Otto Gerstenberg (11 September 1848 – 24 April 1935) was a German entrepreneur, mathematician and an early 20th-century Berlin art collector.
In 1884, Gerstenberg married Elise Wilhelmine Winzerling, with her he had two daughters. The family home was first at Großbeerenstraße in Berlin-Kreuzberg and later in Berlin-Lichterfelde. His daughter Margarete married physicist Hans Georg Scharf.
Gerstenberg collected art. During World War II, part of his collection was destroyed and other works were seized from Nazi Germany, ending up in Russian museums. Sammlung Scharf-Gerstenberg: Die helle Seite der Nacht Nicola Kuhn, Der Tagesspiegel, 11 July 2008. Retrieved 14 September 2010. Sammlung Scharf-Gerstenberg: Passion für die Fantasie Gudrun Meyer, Focus, 9 July 2008. Retrieved 14 September 2010. His collected paintings went to his daughter, Margarete Scharf, who stored most in the bunker of the Nationalgalerie in Berlin during the war. These were taken to the Soviet Union. Others were put in storage and burned in an air raid.Steven Erlanger (March 30, 1995), Hermitage, in Its Manner, Displays Its Looted Art New York Times. The surviving artworks remained in family ownership and were inherited by his grandson, Dieter Scharf. Sammlung Scharf-Gerstenberg - Surreale Welten State of Berlin homepage.
Gerstenberg is buried at the St. Annen cemetery in Dahlem, Berlin.
== Art collected by Gerstenberg ==
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