The need for self-representation among Germany’s self-made
entrepreneurs resulted in many commissions for depictions of factories,
factory work, and factory owners’ villas. For example, Albert Borsig
commissioned a cycle of large canvases,
The History of a Locomotive, from
Paul Meyerheim to adorn his country house. This painting by Adolph
Menzel (1815–1905)—his most famous—resulted from no such commission,
however. It was originally purchased in stages (as work on the painting
progressed) by the banker Adolph von Liebermann, who ran into financial
difficulties soon after the finished work was delivered to him in early
1875. By October of the same year, Liebermann was forced to sell it to
the director of the National Gallery, Max Jordan (receiving 30,000
Thaler for a work that had cost him 11,000).
A number of features found in traditional compositions and in
Menzel’s other large canvases can be seen here: note, for example, the
painting’s triptych-like structure. With the painting divided roughly
into thirds, Menzel was able to depict various stages in the men’s
workday. The middle “panel” shows numerous men toiling with glowing,
molten metal; to the left, various other workmen wash up at the end of
their shift; to the right, some others eat bread that has been brought
to them by a young girl. Menzel’s characteristic ordering of space is
achieved by the strong diagonal that runs from the girl in the
lower-right corner, through the fire and huge flywheel, and backward
into the deepest recesses of the factory. Various elements reinforce
this trajectory, including the play of light, as well as the curve of
the worker’s arm (in the approximate center of the canvas), which echoes
and underscores the shape of the flywheel.
Although this painting conveys a true-to-life impression of smoke,
sweat, heat, and backbreaking labor, it was first conceived in Menzel’s
mind: first, as a way to progress beyond the genre of historical realism
that had produced, for example, so many depictions of Frederick the
Great and the coronation of King Wilhelm I (1861), and, second, to
satisfy Menzel’s own curiosity about how to best depict the new Germany,
where the rise of manufacturing had introduced both huge factory works
and complex industrial organization, as well as an ever-growing demand
for the grinding human labor required to keep these machines and systems
running. To research his subject, Menzel traveled to the state-owned
Königshütte Rail Works in his native province of Silesia in the late
summer of 1872. He visited a foundry noted both for its sophisticated
machinery and, just as important, for its emerging social tensions (note
the figure of the factory inspector, who is profiled against the glow of
a furnace in the painting’s middle ground [left]). Menzel read the
engineering literature of the day, sketched unfamiliar tools, and
studied the motions of workers who moved in harmony with giant machines.
He also visited the Borsig Metalworks in the Berlin suburb of
Moabit.
What, then, do we observe here? In 1879, Menzel explained to Max
Jordan that he had depicted the production of a length of rail through
its many stages: from a white-hot “puddle ball” (left), through a series
of rollers (center), and then on to the three figures at the right who
wait to receive it, whereupon they will begin to shape it into a rail.
The scale of the actual Königshütte enterprise depicted in Menzel’s
painting was nothing short of remarkable. Three thousand workers were
employed in seven principal furnaces, 71 puddling furnaces, and 33
smelting furnaces. Together with 4 Bessemer converters, these units
produced 55,000 tons of raw iron, 43,000 tons of iron bars and rails,
750 tons of raw zinc, and 10,000 tons of steel for the railways in a
typical year.