[AI]

MISSED IMAGES

at the Charité

MISSED IMAGES AT THE CHARITÉ

Women in science have always faced different hurdles and barriers than their male colleagues, and this remains true today. Worldwide, only one in three people in science is a woman, and in Germany, women are still underrepresented in scientific leadership positions. This also applies to their representation in public and on the campuses of scientific institutions. Buildings, rooms, and streets are most often named after men, and walls are adorned with prominent and honourable portraits of distinguished men from the institution’s past. Charité is no exception. 

Women’s visual underrepresentation conveys the impression that they have not contributed to the success of university medicine, and sends a message to future students that women cannot play an equally decisive role in medicine and research. 

This is where our project ‘Missed Images’ at Charité comes in. We have selected eight trailblazing women from the history of university medicine in Berlin as examples to receive visual recognition as doctors and scientists, have their stories told, and receive the honour they deserve. 

The project ‘Versäumte Bilder’ (Missed Images) was launched by science communicator Gesine Born. With her Bilderinstitut, she and scientific institutions are giving female researchers a platform that was denied to them during their lifetimes.

The Bilderinstitut uses artificial intelligence (AI) to reinterpret and contextualise existing portraits and photos in order to make the significant scientific achievements of women visually tangible – as realistically and contemporarily as possible, to show how recognition of these female scientists could have been achieved.

The portraits generated by AI do not replace photographs, but rather open up a space of possibility in the viewer's mind and provide access to these women and their stories. What might have been if these women had received the same visibility? What role models have been missing for entire generations of female scientists? The images themselves are tools that enable us as an institution to critically examine our own history and create a space for thought and possibility in which women are just as visible as men – a utopia that should not be one.

With these representations, we explore the possibilities and limitations of AI and deal with them transparently. All inputs made into the AI tool are also published. These prompts are not biographical facts, but working documents that make the creation process transparent. They also show the challenges of dealing with the ‘biases’ of AI: women are usually generated by AI as too complacent and too young. To counter this, Gesine Born systematically worked against these algorithmic ‘biases’ with her prompts – for example, by explicitly stating ages or using descriptions that break with common clichés. The published prompts document this working method and educate the public about the responsible use of artificial intelligence. They are not historical sources, but insights into a technical process.

The exhibition will be shown at various locations within Charité, and individual portraits will subsequently be moved to different departments. We hope that these locations will encourage future generations of female researchers and empower them in their personal success.

We see these eight imagined portraits as inspiration and an invitation to research and share more stories of women at Charité, and hope that the launch of this exhibition will lead to many more projects and ideas.

This exhibition is a joint project involving multiple stakeholders at Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin. We would like to thank the Equal Opportunities Office, our cooperation partners and supporters.

Annelise Wittgenstein

1890 – 1946

Internal medicine specialist

The missing image shows Annelise Wittgenstein as a professor in the lecture hall, a position she was denied in 1933. 

AI input: classical official portrait from 1933 showing 43 year old female professor, wearing a black simple dress with long sleeves, standing proudly in a lecture hall of the Charité Berlin --oref [Bild Wittgenstein] --v 7.0 --s 50

Generated with Midjourney by Gesine Born

Annelise Wittgenstein was born in Silesia in 1890. In 1909, she first completed her teaching exam and worked as a teacher before catching up on her high school diploma in 1913 and beginning her medical studies at the HU. She passed her state exam in 1918, followed by her doctorate and license to practice medicine in 1919. From the summer of 1919, she was an assistant at the Charité hospital. Seven years later, she qualified as a professor of internal medicine and was one of only two female private lecturers at the Medical Faculty of Berlin University between 1919 and 1932.

In 1932, the director of the medical faculty, Prof. Alfred Goldscheider, submitted an application for Wittgenstein's professorship to the then dean, Prof. Hermann Gocht. The application was not discussed until 1933, after the National Socialists had seized power, at a faculty meeting – and was rejected. Officially, her own withdrawal was cited as the reason: she had preempted the rejection with a personal letter in which she requested temporary exemption from her lectures due to a heart muscle disease, as she saw no possibility for herself to adequately perform her professorship under the political circumstances.

