Welcome to Lotte Laserstein Haus
in Berlin
On this website we have compiled all the information for you to make it easier to settle in and live in our Felixx student Homes. We wish you a wonderful and exciting time in the Lotte Laserstein House and a successful study or training with many new experiences!
When you move in, you will receive an email with a link to the WhatsApp group and the contact details of your tutor team. The names and numbers of your tutor team, who are responsible for community life in the house and are available to answer any questions or suggestions you may have, can also be found on the notice board.
Studying in Berlin
You can find helpful information and tips here:
Important names & addresses
Property management
Ian Quabius
Phone: 09131 618 042
Mail: ian.quiabius@felixx-student.de
Janitorial service
Henrik Wilhelms
Phone.: 0160 94 49 68 38
Mail: berlin-lls@felixx-student.de
Working hours: Monday – Friday: 8:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.
Accounting
Jeannine Blind
Phone: 09131 6180 53
Mail: jeannine.blind@felixx-student.de
Internet provider DS-Networks
Phone: 09131 927 013 10
Mail:info@DS-networks.de
Service provider launderette
RentWash
Phone: 089 74 59 00 1
Mail:info@rentwash.de
Website: rentwash.de
Emergency key service
SSB Schlüsseldienst
(fee applies; prices vary depending on the time of day)
Phone: 030 555 784 26
Website: schluesseldienst-service.berlin
Who was Lotte Laserstein?
Born in 1898 in Prussian Holland, died in 1993 in Kolmar (Sweden).
Raised in East Prussia, then part of the German Empire, Lotte Laserstein came from a liberal Jewish family. She studied at the Berlin Academy of Arts and was among the first female graduates in 1927. She enjoyed successful years in the vibrant and creative metropolis, becoming one of the most important painters of the Weimar Republic. Her works, often portraits of her close friend Traute Rose, were created in the style of “New Objectivity.” In 1933, the Nazi regime banned her from exhibiting and working due to her Jewish heritage and identity as an artist. Her art was labeled “degenerate.” In 1937, she emigrated to Sweden, where she remained active throughout her life. Her efforts to save her mother and sister from Nazi Germany during the war failed. Only in the mid-1980s did she gain international recognition, including exhibitions at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. In Germany, the forgotten artist was rediscovered only after her death. Her major work, Evening over Potsdam (1930), is set to be the first painting displayed when the Neue Nationalgalerie reopens.