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Seven events you can’t miss in January 2020 in Germany

Whether you're a film fan or foodie, there's a fun line-up of events throughout the country to kick off the first month of the new year.

Seven events you can't miss in January 2020 in Germany
Star singers in Obermarchtal, Baden-Württemberg in 2016. Photo: DPA

‘Great Realism, Great Abstraction’ art exhibit, January 3rd-February 16th, Frankfurt

Over 1,800, twentieth-century German drawings in the collection of the Städel Museum’s Department of Prints and Drawings will be on display starting Friday. Spanning styles of art from realism to abstraction, these are the works of German greats such as Max Beckmann and Gerhald Richer.

Taking place simultaneously is the impressive “Making Van Gogh” exhibition, which features more than 120 paintings and works on paper. 

Visitors to the Van Gogh exhibit at the Städel Museum in October 2019. Photo: DPA

Three Kings Day, January 6th, throughout Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria and Saxony-Anhalt

Head to these three German states, where the most traditional Epiphany celebrations, or Dreikönigsfeste, take place over the public holiday. Carollers and Sternsinger (star singers) dressed up as the Three Kings go door to door carolling and often collecting money for charity. 

Homes and stables are also purified through the process of burning frankincense, and at night families prost to the New Year over a Bockbier

Celebration and reading for famous Weimar Republic writer Kurt Tucholsky, Berlin, January 10th 

Kurt Tucholsky, the famous German Jewish journalist and satirist of the Weimar Republic, would be turning 130 years old in January were he still alive.

To celebrate the occasion, a lecture, book reading and birthday party (of course with wine and cake on hand) will take place in the art installation space in the house where Tucholsky was actually born, in Berlin’s Moabit neighbourhood.

“All You Need is Love” Beatles Musical, January 14th, Niederhausen

2020 marks a particularly special year for Beatles fans: 60 years earlier, John, Paul, Ringo and George would give their very first concert in Liverpool. 

A Beatles musical biography, “All You Need is Love”, will honour the anniversary at Niederhausen’s Rhine-Main-Theatre. The four musicians of the Las Vegas band “Twist and Shout” are impersonating the men, travelling through time and their multifaceted careers.

But if you miss the occasion, there’s still a long line-up of tour dates throughout Germany in January and February.

13th British Shorts Film Festival, January 16th-22nd, Berlin

Over the course of seven days, 222 films at six various venues throughout the capital will feature current British and Irish films spanning comedy, drama, experimental films and music videos. 

Besides a great line-up – which includes talks with directors and concerts – there will also be a free film workshop which includes the so-called “48-hour film challenge.”

Newbie and novice filmmakers alike will have the opportunity to produce their own film in just two days. 

International Green Week, January 17th-26th, Berlin

Mario Oblak, a cheese sommelier from Green Week partner country Croatia, presents some of his specialties. Photo: DPA

Considered to be the world’s largest fair for food, agricultural and horticultural industries, this impressively diverse event includes all sorts of landscaping exhibitions, German beer and organic products for every palate, a livestock section, and an array of sustainability workshops.

While this year’s partner country is Croatia, the 1,800 exhibitors on hand will hail from all of the world, with a specific focus on central and eastern Europe. 

25th Annual Motorrad Messe, January 31st-February 2nd, Leipzig

This massive “Motorcycle Fair” is not just devoted its namesake, but also to all sorts of bikes, from classics to the newest brands. A series of classic cars will also be on display.

For a rush without the risk, a “Wheelie-Simulator” will also be on hand to test out your luck as a stunt driver.

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EVENTS

How Cologne is preparing for the start of Carnival on Friday

Dressing up, singing, and drinking: On Friday, countless Jecken (revelers) in Cologne will once again celebrate the start of the Carnival session.

How Cologne is preparing for the start of Carnival on Friday

Dubbed Germany’s “fifth season” by locals, the event starts every year on November 11th at 11:11 am, and typically stretches into February or March, when colourful parades spill into the streets.

Carnival stronghold Cologne in particular is preparing for the onslaught of tens of thousands of people who will flock to its Altstadt (old town), and especially to the student quarter, starting early Friday morning. 

READ ALSO: 10 unmissable events in Germany this November

“Far too many people want to celebrate in far too small a space,” city director Andrea Blome told DPA. “We can’t stop anyone from coming to Cologne now.” 

More security this year

In the popular Kwartier Latäng student quarter, there have been regular bouts of drinking by young partygoers in the past, who crowded into a confined space, leaving litter everywhere and publicly peeing on the corners of buildings. 

Google Maps shows the location of the so-called Kwartier Latäng part of Cologne.

But with a new security plan, the city and police hope to keep the situation under control.

Several checkpoints and road closures have been set up to secure the safety of the revelers and relieve the burden on worried residents, according to Blome. Visitors will only be able to enter the closed-off area around Zülpicher Straße via a single access point. 

On Friday, Cologne is also set to send a total of 150 employees from the Ordnungsamt (public order office) onto the streets, who will be supported by 520 private security guards. 

A glass ban will again apply in the celebration zones, and several hundred toilets will be set up at the hotspots, “which nevertheless will probably not be used by all visitors,” Blome predicted.

READ ALSO: 10 words you need to know at Cologne’s Carnival

Up to 1,100 police officers are expected to be on duty on the day – about 200 fewer than last year, said head of operations Rüdiger Fink. But he expected to keep the situation “under control with a new security plan.”

What to expect

On Cologne’s Heumarkt, there will be a stage program all day with bands such as the Bläck Fööss, the Paveiern and Brings. 

Google Maps shows Cologne’s Heumarkt along the Rhine River.

According to the Willi Ostermann Society, about 10,000 tickets were sold in advance for the event, which will be aired by German WDR for several hours.

Meanwhile, in Düsseldorf, the day will start at 11:11 a.m. with the “Hoppeditz Awakening” in front of City Hall. 

According to a spokesman, the police will be adequately prepared for the start of the season, with a particular focus on the Altstadt, where there will certainly be celebrations.

“But 11.11. is a very different event here in Düsseldorf than in Cologne,” he said, referring to a more orderly start and fewer guests.

READ ALSO: What you need to know about celebrating Carnival in Germany

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