Sand in the Bristles
In 1876 a journalist from the "Allgemeinen Zeitung" visited Makart in his atelier in Cairo and reported gaily: "The Arabic models, who seemed bashful at first, eventually became so shameless that they brazenly ran around in the fashion of Eve. The photographic machine was constantly in use, the most exquisite poses were counterfeited, of which even the least indecent should not be described."
This was also part of the artists' successful marketing strategies. During his stay in Cairo, Makart sold erotic paintings at a value sum of up to ten thousand florins. "Makart was diligent, painted eight paintings here, big old things," Müller wrote sinisterly, "Lenbach only experimented."
Müller also experimented. Photographs show him in the summer heat with his head cocked to the side, critically peering from behind his spectacles, sitting in the sand and painting. "I always work outside," Müller wrote with chagrin, "painting genres from periods that no one knows at all is nonsense."
Everyday life versus eroticism
Unlike Makart, Müller wanted to depict daily life in the contemporary Orient in all its vivacity, and he did so with an ethnological zeal that few shared with him. He painted schools and street scenes, in which, however, he contradicted his own principles by bringing in fantasized desert architectural constructions. With cartographic meticulousness, he painted costumes and children, crumbling walls, Arabic physiognomies, and the foggy light of the Nile delta as it played on bodies and clothes.
In his desperate attempts to capture the vibrations of the quickly fading morning and evening light, he came closer to the impressionists than the Boudoir painters of his time who painted the Orient as a whole as if it were nothing but a thrillingly adorned brothel. Due to their overwhelming success, these contemporary artists lapsed into paintings of ever more extreme fantasies of violence. Edwin Long painted a Babylonian marriage market in which women were lined up like products on a shelf waiting for buyers. Jean-Léon Gérôme and Ferencz Eisenhut depicted slave markets in which buyers use a rough hand to check the teeth and breasts of naked slave women.
Müller's softly colored paintings depict other kinds of people – androgynous, elusive strangers that maintain a certain distance to the spectator. Not even their gender can be determined. Once Müller painted an attractive "Contemporary Sphinx," which could also be a young man, a young man who once looked like a girl.
Oriental Vamp with a cigarette
On his last trip Müller painted the "Nefusa," a Berber woman in a low cut black robe with an imposing gaze – a portrait in which his past as a caricaturist comes through. Portrayed lasciviously with her thrashing eyelashes, his Nefusa looks almost like a grotesque parody of the bedroom paintings of his colleagues.
A cynical Viennese attitude haunts the eyes of Müller's Oriental vamp, with a cigarette in her right hand as she casually leans into the corner. She embodies a female type that was seldom to be seen in fin de siècle Oriental paintings.
"Müller the Egyptian" with a Fez
The Nefusa was Müller's farewell to Egypt. The "lousily paid" professorship he took on, the tribulations of which he often loudly complained about, no longer allowed him long trips to the Orient. Only once more did he take leave and travel to Cairo in winter.
Until his death in 1892, "Müller the Egyptian" – as he was called by his students – carried out an existence as successor to Makart in a post teaching historical painting. But in this function he continued to paint less history than he did the mysteries of the present. And this he did with a fez atop his head.
Niklas Maak
© Niklas Maak/Qantara.de 2004
Translation from German: Christina M. White
This text was previously published by Germany's daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.