Max Thedy

German painter, designer and engraver From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Max Thedy (16 October 1858, Munich - 13 August 1924, Polling[1]) was a German painter, designer and engraver. He is sometimes erroneously referred to as Marc Thedy.

Max Thedy; portrait by Carl Frithjof Smith (1893, detail)
Parlor in Überlingen on Lake Constance

Biography

He was the youngest of twelve children born to Johann Valentin Thedy, a Verwaltungsaktuar (administrative assistant in the community government) and his wife, Theresia.[1] After his parents' premature deaths, he was taken in by the family of the Hamburg painter, Georg Friedrich Louis Reinhardt (1819–1905) and encouraged to pursue a career in art.[2]

After 1875, he was a student at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich. In 1882, aged only twenty-four, he was called to be a professor at the Grand-Ducal Saxon Art School, Weimar.[1] Among his best known students were Elisabeth Thiermann [de], Christian Rohlfs, Ernest Biedermann [de] and Rudolf Schmidt-Dethloff [de]. In 1919, he became an instructor at the Bauhaus[1] and, in 1921, was named a Professor there.[1]

His works have been shown throughout Europe and the United States; most recently at exhibitions in Weimar (2002), Überlingen and Frankfurt am Main (2005).

References

Further reading

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