored panels on the walls. These project the course of the stripes onto the opposite walls and doors below the arches and interior doors.
Buren uses mirrors to alter perceptions and create an immersive environment. The overall effect is only interrupted by doorways and crossbars. Buren’s stripes give the room a unique atmosphere, transforming the Muluru into an immersive work of art that can be experienced with all the senses.