Alfred Thiele Explained

Alfred Thiele (21 September 1886 – 19 September 1957) was a German sculptor, and medallist.[1] [2] [3]

Life

Provenance and training

Alfred Thiele was born in Leipzig. Carl Thiele (1859-1929), his father, was a book dealer. Alfred's initial training was in stonework and wood carving. Then between 1903 and 1908, he attended the Arts Academy ("Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst") in Leipzig. His teachers included Adolf Lehnert and Bruno Héroux.

Artist

After a short stay in Munich Thiele returned to Leipzig and embarked on a career as a freelance artist. Starting in 1910, his work involved medallions and wall-mounted plaques. From 1911 he became more focused on figurines and participation in exhibitions. His early style reflected the naturalist and Jugendstil influences of the time, but during the 1920s he moved on through expressionism to so-called new realism. Influenced by Aristide Maillol and Wilhelm Lehmbruck, his artistic interest turned towards the presentation of physical movement and expressions of the human body. By 1928 he had become sufficiently well known to justify a newspaper headline that read "There is only one sculptor in Leipzig: Alfred Thiele!" ("Es gibt nur einen Bildhauer in Leipzig: Alfred Thiele!").[4] During the 1930s he began to apply the skills acquired working on small figures to much larger figures. Thiele applies his outstanding powers of observation, his sense for movement and other specialist abilities to developing a mastery of animal sculptures. Some of his designs were reproduced on an industrial scale by the firm, offered as both glazed and unglazed porcelain figures. He also applied himself to statues other adornments for monumental grave stones.

Teacher

As a teacher, and later as director for sculpture classes at the Leipzig Arts Academy between 1921 and 1953, Thiele exercised a great influence. One example (among many) was setting up a close collaborative relationship between the academy and the city zoo which created a tradition of animal sculpture in Leipzig which endures to this day.

His pupils, in both a narrow and a broader sense, included,,,,,, Walter Arnold,, Gisela Richter-Thiele, Hans-Joachim Förster,, Gunter Morgner, Rolf Nagel and .

Output (selection)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Grabmal Alfred Thiele. 1 December 2011. Hendrik Tews. 19 December 2017.
  2. Ausstellung Alfred Thiele und Georg Quenzel im Museum der Bildenden Künste Leipzig, 16. September bis 7. Oktober 1956, Katalog, Leipzig 1956.
  3. Book: Rudolf Vierhaus. Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopaedie. 1 January 2005. Walter de Gruyter. 978-3-11-094657-4.
  4. Herwig Guratzsch (Hrsg.): Museum des bildenden Künste Leipzig. Katalog der Bildwerke, Köln 1999, S. 61.