Master Outdoor Painters
Wilhem Kuhnert 1865-1926 By Armand Cabrera
Wilhelm
Kuhnert was born in Germany on September 28, 1865. At
the age of seventeen, he traveled to Berlin to stay with
relatives and enroll at the Royal Academy of Berlin. While
at the Academy, he studied Animal Painting under Paul
Meyerheim and Landscape Painting under Ferdinand Bellerman.
Although considerable attention was paid to studying anatomy,
the students would sketch captive animals in a zoo and
then make formal paintings in their studio---making up
the environments from the artists’ imagination.
Kuhnert decided to change this. After seeing some African
animals at a fair, the young artist vowed to travel to
Africa and paint animals in their native habitat.
Upon leaving the Royal Academy, he acquired a studio in
Berlin. While Kuhnert was sketching at the Berlin Zoo,
he was introduced to Hans Meyer, the first European to
climb Kilimanjaro. Meyer was impressed with Kuhnert’s
ability and promised the young artist the chance to illustrate
his next book. Kuhnert told Meyer of his goal of traveling
to Africa to paint the animals in their natural settings.
Meyer suggested he travel to East Africa and even gave
Kuhnert his safari equipment.
Good
to his word, Meyer commissioned Kuhnert to illustrate
Brehms Tierbuilder, a dictionary of animals from around
the world. With the proceeds from the book, Kuhnert traveled
to Africa in 1891.
At that time, the East African Colony was a vast, unexplored
territory for most Germans. Kuhnert traveled the only
way available---accompanied by a score of men to act as
guides and carry the hundreds of pounds of gear and supplies
needed for such a journey. A year later, he returned to
Germany with dozens of paintings, sketches and drawings
of the African animals, people and places.
In
1893, Kuhnert’s paintings went on display at the
Berliner Art Exhibition and he took the Medal of Honor.
The public responded to his truthful depictions of the
great continent. At only 28 years of age, Kuhnert’s
success seemed assured.
He married in 1894 and moved to a larger studio. The attraction
of Africa could not keep him home, so in 1905, he left
his wife and daughter and returned to what he called “The
Promised Land”. After a year on the continent, rather
than returning home, he traveled to Ceylon. Unable to
stand his long absences, his wife left him in 1907. Kuhnert
finally returned to Germany in 1908.
He returned to Africa once more in 1911. Two years later,
he remarried. In 1920, Kuhnert published two books on
African Wildlife---“Im Lande Meiner Modelle”
(in the Land of My Model) and “Mein Tierre”
(My Animals). He died February 11, 1926 at the age of
60---five months after his second wife had passed away.
It is believed Kuhnert’s body of work totaled 5,500
paintings---primarily animals, but also portraits and
landscapes. Today, there are less than a thousand known
works in existence. The rest of his paintings were destroyed
or lost in World War II.
Bibliography:
The Animal Art of Wilhelm Kuhnert
Terry Weiland
Live Oak press 1995