In his 1932 application, Goldscheider wrote about Wittgenstein: “Despite the widespread mistrust of female academics among both academic teachers and students, Dr. Wittgenstein has firmly established herself as a lecturer ... her practical medical achievements deserve the utmost recognition.”1

In the spring of 1946, the chancellor of the Free University of Berlin sought to reinstate her as a lecturer. The acting dean, Karl Lohmann, rejected her reinstatement because Wittgenstein herself had voluntarily resigned in 1933 and because of her health. A few months later, in December 1946, Annelise Wittgenstein died of pneumonia in Berlin.

1  Z Cit. from David, M., Kollmann, P. S.: „Bloß keine Schreibtischgelehrte sein“, on: Ärztinnen der ersten Generation. https://magazin.aekb.de/kultur-geschichte/aerztinnen-der-ersten-generation-annelise-wittgenstein, accessed on: 31/01/2026

Original image: https://frauenklinik.charite.de/fileadmin/user_upload/microsites/m_cc17/Frauenheilkunde/frauenklinik/Dateien_2024/Aerztin_25x36_Ansicht_Rueck.pdf 

Elisabeth Nau

1900 – 1975

Specialist in Forensic and Social Medicine

The missing picture shows Elisabeth Nau in her later years as a professor and institute director.

AI input:: Hasselblad portrait from 1970, Kodak Portra colors, 150mm, close-up, of 70-year-old female director, wearing a doctor's coat, hard light from the side, proud posture --oref  [Foto Elisabeth Nau] --sref [Foto Ferdinand Sauerbruch]

Generated with Midjourney by Gesine Born

Born in Cologne in 1900, Elisabeth Nau began studying medicine at the age of 20 in Bonn, where she passed her state examination in 1925. She then worked at the Institute for Forensic and Social Medicine – a field that would remain her focus for the rest of her career. She chose child psychiatry and paediatrics as the main focus of her practical clinical work.

Parallel to her medical studies, she completed a degree in philosophy and chose her later habilitation topic from the interdisciplinary intersection: ‘Historical, psychological and psychopathological aspects of suicide and extended suicide and its assessment in the administration of justice.’

In 1930, she moved to Berlin with Prof. Dr. Müller-Hess, with whom she maintained a professional relationship throughout her life. Here, she also worked at the Institute for Forensic and Social Medicine at Friedrich Wilhelm University (now Humboldt University), which she took over as director in 1935. In this role, she continued to teach even during the war. In 1946, she was appointed professor with teaching duties at the Medical Faculty of the University of Berlin.

In 1949, she accepted a position at the newly founded Free University of Berlin. Despite having completed her habilitation in 1940, it was not until then that she was awarded a full professorship. She was the first director of the forensic psychiatry department at the Institute of Forensic Medicine in Berlin.

Elisabeth Nau was internationally recognised in her field and was invited to conferences around the world. She was particularly committed to interdisciplinary cooperation between state institutions in the area of child and youth welfare and in the prevention of criminality among children and young people with mental health issues. She is considered an absolute pioneer in the field of child abuse research.

Original image: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Universitätsbibliothek, 

Marie-Caroline Kaufmann Wolf

1877 – 1922

Dermatologist

The missing image shows Marie Kaufmann-Wolf in her research laboratory, where she discovered an important fungal pathogen.

AI input: large format camera portrait from 1920 showing 50 year old female doctor, wearing a white doctor's coat with a stand-up collar, standing proudly in a lab, behind a desk with papers and a microscope and petri dishes, holding an Erlenmeyer flask --oref [Bild Kaufmann Wolf] --ow 150 --v 7.0 --s 50

Generated with Midjourney by Gesine Born

Marie Wolf was born in Alzey in 1877 into a Jewish family. She attended a secondary school for girls and graduated at the age of 16. In 1896, she married Eugen Kaufmann and it was not until 1904 at the age of 27 that she obtained her high school diploma, subsequently studying medicine in Heidelberg, Halle, and Munich. In 1909, she passed her state examination and received her license to practice medicine. Three years later and at the age of 35, she completed a doctorate in dermatology.

Marie Wolf first worked as an assistant physician on a non-salaried basis, which was common for female doctors holding doctorates at the time. In 1919, she moved to Berlin with her husband, and just one year later she was appointed head of the University Dermatology Clinic at Charité Hospital. In Berlin, she co-founded the Association of Female Doctors. Her commitment to gender equality in areas such as hygiene and social welfare are testimony to her emancipatory approach. She spoke out against laws regulating prostitution and sexually transmitted diseases, arguing that these only restricted women's rights further.

