Seite - 294 - in Rudolf Eitelberger von Edelberg - Netzwerker der Kunstwelt
Bild der Seite - 294 -
Text der Seite - 294 -
294 Marsha Morton
nographic illustrations as well as genre paintings reminiscent of Biedermeier art. Ei-
telberger admired MĂĽller as a political cartoonist for Figaro, owned by Rudolf von
Waldheim, where he was employed from 1862 until 1870. Modeled on the German
publication Kladderadatsch, it was considered to be the foremost satirical paper in late
nineteenth-century Vienna.10 Müller’s illustrations targeted regional character types in
the Crown Lands and prominent political figures during the tumultuous decade leading
to the 1867 Ausgleich.11 His many cartoons of ethnic diversity, such as the cautionary
“Illustrirte Karte von Oesterreich” (9 May 1863) (fig. 2), which exposed Austria as a
relatively small piece of the vast Habsburg Empire, addressed issues of concern to Ei-
telberger who argued for inclusiveness and against rising nationalism. MĂĽller was part
of a circle of progressive writers, artists, and politicians who congregated at the Café
Griensteidl, earning his credentials by receiving a short jail sentence in October 1863
for a blasphemous cartoon related to the Austro-Hungarian constitutional crisis.12 As
Eitelberger wrote appreciatively in his 1881 feuilleton, MĂĽller and his colleague Lauf-
berger “waren scharfe Beobachter des Lebens und der Vorgänge ihrer Zeit […]. Bei
allem Humor und Sarkasmus, zu dem die Zeitverhältnisse herausforderten, waren ihre
Leistungen liebenswürdig, gutmüthig und ohne Frivolität.”13 According to Eitelberger,
the caricatures remained vividly in everyone’s memory.
Significantly, Müller’s cartoons in Figaro and drawings in Waldheim’s Illustrirte Zei-
tung (where he worked in 1862/63), provided Eitelberger with an accurate prototype of
the later Egyptian genre scenes : imagery consistent with a liberal worldview oriented
around trade, universal everyday activities, and opposition to colonialism. In Müller’s
illustrations of markets in Hungary and Vienna, together with many international shop-
ping scenes in Waldheim’s Illustrirte Zeitung, commerce and labor are presented as unify-
ing forces across networks of heterogeneous ethnicities and social classes.14 Eitelberger,
who urged artists and designers to think globally, would not have disagreed with the
concept : “Der Künstler gehört heute der Welt ebensogut an, wie seiner Nation, und der
10 K. Vocelka, K. u. K. Karikaturen und Karikaturen zum Zeitalter Kaiser Franz Josephs, Vienna
1986, p.Â
20.
11 MĂĽller was known for his caricatures of Johann Nepomuk von Berger, Rudolf Brestel, Franz Martin
Schindler, Ignaz Kuranda and Friedrich von Beust.
12 For letters and drawings about this event see A.Â
F. Seligmann, Carl Leopold MĂĽller, Vienna 1922,
pp.Â
31–34 and pp.Â
37–39.
13 Eitelberger, LeopoldÂ
K. MĂĽller (cit. n.Â
4), p.Â
405. Laufberger created caricatures for Figaro in the
years before MĂĽller began working for the paper.
14 Scenes of shopping and markets in Waldheim’s in 1862 include Müller’s Ungarische Marktszene
(18Â
Jan., p.Â
62) and illustrations for Vienna’s Tandelmarkt (26Â
April, p.Â
196), H. Reinhardt’s Der Fis-
chmarkt in Venedig (8Â
March, p.Â
115), and L’Allemand’s Mexikanische Strassenbilder (8Â
March, p.Â
117).
Open Access © 2019 by BÖHLAU VERLAG GMBH & CO.KG, WIEN
Rudolf Eitelberger von Edelberg
Netzwerker der Kunstwelt
- Titel
- Rudolf Eitelberger von Edelberg
- Untertitel
- Netzwerker der Kunstwelt
- Autoren
- Julia RĂĽdiger
- Eva Kernbauer
- Kathrin Pokorny-Nagel
- Raphael Rosenberg
- Patrick Werkner
- Tanja Jenni
- Verlag
- Böhlau Verlag
- Ort
- Wien
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-205-20925-6
- Abmessungen
- 17.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 562
- Kategorie
- Biographien