Feature · Lot P-107
Klagemauer Der Juden
Wailing Wall of the Jews

Klagemauer Der Juden, "Wailing Wall of the Jews"
Painted in the early 1890s during Perlberg's Holy Land travels, Klagemauer Der Juden depicts worshippers gathered at the Western Wall in Jerusalem under a clear Levantine light. The composition gives the wall full architectural weight while individuating the figures at prayer; the palette is dry, ochre and limestone, with cooler shadows in the recessed courses of stone. The work belongs to a small body of late nineteenth-century European treatments of the site executed by artists who travelled to Jerusalem rather than working from photographs, and it is one of the larger surviving canvases of the subject from the period.
Friedrich Perlberg (1848–1921) was a German Orientalist painter trained in Munich, known for finely observed studies of Jerusalem, the Sinai, and Egypt drawn from extensive travels in the Holy Land in the 1890s.
Klagemauer Der Juden by Friedrich Perlberg (1848–1921) is an oil on canvas, 31 × 45 inches, painted between 1890 and 1895. The work depicts the Wailing Wall — the Western Wall of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem — and is held in a private collection under inventory number P-107.
Friedrich Perlberg
Friedrich Perlberg was born in Nuremberg in 1848 and trained at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Munich, where he later worked as an illustrator and painter. He travelled repeatedly to the eastern Mediterranean during the 1890s, producing watercolours and oils of Jerusalem, the Dead Sea, the Sinai Peninsula, and Egypt that were exhibited and reproduced widely in German and Austrian publications of the period. His work belongs to the late nineteenth-century Orientalist tradition that combined documentary precision with an atmospheric, often devotional sensitivity to sacred sites. Perlberg died in Munich in 1921.