Marie Kaufmann-Wolf died in 1922 at just 45 years of age, shortly before completing her habilitation. Her habilitation thesis was published posthumously. She left behind a long list of publications, the results of her research, not only in the field of dermatology, but also in anatomy, pathology, and embryology, among others.

Syphilis and mycoses research were especially prominent in her research. Based on research findings in this area, a fungal infection was named after her, albeit briefly, “Morbus Kaufmanii,” a skin condition affecting the hands and feet. The name remains largely unknown (known today as Trichophyton interdigitale).

Original image: Bildarchiv Medizinische Universität Wien

Ingeborg Syllm-Rapoport

1912 - 2017

Professor of Neonatology

The missing picture shows Rapoport defending her doctoral thesis at the age of 25, which she was denied due to the Nazi takeover. 

AI input: Hasselblad portrait from 1938 showing 25 year old female Doktor Ingeborg Rapoport with curly brown hair and a narrow face, standing proudly with her doctor certificate on a stage in front of a dark curtain, celebrating her doctorate, smiling --oref [Foto Rapoport] --v 7.0 --s 50

generiert mit Midjourney von Gesine Born

Born in Cameroon, Ingeborg Rapoport grew up in Hamburg, where she later studied medicine and passed her state examination in 1937. She was denied her doctorate for a thesis on diphtheria because her mother was Jewish. 

In September 1938, shortly before the November pogrom (Night of Broken Glass), she emigrated to the USA, where her state examination was not accepted. She studied again for two years at the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania, worked in various hospitals, and earned her medical doctorate with a specialization in pediatrics. In the USA, she met Mitja Rapoport, who became her husband and with whom she had four children. 

Because the couple were politically active in the civil rights movement and were members of the Communist Party USA, they came under the scrutiny of the McCarthy Committee and returned to Europe from the USA as political refugees. The family found a new home in Berlin, where Rapoport worked as a doctor and research assistant and habilitated in 1959 with her research work.  

From 1958 onwards, she worked at the Charité Children's Hospital at that timeGDR), where she headed the infant and premature baby ward, which she gradually developed into a department for neonatal medicine. In 1964, she was appointed professor of pediatrics and in 1969 she became the first chair of neonatology in Europe. Rapoport continued to develop her department, which became part of a perinatal center in 1970, both in terms of content and structure, establishing a neonatal intensive care unit and a research department. In 1973, as was the norm for women in the GDR at the time, she retired at the age of 60. She protested strongly against this unequal treatment in a letter to the government, as men were allowed to work as professors until the age of 65. 

She successfully defended her doctoral thesis in 2015 at the age of 102, making her the oldest person to date to do so at the University of Hamburg.

Original image: Privat

Käthe Beutler

1896 – 1999

Pediatrician

The missed image shows Beutler as a young pediatrician in her own practice in Berlin. 

AI input: Leica portrait from 1933 showing 35-year-old female doctor with simple pageboy hair, slight olive tint, wearing a white doctor's coat, standing proud and serious in her own doctor's office [Foto Beutler] --v 7.0 --s 50

Generated with Midjourney by Gesine Born

Käthe Beutler was born in Berlin in 1886 and studied medicine there from 1918 as one of 251 women among a total of 2,560 medical students. She received her doctorate from the Charité in 1920 and her license to practice medicine in 1924. As part of her specialist training, she worked with the renowned professors Finkelstein and Czerny at the Charité. Her scientific interests focused primarily on the development of infant nutrition and social medicine. During this time, she published an article on the effectiveness of a drug for congenital syphilis in combination with good nutrition and care for sick children. 

In 1925, she married the Jewish internist Dr. Alfred Beutler and had three children with him. In 1927, just one year after the birth of her first son, Beutler opened her own pediatric practice under her birth name Italiener.  In February 1933, she received her license from the statutory health insurance fund, which she lost again after the National Socialists seized power in July 1933. From that point on, she was only allowed to treat private patients. As living conditions for Jews in Germany continued to deteriorate, the Beutler family emigrated to the United States in 1935.

In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Beutler passed the American state examination and opened her own pediatric practice again in 1937. This is all the more remarkable given that, as a migrant and a Jew, she had to battle prejudice and received no support from her male colleagues or other migrants. 

