Max Lingner Explained

Max Lingner (17 November 1888 – 14 March 1959) was a German painter, graphic artist, communist, and resistance fighter against the Nazi regime.

Life

Born in Leipzig, the son of a xylographer, Lingner graduated from high school in 1907 and studied as a master student under Carl Bantzer at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts, where he completed his training in 1912 with a painting Singing Girls, for which he received the "Saxon State Prize". On a study trip in 1913/1914 he visited England, the Netherlands, France and Belgium.

In First World War he had to fight on all fronts. In 1918, he took part in the Kiel mutiny and became a member of the soldiers' council in Kiel. He settled in the village of Born on the Darß from 1919 to 1922, but failed as a farmer. From 1922 to 1927, he worked as a painter and graphic artist in Weißenfels, but greater successes failed to materialise. On the advice of Käthe Kollwitz, he moved to Paris.

The first years in the French capital also passed without any great impressions for him. The tide turned when Henri Barbusse won him a job at the weekly newspaper Monde. Here Lingner's great talent as a press artist became apparent, so that he was soon entrusted with the entire artistic design of the newspaper. The Monde appeared from 1928 until Barbusse's death in 1935. From 1931 onwards, Lingner's style shaped the appearance of the newspaper. He created drawings for title pages, but also drawings and illustrations for the published texts and literary supplements.

French-language press titles in which Max Lingner has collaborated

With these works, he found his way into Parisian artistic life. In 1934, he joined the Association of Revolutionary Writers and Artists of France (AEAR). He participated in exhibitions of this group. In 1933, Lingner showed his first works at the Galerie Billet (Pierre Vorms[13]), and further exhibitions took place in Paris in 1939 and 1947.

The paintings and drawings shown there were created alongside his daily work as a press illustrator. He also brought back hundreds of ink drawings from his forays through Parisian working-class suburbs - the banlieue - and motifs and people from these wanderings were often found in his paintings and press drawings. He liked to paint and draw motifs of French women.

Exhibitions in Paris

Notes and References

  1. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k889226m.item Monde, N° 247, 25 February 1933
  2. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k889293w/f1.item.zoom Monde, N° 316, 21 December 1934
  3. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k866608m/f1.item.zoom Monde, N° 317, 4 January 1935
  4. This first page is reproduced in the book by Denis Cohen & Valère Staraselski, 1909-2009 Un siècle de Vie ouvrière, éditions Le cherche midi, Paris, 2009, page 45.
  5. Web site: L'Humanité : journal socialiste quotidien. Parti communiste français Auteur du. texte. December 9, 1937. Gallica.
  6. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k407536k/f4.item.zoom L'Humanité, August 14, 1938
  7. https://www.humanite.fr/un-journal-saisi-et-interdit-613264 L'Humanité, 6 August 2016, Alexandre Courban: Un journal saisi et interdit
  8. Web site: L'Humanité : journal socialiste quotidien. Parti communiste français Auteur du. texte. January 26, 1947. Gallica.
  9. Web site: L'Humanité : journal socialiste quotidien. Parti communiste français Auteur du. texte. June 22, 1947. Gallica.
  10. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k76359166/f8.item.zoom Regards, 28 January 1937, N° 159
  11. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k76546862/f19.item Regards, N° 130, 9 July 1936
  12. Consultation of L'Almanach ouvrier et paysan de L'Humanité published in the years concerned.
  13. https://data.bnf.fr/fr/13595946/pierre_vorms/ Pierre Worms
  14. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k4078087/f8.item L'Humanité, 13 May 1939
  15. https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k4739130k/f1.item.zoom. L'Humanité, 21 May 1947
  16. Exhibition presented by Jean Rollin, chief curator of the museum and art critic at L'Humanité from 1952 to 1999, under the title: Retour d'un ami.
  17. http://www.museehistoirevivante.fr/expositions/exposition-du-14-mars-au-17-mai-2020/max-lingner-a-la-recherche-du-temps-present Musée de l'Histoire vivante, 14 March – 17 May 2020}}.
  18. Web site: Ce soir : grand quotidien d'information indépendant / directeur Louis Aragon ; directeur Jean Richard Bloch. June 4, 1939. Gallica.
  19. identische Ausgabe in der BRD: Röderberg, Frankfurt 1982. Ergänzte Neuauflage Claude Laharie; Jacques Abauzit; Jean-Francois Vergez; Evangelische Landeskirche in Baden (ed.): Gurs 1939 – 1945: ein Internierungslager in Südwestfrankreich. Von der Internierung spanischer Republikaner und Freiwilliger der Internationalen Brigaden bis zur Deportation der Juden in die NS-Vernichtungslager. Atlantica-Seguier, Biarritz 2007 .
  20. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/249978073 Max Lingner - Werkverzeichnis 1898 bis 1931/32 [begleitet von der Ausstellung Max Lingner - Frühzeit und Frankreich, Museum im Kleihues-Bau, 17. Juli bis 26. September 2004, Museen der Stadt Kornwestheim''] on WorldCat