Transcript Vienna
Friday, 08 April 2016
A city of genius – Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert –
Vienna despises talent whilst alive and honours it after
death.
Romanticism. Beethoven leads the way.
Schubert follows.
Authority unsettled by the rise in private performance
and respect for the individual.
An autocratic imperial power must face the rise in
popular opinion and culture.
A decade or so after the French revolution – authority
feels threatened.
Emperor rules Austro-Hungarian Empire and sits at
the top of a plutocratic power pyramid.
Taste is generally conservative and non-innovative.
All things new or “foreign” are discouraged.
City lapses into comfortable mediocrity…
The music of social gatherings.
Intimacy is allowed in strictly regulated conditions.
The soundtrack is that of the Strauss family, seen today
as embodying Viennese culture as the 19th century
develops.
Vienna is bloated, living in the past and decaying.
Young artists are inspired by what they see and by the
rise of Freudian analysis to challenge the authority of
the state-run art schools and galleries.
They found a new movement in Café Sperl (Hitler’s
favourite coffee house, by the way).
The Secession, or
“break-away” is
born.
KLIMT is among
the more
prominent artists
involved.
“We desire not art enslaved to foreigners, but at the
same time without fear or hatred of the foreign”.
Meaning?
“To every age its art. To art its freedom.” (secesion
motto)
In this deeply anti-Semitic city, it was possible for one
authority figure to declare: “Science is what one Jew
copies from another”.
The new arts movement (JUGENDSTIL) numbered
many Jews amongst its members. Hostility was
evident within “nice” society.
The hostility between Alt-Wien and the modernists
forced a break.
Freud, Klimt, Mahler are all treated poorly. Klimt as a
pornographer and Mahler, although working as
director of the Staatsoper, hounded from office by the
wealthy and powerful.
Women still wore fashions dictated by men: wasp
waists, large busts, collar to toe coverings. Klimt and
Freud began to remove the outer layers and show the
sexuality that lurked beneath.
Fatalism and a fascination with death are evident in
much of the poetry and music of the time.
Kidertotenlieder – Mahler sets songs that would
presage the deaths of his own children.
A building was designed by Otto Wagner to hold the
Secession exhibitions:
At odds with the Baroque buildings around it, this was
an immediate statement of intent.
!4th exhibition was the most famous. Devoted to
Beethoven it featured the Beethoven Frieze of Klimt…
The movement begins to fragment and the artists
begin to go their separate ways.
Music takes over…
A new language for a new time.
Fibonacci based Western music is altered to achieve a
new language.
12 note strings…
I’ll explain briefly.
Schoenberg, Webern, Berg.
Hated by society, helped by Mahler.
Art survives and is enriched by the debate…
Is this true of all areas of knowledge? Why?
Busy girl, Alma:
Zemlinksy (composer)
Klimt
Gropius (architect and artist)
Kokoschka
Werfel
All in addition to Gustav Mahler, probably the greatest
musician of his day.
Leading figure of
Secession
Sensual
Visionary
Forced to withdraw
certain paintings which
caused too great an
offence: University
pictures
Director Staatoper
Renowned composer
Fatalistic outlook on life.
Jewish
Took music to the edge of the new ideas.
Supported Schoenberg and others.
Died 1911 after “exile” in New York.
Had affair with Alma after Mahler’s death (unlike
Gropius who didn’t wait).
“Consciousness is the source of all things and ideas,
it is a sea with visions as its only horizons.
Consciousness is a tomb for all things, where they
cease to be, the hereafter in which they perish.”
?
Composer supported by Alma.
Wrote in 12 note style.
Violin concerto dedicated to dead child of Alma and
Gropius.
Works embody the fatalistic death obsession of
Viennese art at this time:
Wozzeck
Lulu
Misfit poverty stricken
Prostitute has a variety of
soldier abused by
authority figures
Wife unfaithful –seeking
glamour
Murders her
Commits suicide
clients
Expounds theory of life
and death
Meets Jack the Ripper.
…
The city of Schmaltz and whipped cream.
Strauss waltzes and carriage rides around the Ring for
the wealthy.
In reality a hotbed of innovation and the centre of
artistic change for the twentieth century.
Bigoted, deceitful, charming, beautiful, imaginative,
inspirational…