Despite all the hardships Käthe Beutler encountered in the course of her life, she retained the ability to adapt to new circumstances repeatedly and never gave up her priorities in life. Today, a research building at the Berlin Institute of Health on the Buch campus commemorates the life and work of Käthe Beutler.

Original image: Privat

Lydia Rabinowitsch-Kempner

1871 – 1935

 Microbiologist

The missed image shows Rabinowitsch in an oil painting based on the portraits of male scientists that were common at the time.

AI input: oil portrait painting from 1903 of 35 year old female Doctor Lydia Rabinowitsch-Kempner sitting behind a desk --[Foto Rabinowitsch-Kempner] --sref [Gemälde von Anders Zorn]

Generated with Midjourney by Gesine Born

Lydia Rabinowitsch was born in the former Russian border town of Kowno (now Kaunas in Lithuania). After graduating from school, she moved to Switzerland, where, unlike in most other European countries at the time, women were already allowed to study. After completing her doctorate, she moved to Berlin in 1894, where she obtained a position as an unpaid assistant to Robert Koch at the Institute for Infectious Diseases in Berlin. Her work focused on tuberculosis research. 

This was followed by a research stay in the USA, where she taught bacteriology at the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania and was appointed full professor in 1898. She married the physician Walter Kempner and returned to Berlin in 1903, where she worked as a research assistant at the Pathological Institute of the Charité in 1920 and rose to become a leading tuberculosis researcher. Parallel to her research activities, she had three children. 

She conducted intensive research into the transmission routes of tuberculosis and was the first to discover that humans including many children, become infected through the milk of cows with tuberculosis. Her work contributed to the introduction of hygiene controls in dairies and to the development of a pasteurization process. 

In 1912, she became the first female scientist in Berlin to receive the title of professor, but was not offered a position at the university. In 1920, she became director of the Bacteriological Institute at the hospital in Moabit, where she was paid appropriately for her work for the first time. Due to her Jewish heritage, she was forced into retirement by the National Socialists in 1934. Shortly thereafter, on August 3, 1935, she died in Berlin at the age of 63 after a serious illness.

Since 2007, there has been a scholarship named after her for female scientists with doctorates and postdoctoral qualifications at Charité who have family responsibilities.

Original image: Urheber:in nicht bekannt

Rhoda Erdmann

1870–1935

Cell biologist 

The missed image shows Rhoda Erdmann at her desk with her handbook on methods of tissue culture (1922)

AI input: close-up portrait from 1922 of 45-year-old female doctor standing proud in a lab, wearing a white coat, leaning on a table, on the table a paper, in the background two students wearing white coats --oref [Foto Erdmann] --ow 100 --v 7.0 --s 50

Generated with Midjourney by Gesine Born

As a pioneering female cell biologist in the early 1900s, Rhoda Erdmann (1870–1935) was one of few women to become a professor in Germany at a time when science was dominated by men. She faced challenges as a scientist due to a combination of factors related to her gender and the historical context of the interwar period in which she worked, and to entering a highly competitive and fast developing research area. 

Erdmann specialized in tissue culture and experimental cell biology and made important contributions to establishing these methods as an independent field of research, and to applying the methods in research of disease pathogenesis. After completing her doctorate, she initially worked in precarious and less prestigious positions. In 1913, she received a Research Fellowship at Yale University, and conducted research in the laboratory of Ross G. Harrison, one of the founders of modern tissue culture. During WW I, Erdmann was interned in the US on suspicion of being a German spy, which hindered progress in her scientific work.

After returning to Germany, she continued her research under difficult conditions and eventually established the Department for Cell Research at the Charité’s Institute for Cancer Research in Berlin. She was appointed associate professor in 1924 and professor in 1929. Erdmann systematically disseminated methods of tissue culture and made them accessible. This is evident in the publication of her practice-oriented textbook Praktikum der Gewebepflege oder Explantation, besonders der Gewebezüchtung 1 and in the founding and publication of the journal Archiv für experimentelle Zellforschung, which served as an international forum for experimental cell and tissue research.

When National Socialists seized power in 1933, Erdmann came under increasing political pressure. She was briefly imprisoned and dismissed from her position on the basis of false accusations of being Jewish and supporting Jewish colleagues; her department was subsequently dissolved and she was dismissed from service. Rhoda Erdmann died in 1935. Her scientific work and her institutional development of experimental cell research were long forgotten, but are now recognized as central contributions to early cell biology and the internationalization of experimental research.

