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From 1955 to 1960, Uhlig studied at the Dresden University of Fine Arts with Hans Theo Richter and Max Schwimmer.
From 1961 to 1963, he was a master student at the German Academy of the Arts in Berlin with Hans Theo Richter. He then worked as a freelancer until 1995. In 1968, he worked with Carlfriedrich Claus on the creation of his first prints (lithographs); later prints were also made for Charlotte E. Pauly, Dieter Goltzsche, Willy Wolff, Otto Niemeyer-Holstein, Heinrich Ehmsen, Hans Theo Richter and Wilhelm Höpfner. Until the early 1970s, the artist emerged only as a graphic artist. In 1978, Max Uhlig presented his characteristic paintings for the first time in the Dresden Kupferstichkabinett.
"Black and white or in colour, lines in the expressive rhythm of their superimposition draw the image mode and the conciseness of an extensive, unmistakable work that is a discovery. Today Max Uhlig is one of the last representatives of the era of open-air painting in modern art that began 150 years ago, but his work elevates it to the height of our time." His late work received significant impulses from annual stays in Faucon (southern France) from 1991 to 2010.
In June 2013, Uhlig's designs for the design of the glass windows for the Gothic St. John's Church in Magdeburg, which was rebuilt from 1994 to 1999, were accepted. The artist himself has been painting directly on glass in the Derix workshops in Taunusstein since spring 2014. From July to October 2014, the drafts and initial work results were on view in the exhibition "Max Uhlig. Grown before nature. Painting and graphics" in the art museum Kloster Unser Lieben Frauen Magdeburg.
Max Uhlig has been a member of the German Association of Artists since 1990 and a founding member of the Saxon Academy of the Arts. From 1995 to 2002, he was the professor for painting and graphics at the University of Fine Arts in Dresden.
As a Dresden painter, Uhlig had already become known before 1989 through participation in exhibitions in Western Europe outside the borders of the GDR. He has been awarded several national and international prizes, including the 1987 Käthe-Kollwitz-Preis of the Akademie der Künste der DDR, the 1991 2nd prize of the 21st International Biennale of São Paulo and the gold medal of the 10th Norsk Internasjonal Grafikk Biennale Fredrikstad, the 1998 Hans-Theo-Richter-Preis and the Saxon Order of Merit, the 2003 art prize of the state capital Dresden and the art prize of the artists on the occasion of the great art exhibition North Rhine-Westphalia in Düsseldorf 2006.
Max Uhlig has been married to Angela Simon since 1999 and now lives and works in the Helfenberg district of Dresden on the site of a former chemical factory.
Exhibitions
2014 "Grown before nature", Art Museum Magdeburg Monastery of Our Dear Women
2004 "Works from 50 Years", Beethovenstrasse Gallery, Düsseldorf
2004 "Change of Seasons", Kunsthalle Dominikanerkirche, Osnabrück
2004 Aalen Art Association, Aalen
2003 "Portraits and Landscapes", Gallery Klose, Essen
2002 German Society for Christian Art, Munich
2001 Saxon Academy of Arts, Dresden
2001 "Early Works 1960-1980", Galerie Oben, Chemnitz
2000 "Head Studies + Landscape", Scheffel Gallery, Bad Homburg
1999 "Pictures and works on paper 1970 to 1999", Galerie von Loeper, Hamburg
1999 "Portraits", Galerie Stefan Röpke, Cologne and Galería Arnés y Röpke, Madrid
1998 Municipal Gallery, Schwäbisch Hall
