Tell your friends about this item:
The Giant Ohl and Tiny Tim
Christian Bärmann
The Giant Ohl and Tiny Tim
Christian Bärmann
Born in W?rzburg to a poor baker's family, he was trained at a young age to become a tailor because he was never successful at school. However, he rebelled against his family and went to Hamburg where he began working on ships and travelled to South America a few times. During his teenage years he returned to W?rzburg, where his mother encouraged him to become an architect. With his mother's help, he mustered enough money to attend a school for architecture and art in Munich. Once there, his instructors recognized his great talent for painting and illustration. By the beginning of the twentieth century he served as an apprentice for various painters in Munich and became known not only for his fairy-tale like paintings but also for realistic paintings of W?rzburg. He won many prizes for his early work including the Rome Prize, which enabled him to travel to Italy to study the great Italian painters and improve his techniques and understanding of art. He returned to Germany in 1910 and spent a good deal of his time studying animals and nature. He had a special fondness for illustrating frogs, rabbits, and insects. This was one of the reasons Waldemar B?nsels asked him to contribute 60 illustrations to his famous children's book, Die Biene Maja (Maja the Bee, 1912). B?rmann was greatly disturbed by World War I, and his paintings such as The Revolution (1914) and Der Brand (The Fire, 1914) reflect his concern about the violence in Europe. At the same time, he began to turn to sketching and painting scenes that would illustrate his books for children. B?rmann had a wry sense of humor that can be seen in a series of fairy tales he created from 1914 until his death in 1924: Die Kr?te Rockr?ck (The Frog R?ckkr?ck, 1918), Der Riese Ohl und das Hannesle (The Giant Ohl and Tiny Tim, 1918), and Die Honriche (The Flower Angels, 1923). B?rmann was greatly infatuated if not obsessed by giants and large creatures, who were kind and misunderstood. His compassion for these gigantic people and animals is evident in his paintings and illustrations. In the case of The Giant Ohl, it is clear that the good-natured giant is a friend of humans who have prejudices against strangers, especially when they seem to be enormous dangerous aliens. B?rmann was an unusual painter/storyteller. His texts and images reveal both his serious critique of social prejudice and also his jovial and optimistic perspective on how people might overcome aggressive behavior toward "freaks." Aside from his own work, B?rmann also produced illustrations for Eduard M?rike's fairy tale Das M?rchen vom sicherern Mann (The Fairy Tale about the Man with Confidence, 1907) and Gustav Meyrink's Golem (1915).
Media | Books Hardcover Book (Book with hard spine and cover) |
Released | August 5, 2019 |
ISBN13 | 9780578458496 |
Publishers | Tiny Mole and Honey Bear Press |
Pages | 88 |
Dimensions | 147 × 226 × 15 mm · 362 g |
Language | English |
More by Christian Bärmann
See all of Christian Bärmann ( e.g. CD , Hardcover Book and Audiobook (CD) )