Leipzig

Dear members and friends of the GDNÄ,

now it is over, the glittering festival of science that we were able to celebrate in the splendid atmosphere of the Leipzig Congress Hall at the Zoo. It was four days full of stimulating encounters and events. After a Corona break of more than two years, we were finally able to get together again in person, in keeping with the spirit of our society’s founders.

Prominent speakers and panellists interpreted the theme “Images in science” from their own perspective. It became apparent how interdisciplinary science is and must be today: All sciences strive to create images, and they use artificial as well as natural intelligence, the large toolbox of computer science, sophisticated methods of physics and specially designed building blocks of chemistry to do so. One example: in order to depict the molecules of life ever more precisely, new dyes and labelling strategies, complex light and electron microscopes, efficient algorithms and plausible visualisations are needed.

On the journey through scientific image worlds, we were allowed to participate in technological and content-related breakthroughs, for example in the search for exoplanets, dark matter and black holes, in blazingly fast NMR imaging and light microscopy on the nanometre scale, or in research on individual molecules and atoms.

All the speakers were well prepared, with lectures that were challenging, understandable and often entertaining. And not only for the eight hundred guests in the hall, but also via livestream, Instagram and website diary for many others, as the impressive user numbers show. As soon as the films are edited, you can watch the presentations again on our Youtube channel.

The discussions on the podium were invigorating, opening up other interesting perspectives in addition to the views of individual speakers. For example, during the festive afternoon on the images of Humboldt’s expeditions and research journeys into the deep sea and the universe; then on Sunday on the incipient revolution in RNA medicine.

Around two hundred participants in our student programme brought freshness and new impulses to the discussion. The gratitude of the young people for this unique programme is overwhelming! The guest book also bears witness to happy-go-lucky feedback: “were able to meet great people”, “inspiring insights into cutting-edge research”, “new images – new world view”, “reveling in enthusiasm”, “let the spark fly”, “best conference ever”, “will gladly come again” – these are just a few examples from many handwritten thank-you notes.

Once again, we would like to thank all those who contributed to the success of this celebration: our guests who travelled from near and far, members and non-members, younger and older, all speakers and panellists, all those who helped with the preparation and implementation in the office and board and in the local team of Zoo and Congress Hall around Jörg Junhold, the city of Leipzig and the state of Saxony for their hospitality, the Nikolaikirche with Sebastian Feydt, who reminded us of the peaceful revolution of 1989, and the musicians who took us on an intensive foray through Leipzig’s musical history, the students around Paul Mühlenhoff, the Instagram team from Stuttgart around Alexander Mäder, the archive of the GDNÄ around Matthias Röschner and all exhibitors at the Expo, the authors and the team of the commemorative publication around Lilo Berg and Thomas Liebscher, all sponsors, donors and benefactors.

After the meeting is before the meeting: The next meeting of the GDNÄ will take place in Potsdam in September 2024, then under the leadership of Heribert Hofer. Anke Kaysser-Pyzalla was elected for the presidency in 2025 and 2026, the first female engineer to chair the GDNÄ. So the planning already reaches quite far into the future.

The festive assembly showed that the GDNÄ is needed and has a model for the future that it can further develop and expand: for an intensive dialogue between disciplines, for an invigorating student programme, and for science communication in the best sense!

 

Yours,

Lennart Resch

Martin Lohse, President of the GDNÄ (2019-2022)

One click to the program of the 2022 Jubilee Assembly.

Back to the roots

To celebrate its 200th anniversary, the GDNÄ will return to its founding city of Leipzig from 8 to 11 September 2022. The venue will be the Congress Hall at Leipzig Zoo. The Art Deco building combines historical and modern elements in an elegant interplay. It was inaugurated in 1900 as the “Bürgerliches Gesellschaftshaus” of the zoo. Initiated by a citizens’ initiative, the ensemble was extensively renovated and converted from 2010 to 2015.

Diary

blank

Day One

Student programme: Science is challenged
mehr >>

Diary

blank

Day Three

From planets, luminaries in the making, and images from Hollywood.
mehr >>

Livestream

blank

In real time

Jubilee conference 8-11 September 2022: Just tune in!
mehr >>

Jubilee publication

blank

The book for the jubilee

Just published: 200 exciting pages about 200 years of GDNÄ.
more >>

Diary

blank

Day Two

Of mini deer, new materials and black holes
mehr >>

Diary

blank

Day Four

Images from the body, RNA medicine and hands-on science.
mehr >>

Reports from Leipzig

blank

The anniversary in the media

School program on television / Instagram channel opened.
mehr >>

Leipzig 2022

blank

President’s invitation

Martin Lohse looks back – and forward to a glamorous celebration.
more >>

Saarbrücken 2018 © Robertus Koppies

Congress Hall at the Leipzig Zoo

The Saxon city looks back on an eventful history. Sorbs settled here as early as the 7th century in the “Ort bei den Linden”. Around 1165, Leipzig was granted city rights and market privileges and quickly became an important trading city. An imperial privilege in 1497 initiated the development of Leipzig into a trade fair city of European standing.

The university, founded in 1409, is one of the oldest in Germany. Today, together with numerous non-university institutes, it makes Leipzig a city of science and research.

Leipzig’s musical heritage is also highly regarded far beyond the city and state borders. Johann Sebastian Bach worked as a cantor in St Thomas’ Church for 27 years. The world-famous St Thomas’ Boys Choir has its home here.

The events of autumn 1989 made the world look to Leipzig. St Nicholas’ Church became the starting point of a peaceful revolution that led to the reunification of Germany. In this so significant church we celebrate the 200th anniversary of our society with an anniversary concert.