Erdmann, R.: Gewebepflege oder Explantation (Tissue Care or Explantation), Heidelberg, 1922

Original image: https://onlineexhibits.library.yale.edu/s/WISE/page/anna-maria-rhoda-erdmann

Helenefriederike Stelzner

1861- 1937

Physician

The missed image shows Stelzner as the first female volunteer doctor at the Charité, Clinic for Psychiatry.

AI input: 20 year old female doctor as a Hasselblad portrait from 1933 wearing a white doctor's coat, standing proud in the hospital Charité, Berlin --oref [generiertes Portrait] --ow 300 --v 7.0 --s 50

Generated with Midjourney by Gesine Born

Helenefriederike Stelzner was the first female doctor at the Charité, yet little is known about her biography and she has remained obscure. It is known that she was born in Bohemia in 1861, received a girl’s education in Chemnitz, and was married. In the year her husband died (1897), she passed an exam qualifying her to attend university. As women were not admitted to universities in Germany at the time, she studied medicine in Switzerland from 1897-1900.

Stelzner was one of 22 women—alongside Rahel Hirsch and others – who wrote a petition to the German Reichstag in 1899 demanding that women be allowed to study medicine in Germany. A famous quote from it reads as follows: "It damages the dignity of their profession when female doctors, despite having studied diligently…are prevented from performing certain functions.... The public will also be easily inclined to entertain false ideas about the value of female doctors who are not recognized by the state in Germany …[A] female doctor practices her profession in Germany with no other authorization than that granted to any quack…. All this justifies the urgent desire to obtain German licensure under all circumstances."1 In the summer of 1900, the petitioners’ request was granted.

From 1902 until her death in 1937, Stelzner worked as a doctor in civilian and military hospitals, schools, and as an expert in courts. She authored publications on scientific and social topics, touching on controversial subjects including women’s rights and health, but also eugenics. She was most certainly a pioneer: from 1903-1904 the first female doctor at the Charité (Clinic for Psychiatry); in 1905 the first female school doctor in Berlin-Charlottenburg; and in 1913 the first female member of the German Association for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy – the only woman among 620 men. 

1   Petition by Dr. Ida Democh and her colleagues to the Reichstag for the admission of women to state medical examinations (1899). Reichstag printed paper no. 339, 10th legislative period, I. Session 1898/1900.

No images of Helenefriederike Stelzner could be found; the reference image was also already generated using AI:

Input AI: vintage foto from 1913 showing 50 year old first female doctor of psychiatry at Charité in Berlin, with brown hair and a white doctor's coat, looking proud, leaning on her hand —sref [klassisches Portrait eines Psychiaters]

References and Bibliography

Rhoda Erdmann

Literatur: 

Fangerau, H.: Leaving the Academic Niche-Rhoda Erdmann (1870-1935) and the Democratization of Tissue Culture Research. Front Cell Dev Biol., 2022

https://gedenkort.charite.de/menschen/rhoda_erdmann

abgerufen am 05.02.2026

https://magazin.aekb.de/kultur-geschichte/aerztinnen-der-ersten-generation-rhoda-erdmann

abgerufen am 05.02.2026

Bildquelle:

https://onlineexhibits.library.yale.edu/s/WISE/page/anna-maria-rhoda-erdmann

Marie-Caroline Kaufmann-Wolf

Literatur: 

https://geschichte.charite.de/aeik/biografie.php?ID=AEIK00010

abgerufen am 01.02.2026

Papritz, A.: Zur Erinnerung an Dr. med. Maria Kaufmann-Wolf. Vierteljahrsschrift des Bundes Deutscher Ärztinnen 1, 1924, H. 1, S. 11

Rosenau, R.: Die Kusinen Kaufmann-Wolf und Ella Wolf. Zwei Alzeyer Mädchen auf dem langen Weg zu Studium und Arztberuf. In: Alzeyer Geschichtsblätter (Sonderdruck), Heft 41, 2015, S. 128-145

Korting, G. W., Scheider, S.: Geschichte der Dermatologie. Zur 50. Wiederkehr des Todestages von Fau Marie Kaufmann-Wolf am 1. 3. 1972; in: Der Hautarzt, 23. Jg., Heft 8, 1972, S. 362

