About us
Who we are
Ephra is a non-profit organisation based in Berlin. Ephra conceives and realises innovative projects and individual offers for partner institutions and clients from the fields of culture and education. Ephra acts as an interface to connect children and art and is committed to breaking down barriers to participation in cultural offerings. Ephra opens up spaces for joint questioning at eye level. Ephra is committed to democracy and emotional education through art.
Our projects
In order to create places and spaces for child-friendly art education, Ephra cooperates with schools and various institutions, museums and exhibition venues, including the Bundesstiftung Bauakademie, the Jewish Museum Berlin, LAS (Light Art Space), Kulturhaus Schwartzsche Villa, Kunsthaus Dahlem and Gropius Bau. For the latter, Ephra conceived and implemented the education programme for the Yayoi Kusama retrospective in 2021, as well as workshops for families and school classes in the group exhibition YOYI! Care, Repair, Heal in 2022.
In 2023, in cooperation with Haus Kunst Mitte, Ephra presented the group exhibition
GEDANKEN SPIELEN VERSTECKEN. A Contemporary Art Exhibition for Kids and Adults with artistic positions from the Ephra on the road-programme. Ephra on the road offers children a direct exchange with Berlin-based artists in their studios.
Our mission
Education for democracy must begin in childhood! When children learn that their thoughts and feelings are valuable, this demonstrably strengthens their resilience and community skills. Children learn democracy by being taught how to constructively shape their living environment. Children are strengthened in their personal responsibility by experiencing diversity, co-determination and freedom of expression. Children hone their community skills by learning how to express themselves and listen to others.
Ephra connects children with artists and art because art encourages them to consider life's essential questions together. Children belong in art. Because art is not a privilege, but an important pillar of a democratic society.
Team
Rebecca Raue
is the CEO of Ephra. She studied art with Georg Baselitz and Rebecca Horn and lives and works in Berlin. At the age of 17, she was already dreaming of a house where children and art could come together. Her dream was to open new spaces for thinking by acknowledging individual worlds of feeling and exchanging ideas about them. Rebecca Raue knows the art world and the gallery and exhibition business, she knows the processes on the art market, but above all she knows many people who realise how important it is to let children really participate. With Ephra, she opens up the space to come together and positively impact their lives. To the website
Malu Blume
is an art mediator and artist. She studied art education and educational sciences as well as the Master Critical Studies at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna with a focus on art education. Malu has realised various projects at the intersections of performance, mediation, artistic research and community. She is a member of the queer-feminist studio collective and project space “Altes”. At Ephra, she leads the project Ephra unterwegs, develops mediation concepts and accompanies many groups on studio visits and in other workshop formats.
Alexa von Senger
studied cultural studies and business administration at the University of Potsdam. She is now continuing her master’s degree in Art Studies at TU Berlin. Through an internship in museum education, she was able to pass on her love of art and creativity. As part of “Achtet Alis MB”, the youth committee of the National Museums in Berlin, she does projects and workshops by young people for young people. Since 2022 she has been supporting Ephra primarily in the organization and implementation of Ephra unterwegs.
Amelie Bender
studied Art and Visual History and Educational Science at Humboldt University in Berlin and is now completing a Master's degree in Art Studies at TU Berlin. Training as a museum guide during her school years sparked her interest in art education. Since then, she has had the opportunity to work with children and young people in various projects. Since 2022, she has mainly been responsible for communication (website and newsletter) and editorial work at Ephra.
The Ephra House
Since September 2024, we are based in the Ephra House, a spacious three-floor building at Köpenicker Straße 179 in Berlin-Kreuzberg owned by BEOS AG. Little by little, a creative laboratory is emerging here, where children and artists come together, try out participation, feel, play, discuss or dream, cook lunch, explore emotional worlds and landscapes and collect ideas for the future.
What the people say
“The children are given space to develop here, they are valued and seen. What that can achieve is really impressive.”
– Heinke Castagne, social worker
“If I don’t walk out of here happy today, I don’t understand myself anymore.”
– Ephra unterwegs-child
“I’m so full of ideas, I could explode.”
– Ephra unterwegs-child
“I went wild in my imagination.”
– Ephra unterwegs-child
“I think it’s nice that there are no rules in art.”
– Ephra unterwegs-child
"I learned that you can also just paint freely from your imagination and that it doesn't have to be perfect."
– Ephra unterwegs-child
“Very sensitively, Ephra has allowed a trusting & interpersonal closeness to develop between the children & me in my studio. The integrative power of culture is already being tested here at the root of society. This is absolutely meaningful.”
– René Wirths, artist
“I always wish that school would continue so that I could go back to Ephra.”
– Omar, student
“I used to think the world had nothing to do with me. Since I joined the project, I know that the world has a lot to do with me.”
– Ephra unterwegs-child
“Everyone was able to really speak their mind, and people dared to.”
– Ephra unterwegs-child, about the ‘Ephra unterwegs’ studio visits
“I thought artists always had the same technique – make everything as realistic as possible – but through the project I saw that there are a lot of different ones.”
– Ephra unterwegs-child
“The project is making waves among the children and young people, which can also be noticed in other areas of everyday school life, in addition to artistic engagement. They grow in their attentiveness and reflection, in their clarity of expression and appreciation of their own work as well as the work of others.”
– Annette Pfnorr, Elementary School Teacher
What does the name Ephra mean?
The name Ephra is a tribute to Marion Ephraimson, born in Berlin in September 1889 as the child of Jewish fabric merchants. She is the great-grandmother of Rebecca Raue. Whilst searching for a name for the projects that had been in the pipeline for a long time, Rebecca came across her long-dead relative in meditations. She was a mother and grandmother and had been interested in art all her life. Her surname Ephraimson is derived from Ephraim (Hebrew ֶא ְפ ַריִם efrájim) - which means "fruitful on both sides". The word "ephra" thus precisely describes the vision that Rebecca and Michaela had for the projects: Through art connections, both fields, that of childhood and that of art, are cultivated and made fruitful for the future.
Ephra is children, future, art.