Showing posts with label German Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label German Art. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Art Eyewitness Review: Celebrating Caspar David Friedrich, 250th Anniversary

 

Caspar David Friedrich: the Soul of Nature

                           Metropolitan Museum of Art                               

 February 8 - May 11, 2025


Caspar David Friedrich: Art for a New Age

Thames & Hudson/496 pages/$65


Reviewed by Ed Voves

Fate is unfair. Good intentions and noble aspirations seem to count for little in the march of time and the unfolding of events. 
The life of the great German painter, Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840) is a prime example of this undeniable fact.

For much of his life, and nearly a century afterward, Caspar David Friedrich's reputation languished in undeserved obscurity. This was true even in his native land. In the world beyond Germany, he was virtually unknown. Recently, Friedrich has gained some visual recognition in the English-speaking nations, based on one, frequently reproduced, painting.

                                                         

Caspar David Friedrich, Wanderer above a Sea of Fog, 1818

A major retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and an equally impressive book published by Thames & Hudson, Caspar David Friedrich: Art for a New Age, may finally succeed in establishing the German "mystic with a paintbrush" where he belongs - in the first rank of great 19th century artists.

The phrase "may finally succeed" needs to be emphasized. As the Thames & Hudson book relates, Friedrich and his Wanderer above a Sea of Fog are currently being used to promote awareness of humanity's domination over the natural environment. Wanderer above a Sea of Fog has become the "poster boy" for concern over the Anthropocene.



Elina Brotherus, Der Wanderer 2, 2004

Some of the contemporary uses of Wanderer testify to sincere concern over our man-made environment, like the image above. Others are notably derivative and self-righteous. None really expresses the core beliefs of Friedrich, who was the last great Christian artist of Europe before secularism drove religion to the margins of cultural discourse.

Let’s hope that The Met exhibition and the Thames & Hudson book will open people's eyes to the true Caspar David Friedrich. It won't be an easy task. Every time that Friedrich seems to be gaining the recognition he deserves, Fate is waiting in ambush.

The first turning point in reviving Friedrich’s fortunes was a well-received exhibition in 1906. Later, in the aftermath of World War I, Friedrich’s haunting landscapes and brooding Rückenfiguren (human figures seen from behind) struck an emotional chord. After decades in the shadows, Friedrich began to attract widespread popularity in Germany.

Then the malevolent hand of Fate struck again. A catastrophic museum fire in Munich in 1931 destroyed a number of Friedrich’s greatest paintings.Two years later, a change in Germany’s government brought an admirer of Friedrich’s work to a position of unparalleled power. And that was the cruelest misfortune of all.

“I am an artist and not a politician,” Adolf Hitler told a British diplomat. Der Fuhrer felt that Caspar David Friedrich was a kindred soul.

Hitler and his Nazi henchmen placed Friedrich high in the pantheon of noble Germanic heroes. One of Friedrich’s signature works, Two Men Contemplating the Moon, of which he painted three versions, was embraced by the Nazis as emblematic of the Nordic “culture” of the Third Reich. 



Caspar David Friedrich, Two Men Contemplating the Moon, 1825-30

In 2001,The Met purchased the last of these three paintings made notorious by Nazi adulation. The Met's Two Men Contemplating the Moon is one of the very few paintings by Friedrich in a collection outside Germany.

Though he had died nearly a century before Hitler came to power, Caspar David Friedrich was tarred by the brush of Nazi propaganda. It took a long time for Friedrich's Nazi "past" to be forgiven. Germany's leading post-war artist, Anselm Kiefer, underscored Friedrich's guilt by association, posing as the "wanderer above a sea of fog" with his arm raised in the Sieg Heil salute.

As we said, Fate is unfair.

Last year marked the 250th anniversary of Friedrich’s birth. Museums in Germany  honored the now-rehabilitated artist with a number of special exhibitions over the course of 2024. The Metropolitan Museum of Art took advantage of the closing of these German tributes to mount a celebratory exhibit of its own, February 8 through May 11. The Met curators brought an impressive selection of Friedrich's works to New York, the greatest ever exhibition to be mounted in the U.S.



Ed Voves, Photo (2025)
 Alison Hokanson and Joanna Sheers Seidenstein,
Curators of Caspar David Friedrich: the Soul of Nature 

Caspar David Friedrich: the Soul of Nature is vast and thorough-going. Over 75 paintings, finished drawings, preparatory sketches by Friedrich and prints made from his works are featured. Several paintings by Romantic-era artists like Carl Gustav Carus and Johan Christian Dahl, both of whom were much influenced by Friedrich, are also on view. 



