DALLERY - daily art gallery: Art up your life!

DALLERY

© Dallery | all rights reserved

Dallery is an original concept created by Jürgen Wageck and Anna Galeeva.

Dallery brings art into your life without asking you to change your routines. From business gatherings to private celebrations, from curated pop-ups to intimate formats at home, we integrate original, high-quality contemporary art into existing settings with precision and care. We work with real artists, real works and a curatorial approach that assembles each presentation specifically for its context. The result is not decoration, but presence — art that transforms atmosphere, perception and memory.

ART UP YOUR LIFE!

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ART UP YOUR LIFE! 〰️

The name Dallery combines “Daily” and “Gallery” and reflects a clear idea: art belongs to everyday life. It can be part of your workspace, your celebration, your home, your moment. Dallery does not impose fixed formats or institutional rules. It adapts to your circumstances and develops a tailored concept that fits your scale, audience and intention. Each proposal is constructed individually, economically precise and aesthetically coherent.

Inspired by the philosophy Art up your life and the expanded idea of Art on Prescription, Dallery understands art as something to be lived with rather than reserved for special occasions only. We curate works that carry depth, character and authorship, and we place them in environments where they can activate dialogue, atmosphere and meaning. Art becomes accessible without losing quality, and professional without becoming distant.

Dallery operates as a flexible cultural platform based in Berlin, creating exhibition weeks, presentation formats and site-specific art integrations. We build bridges between artists, collectors, companies and audiences who seek originality and substance. Art remains autonomous, but it enters life directly — naturally, confidently and with lasting impact.

Founders

Black and white photo of a smiling man with short, gray hair, wearing a patterned scarf and a dark jacket.

Jürgen Wageck

Jürgen Wageck (born 1958 in Grünstadt, Germany) is a German artist whose work spans painting, mixed media and collage. He trained as a technical draftsman before completing his Abitur in Frankenthal and studying theology at Heidelberg and Mainz (Mag. theol., 1982–1988), followed by a diploma in business administration in Mannheim (1988–1991). From 1991 to 2014 he worked in the insurance sector while continuously developing his artistic practice. He studied with Walter Graser in Montalba, France, and undertook extended study stays in France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Mexico, Indonesia and South Africa. His work has been presented in numerous exhibitions and project contexts in Germany and internationally, including Kunstverein Maxdorf, OPEN-Art Festival Frankenthal, Galerie L’EXPRESSION in St. Tropez, Galerie “Trans” in Szczecin, Planet Wilmus Straßbourg, as well as collaborations within film environments and filmmakers such as Martin Enlen Hochschule für Film und Fernsehen München,Nico Hofmann, Jan Kaiser Neue Deutsche Filmgesellschaft (NDF) and projects connected to film production in Mannheim and Munich. + add the galerist experience and event-experience.

Founder/he
A black-and-white portrait of a woman with short dark hair sitting on a chair, wearing a dark satin-like jacket, with a large potted plant in the background.

Anna Galeeva

Anna Galeeva (b. 1992, Novosibirsk, Siberia, Russia) is a curator, producer, and cultural fundraiser based in Berlin, where she has lived and worked since 2023. She has realised over 100 cultural and educational projects and, since 2018, has worked in cultural fundraising and international partnerships. She is the curator and manager of Vladimir Kordiukov’s art collection and heritage (2,000+ works), leading systematisation, cataloguing, communications, and exhibition production. As a mentor and personal advisor, she has supported more than 35 artists and teaches her author course “Art Management for Creative People,” translating curatorial practice into practical tools for artists and initiatives. She also maintains her own art collection of 200+ works. Her research focuses on social architecture as a method for building horizontal art communities: designing entry points, roles, protocols of collaboration, care, and sustainable collective work. A key curatorial initiative of Anna Galeeva is developing mechanisms through which art moves towards people, making everyday participants—especially those who do not yet own art objects—central actors of the cultural field.

Founder/she