| Max Haider | |
|---|---|
|  Group going fishing by Max Haider | |
| Born | 21 July 1807 Biederstein | 
| Died | 21 June 1873 (aged 65) | 
| Nationality | German | 
| Occupation | illustrator | 
Max Haider (21 July 1807 in Biederstein, Schwabing, Munich – 21 June 1873 in Munich) was a German huntsman, draughtsman, lithographer, cartoonist and illustrator.
He married Therese Fäßler (1811–1893), and was the father to landscape painter Karl Haider, and grandfather to painter Ernst Haider.[1]
Haider provided hunting illustrations for the Fliegende Blätter weekly magazine and the Münchener Bilderbogen bi-weekly broadsheet. These illustrations fitted the cultural programme of Maximilian II of Bavaria's belief in reviving regional and national art to awaken a Bavarian national identity, which countered those of his father Ludwig I.
Works by Haider are in the collection of the German Hunting and Fishing Museum in Munich.
Further reading
- Max Haider: Die Jagd, Braun und Schneider, Munich 1862
- Ebnet, Werner; Sie haben in München gelebt: Biografien aus acht Jahrhunderten (They lived in Munich: biographies from eight centuries) Allitera Verlag (20 July 2016) p. 244. ISBN 9783869067445
References
- ↑ "Artistic talent passed on", Münchner Merkur (Merkur.de), 28 February 2010. Retrieved 28 January 2022
External links
 Media related to Max Haider at Wikimedia Commons Media related to Max Haider at Wikimedia Commons
- Literature by and about Max Haider in the German National Library catalogue
- "Haider, Max" in Deutsche Biographie
- "Haider, Max", Consortium of European Research Libraries (cerl.org)
- "Haider, Max", Virtual International Authority File (VIAF ID: 39651441)
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