Ed Voves, Photo (2025)
 Gallery view of the Caspar David Friedrich exhibit at The Met 

The Met's Caspar David Friedrich: the Soul of Nature places the great German painter directly in the culture of his time. The two key, motivating ideals of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were "romanticism" and the "sublime." The popular understanding of both terms has shifted over time, with the loss of important elements of meaning as comprehended by Friedrich.



Ed Voves, Photo (2025)
 Caspar David Friedrich's Ruins at Oybin,1812

It is vital to our understanding of Friedrich's work to let him explain his own approach to visual expression. The most famous of his quotes on art takes on the character of a manifesto.



Georg Friedrich Kersting,
Caspar David Friedrich in His Studio, 1811

 "The painter shall not paint what he sees in front of him", Friedrich declared, "but what he sees inside himself … The artist’s emotion is his law."

This intuitive grasp of the world around - and within - him was not an exclusive hallmark of Friedrich's art. Other artists in his era, the age of revolutions, French and Industrial, were also aiming to create spiritual and emotional foundations for their work.

The greatest cultural figure of Friedrich's age was certainly interested in addressing the ways that Stimmung or mood affects human creativity. Johan Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), the Sage of Weimar, made much of human emotions in his renowned literary works, the Sorrows of Young Werther and Faust

Goethe was also a man dedicated to rigorous scientific study. He had earlier addressed Friedrich's "the artist’s emotion is his law" by formulating the concept of Manner. In Goethe's view, "manner" in art was the creation of a visual language based on a connection between the human soul and the painted or printed image.



Ed Voves, Photo (2025)
 Caspar David Friedrich's Cross in the Forest, 1812

Friedrich was certainly capable of painting works which exemplified the connection of soul and image. His Cross in the Forest (1812) is an appealing, beautifully composed  painting which unites symbolism and naturalism. An icon of radiant spirituality invites and awaits our response, which, when given, will hopefully contribute to a shared purpose of life and faith.

A careful study of the respective pronouncements of Friedrich and Goethe is less reassuring. Instead of mutual convictions, a lurking chasm exists between the undiluted subjectivity of Friedrich and the more focused integration of spirit and form espoused by Goethe.

This difference in interpretation would eventually lead to misunderstanding and recrimination between Goethe and Friedrich - and tragic consequences for the latter.



Johan Wolfgang von Goethe, portrait by Joseph Karl Steiler (1828);
 Caspar David Friedrich, portrait by Gerhard von Kugelgen (1808)

Initially, Friedrich seemed destined to be a Goethe protege, on the fast track to success as one of the principal painters of Germany. Goethe, whom Thomas Carlyle would later call "the greatest genius that has lived for a century, and the greatest man that has lived for three", was a patron worth cultivating. 

In 1805, Goethe sponsored an art festival at which Friedrich won a major award. Following this heady start to their relationship, Goethe began recommending Friedrich's paintings to the court of the Duchy of Weimar for inclusion in the ducal art collection. Friedrich regularly sent new works to Goethe for his comments and approval.

In 1810, Goethe visited Friedrich's studio in Dresden, a magnificent tribute to a rising artist. Goethe praised the works in progress in his diary. "Wondrous landscapes," he wrote.

A few years later, Goethe's regard for Friedrich had radically changed. He could barely look at a Friedrich landscape. In a fit of rage, Goethe declared “one ought to break Friedrich’s pictures over the edge of a table. Such things must be prevented.”

What had occurred to trigger this outburst?

An incident in 1816 illustrates the growing rancor between Goethe and Friedrich. It is unlikely that this dispute was the sole or primary cause of estrangement between the two men. But it certainly points to fundamental differences in the world views of the Sage of Weimar and the "mystic with a paintbrush."

To complement his research in meteorology, Goethe asked Friedrich to create several cloud studies. This was a subject of much importance to scholars and artists of the day, including John Constable in England.

Incredibly, Friedrich refused Goethe's request. To him the heavens were a celestial realm where one should seek manifestations of divine purpose rather than scientific data.

Friedrich certainly could have accurately depicted the various types of clouds. He proved that, later, in a stunning 1824 oil sketch. Entitled Evening, this oil study is, in the words of the German art scholar, Markus Bertsch, "full of characteristic cloud formations that seem pink due to the blaze of the red sunset. These are cirrus clouds, which consist of fine ice crystals and are only found at great heights."




Caspar David Friedrich, Evening, 1824

Friedrich may have decided to reject Goethe's commission to do cloud studies because he had been criticized early in his career for using a secular medium, landscape painting, to express religious convictions. In fact, he had been condemned for sacrilege! Yet, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that Friedrich made a huge error in not honoring Goethe's request. 

This mistake was much more serious than failing to keep his patron happy. In asking Friedrich to make cloud studies, Goethe was paying him an exceptional compliment for his skill in drawing. This is one of the revelations of The Met's exhibition, which presents an impressive array of Friedrich's drawings and prints. 



