Weltbaum II
mural at the S-Bahnhof Savignyplatz in Berlin, Germany
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
Weltbaum II
Summary
Weltbaum II is a mural[1].
Key Facts
- Weltbaum II is the creator of Ben Wagin[2].
- Weltbaum II is the creator of Joseph Beuys[3].
- Weltbaum II is located in Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf[4].
- Weltbaum II is in the country of Germany[5].
- Weltbaum II's image is recorded as Wall paintings S-Bahn Berlin 2008 3.JPG[6].
- Weltbaum II's instance of is recorded as mural[7].
- Weltbaum II's genre is recorded as public art[8].
- Weltbaum II's genre is recorded as street art[9].
- Weltbaum II's based on is recorded as Weltbaum[10].
- Weltbaum II's depicts is recorded as tree[11].
- Weltbaum II's location is recorded as Berlin Savignyplatz station[12].
- Weltbaum II's part of is recorded as Berlin Savignyplatz station[13].
- Weltbaum II's Commons category is recorded as Weltbaum II[14].
- Weltbaum II's has part is recorded as painting[15].
- +1986-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Weltbaum II[16].
- Weltbaum II's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 52.50526818343313, 'longitude': 13.3188758480724, 'precision': 1e-08}[17].
- Weltbaum II's located on street is recorded as Kantstraße[18].
- Weltbaum II's located on street is recorded as Bleibtreustraße[19].
- Weltbaum II's located on street is recorded as Schlüterstraße[20].
- Weltbaum II's significant event is recorded as economic production[21].
- Weltbaum II's significant event is recorded as unveiling[22].
- Weltbaum II's described by source is recorded as Bildhauerei in Berlin[23].
- Weltbaum II's heritage designation is recorded as cultural heritage monument in Berlin[24].
- Weltbaum II's heritage designation is recorded as partial heritage site[25].
- Weltbaum II's different from is recorded as Weltbaum[26].
Body
Works and Contributions
Created works include Ben Wagin[2], an artist[27], 1930–2021[28], of Germany[29], awarded the Order of Merit of Berlin[30] and Joseph Beuys[3], a sculptor[31], 1921–1986[32], of Germany[33], awarded the Goslarer Kaiserring[34], specialised in performance art[35].