Bildquelle:

Bildarchiv Medizinische Universität Wien, https://www.josephinum.ac.at/online-sammlung/objekt/portraet-von-marie-kaufmann-wolf-mit-einem-bericht-139899/ 

Helenefriederike Stelzner

Literatur: 

Ärztinnen im Kaiserreich

https://geschichte.charite.de/aeik/biografie.php?ID=AEIK00709

abgerufen am 05.02.2026

https://frauenorte.net/die-nichts-als-bildung-maenlichs-haben-zur-geschichte-des-frauenstudiums-an-der-universitaet-halle/

abgerufen am 05.02.2026

https://medonline.at/news/geschichte/90009664/helenefriderike-stelzner/

abgerufen am 05.02.2026

Bildquelle:

Von Helenefriederike Stelzner sind keine Bilder auffindbar, auch die Vorlage wurde bereits mit KI generiert. 

As no images of Helenefriederike Stelzner could be found, the template was also generated using AI.

Ingeborg Syllm-Rapoport

Quelle und Literatur: 

https://www.charite.de/klinikum/themen_klinikum/prof_dr_ingeborg_rapoport/, abgerufen am 02.02.2026

https://magazin.aekb.de/kultur-geschichte/aerztinnen-der-ersten-generation-ingeborg-syllm-rapoport, abgerufen am 30.01.2026

https://www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de/ueber-alle-grenzen-hinaus-die-drei-leben-der-aerztin-100.html, abgerufen am 30.01.2026

Bildquelle:

Privatbesitz 

Käthe Beutler

Quelle und Literatur: 

Italiener, K.: Unsere Erfolge mit Hohen Neosalvarsandosen bei Behandlung der Angeborenen Syphilis. In: Klinische Wochenschrift 3. Jg., Nr. 14, S. 577–579, 1924. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01850070

https://www.mdc-berlin.de/de/news/press/kaethe-beutler-tu-etwas, abgerufen am 30.01.2026

Hildebrandt, S.: Käthe Beutler (1896–1999), Eine jüdische Kinderärztin aus Berlin. Hentrich & Hentrich, 2019

Bildquelle:

Privatbesitz 

Lydia Rabinowitsch-Kempner

Literatur: 

https://gedenkort.charite.de/menschen/lydia_rabinowitsch/,

abgerufen am 30.01.2026

https://magazin.aekb.de/kultur-geschichte/aerztinnen-der-ersten-generation-lydia-rabinowitsch-kempner,

abgerufen am 30.01.2026

Bildquelle:

unbekannt

Annelise Wittgenstein

Quelle und Literatur: 

https://geschichte.charite.de/aeik/biografie.php?ID=AEIK00855

abgerufen am 31.01.2026; 

https://magazin.aekb.de/kultur-geschichte/aerztinnen-der-ersten-generation-annelise-wittgenstein

abgerufen am 31.01.2026

Habilitationsakte Wittgenstein, A.: Lebenslauf, vermutlich 1946, Universitätsarchiv der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Bildquelle:

https://frauenklinik.charite.de/fileadmin/user_upload/microsites/m_cc17/Frauenheilkunde/frauenklinik/Dateien_2024/Aerztin_25x36_Ansicht_Rueck.pdf 

Elisabeth Nau

Quelle und Literatur: 

Ärztinnen im Kaiserreich. In: geschichte.charite.de. Institut für Geschichte der Medizin und Ethik in der Medizin, Charité, abgerufen am 01.02.2026

Brinkschulte, E.: Frauen in der Medizinischen Wissenschaft an den Berliner Universitäten im Rahmen der Vortragsreihe: Berliner Wissenschaftlerinnen 1933-1945. Kontinuitäten und Brüche. WS 1995/1996, Auszug von Eva Brinkschulte, Tabelle 2: Habilitierte 1932-1945, S. 15-20

Bildquelle:

© Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Universitätsbibliothek (https://www.sammlungen.hu-berlin.de/objekte/portraetsammlung-berliner-hochschullehrer/13113/ )

The exhibition was curated by

Karin Höhne

Head of Equal Opportunities and Diversity Unit

Institute of Health at Charité (BIH)

Kristina Helena Pavićević

Coordinator of the BIOQIC Research Training Group 

Institute of Radiology, Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin

With kind support

Funded by project no. 28934735