Museum Folkwang Collection Online
Polnische Familie
  • Otto Mueller
  • Polnische Familie, 1919

  • Polish Family
  • Glue-bound distemper on burlap
  • 179,5 x 112 cm
  • Donated in 1952 by Adalbert Colsman
  • Inv. G 231
  • On view
  • CommentaryOccasionally, Otto Mueller’s pictorial narratives can be brought into direct relation with his biography, as is the case with ›Polnische Familie‹ (Polish Family), which reflects wishful thinking. The artist painted himself as an Orthodox Jew next to his lover Irene Altmann, rendered as Maria with a partial halo. She was of Jewish heritage and also one of his first students at the Breslau Academy in early 1919. Altmann truly impacted on his personal life, for Mueller apparently considered, for the first time, ending his long-standing marriage. The artist thematized the different religious affiliations that could stand in the way of marriage: one of the two would have to convert or so this motif might be interpreted. Also hidden in this representation is the artist’s yearning for familial warmth, conveyed in the depiction of the newborn child. Yet, the birth of a mutual child is unverified here; the dog peeping out from under the bench alludes to Mueller’s poodle called Heiko, who was a loyal companion during the early years in Breslau.
  • Provenance1919–spätestens 1930: Im Besitz des Künstlers | frühestens 1930–[...]: Galerie Ferdinand Möller, Berlin | [...]–01.1952: Edgar Horstmann (1902–1994), Hamburg | Frühjahr 1951–01.1952: Galerie Alex Vömel, Düsseldorf | seit 01.1952: Museum Folkwang, Essen

    Provenienz in Abklärung

    Die Untersuchung erfolgte im Rahmen des vom Deutschen Zentrum Kulturgutverluste geförderten Projekts zur Bestandsprüfung (01.10.2019–30.09.2020).
  • Obj_Id: 3,415
  • Obj_Internet_S: ja
  • Obj_Ownership_S (Verantw):Painting, Sculpture, Media Art
  • Obj_SpareNField01_N (Verantw):
  • Obj_Creditline_S: Gemäldesammlung
  • Obj_Title1_S: Polnische Familie
  • Obj_Title2_S: Polish Family
  • Obj_PartDescription_S (Titelerg):
  • Obj_SpareMField01_M (Alle Titel): Polnische Familie Polish Family
  • Obj_Dating_S: 1919
  • Jahr von: 1,919
  • Jahr bis: 1,919
  • Obj_IdentNr_S: G 231
  • Obj_IdentNrSort_S: G 0231
  • Obj_Classification_S (Objtyp): Painting
  • Obj_Crate_S: 179,5 x 112 cm
  • Obj_Material_S: Glue-bound distemper on burlap
  • Obj_Technique_S:
  • Obj_SpareSField01_S (Mat./Tech.): Glue-bound distemper on burlap
  • Obj_AccNote_S (Erwerb): Donated in 1952 by Adalbert Colsman
  • Obj_PermanentLocation_S (Standort): On view
  • Obj_Condition1_S (Druckerei):
  • Obj_Condition2_S (Auflage):
  • Obj_Subtype_S (Genre):
  • Obj_Rights_S:
Commentary
Artists
Provenance

Occasionally, Otto Mueller’s pictorial narratives can be brought into direct relation with his biography, as is the case with ›Polnische Familie‹ (Polish Family), which reflects wishful thinking. The artist painted himself as an Orthodox Jew next to his lover Irene Altmann, rendered as Maria with a partial halo. She was of Jewish heritage and also one of his first students at the Breslau Academy in early 1919. Altmann truly impacted on his personal life, for Mueller apparently considered, for the first time, ending his long-standing marriage. The artist thematized the different religious affiliations that could stand in the way of marriage: one of the two would have to convert or so this motif might be interpreted. Also hidden in this representation is the artist’s yearning for familial warmth, conveyed in the depiction of the newborn child. Yet, the birth of a mutual child is unverified here; the dog peeping out from under the bench alludes to Mueller’s poodle called Heiko, who was a loyal companion during the early years in Breslau.