A bit of our history
The capable engineering colonel Johann Christipher Nauman was among first who lured the reputation wilderness. In the 20s he was on the road to Bautzen stake out a very large piece of land and took it in culture. When he died in 1742, he left behind a tree house with garden, which borders the subsequent course of Louisen- and der Martin-Luther-Straße specific and indirectly also the Bohemian ... Latter was in the 1750's an access road, which ended blindly from one field away (later Alaunstraße) and turned aside before Naumanns Garten. 1797 made this a regular part of the way is first Bohemian alleyway.
Naumanns Garten went to the council winemaker Johann Friedrich Boden, the beer liquor license pulled in 1759 a tavern at Bautzner Straße itself, which has existed under various names until 1945: Bodens, Altbodens, Martins sonst Alt-Bodens, then Reussischer Garten since 1874 Ballhaus ... Johann Gottfried Martin, host of Alt-Bodens, donated in1830, two strips of its still large land for a connection to Badegasse (Louisenstraße) and the extension of Böhmischen Gasse. The first was called Martinstraße (now Martin-Luther-Straße) what was certainly a great honor, but perhaps not the main thing. For the road construction, the municipality had to pay the "new crop before the Black Gate" with 250 dollars, opened up his land on two sides. Until '33, he sold all along the Martin Street; then again good on both sides of Böhmischen Gasse. One of the houses built in 1836 still stands: the number 34, the Kunsthaus Raskolnikov.
Until the 1880s the house was wearing the number 11 In 1840 there was a Mr. Frederick, of the derogatory is neither night nor anything else known. In the 20s of the 20th Century it was the decorative painter Julius CA Jahn, who pocketed the rent of ten tenants in the 40's and Jahn's heirs, along with two co-owners, where 12 or 13 parties, the powders were guilty or not. A fine address was the 34 at least not one takes the social prestige of the house represented in professional scale: Cutters, Police Sergeant, Accountants, Boiler maker, Seamstress, Laborers, Retired midwife, Wallpapering, Housekeeper (1920) and Army officers, Engineers, Dressmaker, Machine mechanic, Truck drivers, Mechanic helpers, Dance teachers, co ... (1943). But it was not a delicate area in the whole Town.
In the middle of the80s the house was empty, pulled largely stood with the demolition of half the Town closer than anything else. Faint but need not be: Dresdner Artists - Rainer Görß, Viola Schöpe, Harriet Böge, Tom Herold, Thomas Reichstein, etc. - Took over in quietness the working and living space: a cardboard sign on the door said the Bohemian street just decided to the branch of the Academy (Academy of Fine Arts), the ABV (section representative of the People's Police) calmed down and replaced the rental agreement is sufficient.
The early 90s, in the first year of the boom, trendy bars, cafe Raskolnikov were established, established for the Kunsthaus Raskolnikov Raskolnikov eV and the Kunsthaus. The establishment of Raskolnikov bar was designed and built at this time. In 1996 began the renovation of the house, carefully, with due respect. Since October '97 office and gallery work of art house back on the first floor. In the attic is now open for guests of the art house a small guesthouse.