1998 Beethovenstrasse Gallery, Düsseldorf
1997 Döbele Gallery, Dresden
1997 Gallery at Sachsenplatz, Leipzig
1996 "Paysage De La Provence. New Portraits", Loeper Gallery, Hamburg
1996 "Discovered in the studio - pictures never shown", Beethovenstrasse Gallery, Düsseldorf
1995 "For 40 years", Museum Schloss Morsbroich, Leverkusen
1995 "Insights", ifa (Institute for Foreign Relations), Berlin
1995 "On Paper - Art of the 20th Century at Deutsche Bank", Kunsthalle Schirn, Frankfurt am Main
1994 Musée d'Art Moderne et Contemporain, Liège
1994 Art Museum in the Ehrenhof, Düsseldorf
1994 "Am Mont Ventoux", Galerie Stefan Röpke, Cologne
1994 "German Painters after 1945", Busch-Reisinger Museum, Cambridge
1993 "Retrospective", Albertinum, Dresden
1993 "Head and Figure", Beethovenstrasse Gallery, Düsseldorf
1992 "Pictures, Watercolors and Drawings", Loeper Gallery, Hamburg
1991 "Paintings and watercolors, drawings and graphics", Museum Schloss Morsbroich, Leverkusen
1991 "Nordic Plenary - Impressions of a Landscape", Beethovenstrasse Gallery, Düsseldorf
1991 "Blickwechsel", Gallery von Oppenheim, Cologne
1990 Galerie Brusberg Berlin (exhibition with Ernst Marow)
1990 Museum Waldhof, Bielefeld
1990 "Pictures from Germany", Josef-Haubrich-Kunsthalle, Cologne
1989 "13 painters from the GDR", Kunsthalle Emden
1988 Gallery of the Academy of Arts, Berlin
1987 Gallery at Sachsenplatz, Leipzig
1986 "From Beuys to Stella - International Graphics", Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin
1985 "Dresden today - painting and graphics after 1945", Galerie Döbele, Ravensburg
1984 "Max Uhlig - A Painter from Dresden", Brusberg Gallery, Berlin / Hanover
1981 "Painting and Graphics of the GDR", Musée d’art modern de la Ville de Paris
1980 "Painting and Graphics", Central Institute for Nuclear Research, Rossendorf near Dresden
1980 Alvensleben Gallery, Munich
1979 Arcade Gallery, Berlin
1978 Kupferstichkabinett, Dresden
1978 Mouffe Gallery, Paris
1977 "Selected watercolors by artists from the GDR", Galerie am Sachsenplatz, Dresden
1976 North Gallery, Dresden
1974 "25 Years of Graphics in the GDR", Altes Museum, Berlin
1974 "Drawings in the Art of the GDR", Kupferstichkabinett, Dresden
1972 "Contemporary Art of the GDR", Seibu Museum of Art, Tokyo
1971 Museum of Fine Arts, Leipzig
1967 State Lindenau Museum, Altenburg
1964 "8 young artists", Centralne Biuro Wystaw, Warsaw
1963 Humboldt University, Berlin
Works in museums and public properties
Aachen, Ludwig Forum for International Art
Albstadt, Albstadt Art Museum
Altenburg, State Lindenau Museum
Ann Arbor, University of Michigan – Art Gallery
Basel, Art Museum
Berkeley, USA, Berkeley Art Museum
Berlin, Academy of Arts, Neue Nationalgalerie, Kupferstichkabinett, Ostdeutsche Sparkassenstiftung, Märkisches Museum, ifa (Institute for Foreign Relations), Grundkreditbank, German Bundestag, art collection of the federal government Jakob-Kaiser-Haus
Braunschweig, Duke Anton Ulrich Museum
Bremen, Art Gallery
Budapest, Museum of Fine Arts (Graphische Sammlung)
Cambridge, Busch-Reisinger Museum (Harvard-University-Art Museum)
Coburg, municipal art collections of the Veste Coburg
Dresden, State Art Collections, New Masters Gallery, Kupferstichkabinett, Municipal Gallery, Academy of Sciences, Technical University of Dresden, Dresdner Bank Free State of Saxony (Art Fund), Ostsächsische Sparkasse Dresden, Deutsche Bank, Volksbank
Düsseldorf, art museum in the courtyard of honor, provincial insurance
