The museum currently has twelve thematic rooms in its permanent collection, while one room is dedicated to temporary exhibitions. The museum's permanent collection displays Richard von Gigantikow's artwork, including collages and installations, created during the GDR period. These vary from installations to collages, to illustrations, sculptures, and flyers. The museum is, however, not only dedicated to showing arts and artists from the GDR period; it also covers contemporary arts and contributes to ongoing artistic projects and installations in public spaces. The artists’ atelier is open to visitors. In addition, an archive has been set up in order to house documents, samizdat publications, photos, and graphic arts, among others. The garden is used to showcase sculpture projects.
Richard's installations incorporate fine art, collage, video art, sound installations, souvenirs, reliquary, everyday objects from the GDR, and gifts from his artist friends. Among the installations and artwork displayed by the museum, one should note the artist’s works created during the GDR, and after 1989, such as the Atelier of a Dissident (Atelier eines Dissidenten) and the Cathedral of Socialism (Kathedrale des Sozialismus).
The museum has also exhibited the artwork of various avant-garde artists from the GDR period. One notable example is the museum’s support for the organization of the exhibition Between Exit and Action. Subculture in Erfurt in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, organized in 2013 in the Erfurter Kunsthalle together with the Federal Foundation for the Reappraisal of the SED Dictatorship. Also, the exhibition room Interieur Underground was recently opened, dedicated to subcultures in the GDR and marginal artists, accompanied by an eponymous catalogue Interieur Underground. '89 Geschichten der Friedlichen Revolution (Interieur Underground. '89 Stories of the Peaceful Revolution) issued in 2017, with the support of the Federal Foundation for the Reappraisal of the SED Dictatorship and the Saxon Regional Representative for the Stasi Archives.