Max Karl Tilke

Max Karl Tilke (6 February 1869 – 2 August 1942) was a well-known German artist and ethnographer.

Early life

Born in Breslau (Wrocław), Prussian Silesia, he entered the Berlin Academy of Arts in 1886 and, as a student, traveled in Italy and Tunisia in 1890. After graduating from the Academy, he worked first in Berlin as an artist/decorator and then at the Prado in Madrid as a copyist. This period had a great influence on the formation of Tilke’s work. After Spain, he worked in Paris as an illustrator in 1900. At this point, he was already known for having knowledge on costumes.

Returning to Berlin, he began to paint works of historical costumes, which gained him a reputation among the authorities and in high society. In 1911, at the Lipperheide Costume Library of the Berlin Kunstgewerbe Museum, Tilke had an exhibition of his first collection. The exhibition was so well received that it was purchased for the library with state monies.

Berlin

Berlin cabaret: "The Hungry Pegasus"

When Tilke returned to Germany, he opened the first cabaret in Berlin on October 1st, 1901, which was called "The Hungry Pegasus" ("Zum hungrigen Pegasus"). Tilke had become acquainted with it in Paris, and in Berlin he had the role of the conferencier (master of ceremonies). The cabaret was located in a small back room of the Italian restaurant "Dalbelli" at the Potsdamer Brücke. Among the (regular) guests and performers were Charles Horning, Ernst Griebel, Erich Mühsam, Georg David Schulz, Hans Hyan, Hanns Heinz Ewers, Maria Eichhorn ("The Dolorosa") et al. with scetches, songs and programs. Half a year later, Tilke decided to return to painting full-time and the Hungry Pegasus disabanded.[1][2][3]

On Cross-Dressing

In 1912 he and Magnus Hirschfeld published the book Die Transvestiten - eine Untersuchung über den erotischen Verkleidungstrieb mit umfangreichem casuistischen und historischen Material (2nd edition) on transvestism. Tilke was responsible for the illustrations.

Costume design

In 1913, his friend Hanns Heinz Ewers helped Tilke to find a job at the "Deutsche BIOSCOP GmbH Filmgesellschaft", Neubabelsberg/Berlin. He was responsible for the costume design;[4] for example for the movie Kadra Sâfa (1914).[5]

Tbilisi

Meanwhile, his growing reputation resulted in his coming to the attention of the Russian imperial court from which he received a small commission. The Tsar was so pleased with Tilke’s work that he was invited to Tbilisi to work at the Caucasus Museum to paint the costumes in the Museum’s collections as well as to undertake an ethnological expedition to enlarge the collection. In 1912/1913 he worked there as a Professor.

Tilke’s plan was to paint the costumes in the Museum’s collections as well as to undertake an ethnological expedition to paint subjects in situ. While this approach was perhaps more creative, practical realities rendered it inefficient. To overcome the many obstacles this method presented, a compromise solution was reached. Each model in national costume was photographed (in some instances the names of the models are still known); then the costume was purchased; and finally, the painting was made from studying both the photograph and the actual costume. The results are works that combine ethnological accuracy with a talented artist’s eye for character, place, detail, and emotion. However, whenever possible, Tilke painted his works directly from the models.

World War I and later life

The outbreak of World War I put an end to the project before it was completed, and Tilke returned to Germany, taking some of his paintings with him. During the War, Tilke worked for the publishing union, Deutsche Verlag Union, in Stuttgart, painting works about the war, but he continued his interest in ethnic costumes and published several works on the topic. His most famous work, Orientalische Kostume in Schnitt und Farbe (Oriental Costume: Their Designs and Colors), was published in 1922. Tilke died in Berlin.

Legacy

Max Tilke’s talent, his wide range of activity, and his exquisite workmanship secure for him a pre-eminent place among artists and ethnographers alike. Additionally, as the years pass, these works take on an added value. As examples of ethnic costume are less and less frequently seen, and as more and more people forsake their national dress for westernized clothing and costume, these paintings stand as a record and a testament to a bygone, more colorful time.

Max Tilke stands out in that he chose the complicated and unexplored path of being both a scientist and an artist. In his view, the study of historical costume was indispensable to the study of cultural history. It was Tilke’s aim to show the unique importance and significance of individual ethnic groups and his work reflects this aim.

Toward the end of his life, he lent his name to a collaboration with Wolfgang Bruhn. (Bruhn, Wolfgang, and Tilke, Max, Kostümwerk, Verlag Ernst Wassmuth, 1955, as translated into English as A Pictorial History of Costume and republished in 1973 by Hastings House). A copy of one his books has been digitized and is online at the Indiana University Libraries.[6]

Some years ago there was small exhibition on Lydia Bagdasarianz, Tilke's assistant, at the Völkerkundemuseum Zürich (Ethnographic Museum of the University of Zürich), Switzerland.

Recently, there was an exhibition on Max Tilke's work at the Georgian National Museum in Tbilisi, Georgia. A publication is available, but rare.

At the Lipperheidische Kostümbibliothek, Berlin, a large collection of pictures and drawings is available for research.

Bibliography

Sources

References

  1. Jelavich, Peter: Berlin cabaret. Harvard 1996 (2nd Edition), p. 86-88.
  2. Hergemöller, Bernd-Ulrich: Mann für Mann. Biographisches Lexikon zur Geschichte von Freundesliebe und mannmännlicher Sexualität im deutschen Sprachraum. Hamburg 1998, p. 692-93.
  3. Bemmann, Helga: Berliner Musenkinder-Memoiren. Berlin 1981, p. 19-28.
    1. cite_ref-1
  4. "Kadra Sâfa". imdb.com. 1914.
  5. "Oriental Costumes Their Designs and Color, by Mak Tilke". indiana.edu.

External links

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