Emden, art gallery
Erfurt, Angermuseum
Esslingen, Villa Merkel (municipal gallery), Sparkasse Esslingen
Frankfurt / Main, Deutsche Bank, Telekom, Museum for Communication
Frankfurt / Oder, Young Art Gallery
Gera, Orangery Art Gallery
Halle, Moritzburg Art Museum (graphic collection)
Hamburg, Kunsthalle (graphic collection), ART collection, Evangelical Academy
Hanover, Lower Saxony Sparkassenstiftung, Lower Saxony State Chancellery, Preussen Elektra, Sprengel Museum, collection of the Norddeutsche Landesbank
Jena, Romantic House Literature Museum, Jena-Optik
Kaunas, Ciurlionis Museum
Kiel, Kunsthalle, Schleswig-Holstein Ministry of Culture
Leipzig, Museum of Fine Arts, Painting Collection & Graphic Cabinet, Telekom
Leverkusen, Morsbroich Castle Museum
Lodz, Museum Sztuky
London, British Museum (graphic collection), Tate Gallery (graphic collection), Victoria & Albert Museum (graphic collection)
Mainz, ZDF - art collection
Magdeburg, Kunstmuseum Kloster Unser Lieben Frauen
Magdeburg, St. Johannis Church, artistically designed glazing of the 14 large Gothic windows (2014–2020)
Munich, Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, State Gallery of Modern Art (graphic collection), Dresdner Bank
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art (Graphic Collection), McCrory Corporation
Nuremberg, Germanic National Museum, Nuremberg Art Gallery
Oberhausen, Stadtische Galerie Schloss Oberhausen
Osnabrück, Felix Nussbaum House
Paris, National Library of France
Regensburg, Art Forum East German Gallery
Rostock, Rostock art gallery
Schleswig, Gottorf Castle Museum
Schwerin, State Museum
Seoul, South Korea, Korea University
St. Louis, St. Louis Art Museum, Saint Louis University Museum, Pulitzer Foundation
Stuttgart, State Gallery, IBM Collection, Daimler Art Collection
Szczecin, National Museum
Warsaw, National Museum (Graphic Collection)
Washington, Library of Congress (Graphic Collection)
Weimar, State Art Collections
Vienna, Albertina (graphic collection)
Wiesbaden, Wiesbaden Museum
Würzburg, Diocesan Museum
Literature
Francisco Tanzer, Max Uhlig: Zeichen und Zeilen. Poems and pictures. Rimbaud, Aachen 1999. ISBN3-89086-826-6
Renate Wiehager; Christian Gögger; Galerie Döbele GmbH, Dresden (Ed.): Max Uhlig: Aquarelle und farbige Zeichnungen aus drei Jahrzehnten. Sandstein Verlag, Dresden 2011, ISBN978-3-942422-47-5
Agnes Matthias; Bernhard Maaz; Kupferstich-Kabinett, Dresden (ed.): Max Uhlig. Druck. Sandstein Verlag, Dresden 2012, ISBN978-3-95498-006-2
Annegret Laabs (ed.): Max Uhlig. Die Fenster der Johanniskirche/The Windows of the St. Johannis Church, Hirmer Verlag, Munich 2020, ISBN978-3-7774-3657-9
Exhibition catalogs
Max Uhlig - works on paper. Städtische Galerie Albstadt, February 4 to March 17, 1996. Albstadt 1996. ISBN3-923644-68-X
Max Uhlig - On Mont Ventoux. Pictures from southern France 1991 to 1993. Villa Merkel, Gallery of the City of Esslingen am Neckar, January 16–13. February 1994. Cantz, Ostfildern 1994. ISBN3-89322-609-5
Max Uhlig - paintings, watercolors, drawings, graphics, sketchbooks. Kupferstich-Kabinett, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, December 5, 1993–13. February 1994. Dresden 1993.
Lothar Lang: Max Uhlig, street scenes. Drawings 1984–1987. Exhibition from April 7 to June 17, 1990. State Museum Schloss Burgk, Neue Galerie. Burgk (Saale) 1990. ISBN3-86103-011-X
Max Uhlig (* 1937), Mensch und Landschaft, January 17 to March 17, 2013, Käthe Kollwitz Museum Cologne