 Caspar David Friedrich's
 Rock Archway in the Utterwalder Grund (1803)

Friedrich was a draughtsman of the first rank. Not only did he make superb finished drawings of "sublime" geological landmarks like the Rock Archway in the Utterwalder Grund, but his meticulous nature studies were the most accomplished by a German artist since Albrecht Dürer. 

Many of Friedrich's sketches in The Met exhibit do not reproduce well in a blog like Art Eyewitness. But I found one, dating to 1806, on the website of the Dresden art musuem  which proves that a comparison with Dürer is not exaggerated praise.



Caspar David Friedrich, Pflanzenstudie, 1806

Nature studies like Pflanzenstudie showed that Friedrich could paint what was in front of him. To Goethe this was an important ability for which there was pressing need. Goethe sought to revive European civilization after the horror of the Napoleonic wars. He aimed  to encourage both the arts and scientific inquiry, thereby promoting a consensus to bridge the growing split between what we now call the "two cultures" from the title of C.P. Snow's celebrated 1959 essay.

Friedrich's skill set marked him as the perfect comrade for Goethe in nurturing a new Renaissance. Instead, he withdrew into an interior world of his own until he was dubbed "the most solitary of the solitary."

Friedrich's "wanderer above a sea of fog" is an exalted figure. This most famous of Friedrich's images is also among his most unusual. Rather than standing transcendent on a mountain peak, the characteristic Friedrich protagonist is a lonely, searching figure, staggering under burdens of doubt, fear and loneliness. 

The Monk Beside the Sea (1808-10), The Chasseur in the Forest (1813-14) and A Walk at Dusk (1830-35): these are signature Friedrich figures.



Caspar David Friedrich, Monk by the Sea, 1808-10

Caspar David Friedrich, The Chasseur in the Forest (detail), 1813-14


Caspar David Friedrich, A Walk at Dusk, ca. 1830-35

These images of solitary searchers are each, in their way, alter egos for Friedrich.  What motivated Friedrich the "soul searcher" to paint the haunted, mystical masterpieces which we are finally - hopefully - appreciating as such?

To be brief, Friedrich's life was shadowed by the death of his mother while he was a very young child and the especially traumatic death of one of his brothers. These early confrontations with death were later replicated in the experience of Edvard Munch, whose life and art closely resembled that of Friedrich.

Additionally, Friedrich lived throughout the long, bloody ordeal of the Napoleonic Wars and the political repression which followed. The same was true of Francisco Goya in Spain.

Friedrich, Munch and Goya all painted disturbing, symbolical works of art which reflected the turmoil of their lives and times. But of the three, only Friedrich can be said to have been a religious painter. 

Spirituality, mysticism, the divine presence in nature, these were Friedrich's prevailing themes. And it is upon his handling of them that he needs to be judged. 

Following his break with Goethe, Friedrich continued to paint masterful landscapes with religious overtones. These paintings, survivors of the 1931 fire and Allied bombing raids during World War II, are now treasures of Germany's art museums. During the 1820's and early 1830's, however, public taste in art experienced a major shift in Germany. Potential buyers became increasingly unresponsive to Friedrich's works. His sales plummeted and he and his family experienced dire hardship.

In 1835, Friedrich suffered a stroke which left him partially debilitated, unable to paint except with water color and sepia. Fortunately, the year before he had painted what amounts to a valedictory work. Though it reprises elements from earlier works, The Stages of Life is, by my reckoning, Friedrich's supreme masterpiece and one of the great, life-affirming works of art of all time.



Ed Voves, Photo (2025)
 Caspar David Friedrich's The Stages of Life, ca. 1834

Five figures occupy the foreground. They are interpreted (from left) as Friedrich as a sage or elder figure, Friedrich's nephew, Karl Heinrich, Friedrich's two young children, Gustav and Agnes, and his wife or his older daughter, Emma.

The five sailing ships or schooners in the distances are at various points of their voyages. Some are outward bound; others, having completed their journeys, approach the coastline. The five vessels symbolically represent the five people in their respective "ages."

 


 Caspar David Friedrich's The Stages of Life (detail), ca. 1834

Stages of Life is open to interpretation - and has been viewed and analyzed in different ways. For one thing, the title was added much later, after Friedrich's death, and may not reflect his actual choice for a name.

Could the little Swedish flag held by the young children allude to the fact that the part Pomerania where Friedrich was born had remained under Swedish control from the 1600's until 1815? If so, this might give a nostalgic air to the painting. 

There is more reason to see a universal meaning to this wondrous dreamscape

But to which deep, abiding aspect of human life and destiny does Friedrich allude? Is this a painting about the transcience of life and the passing of control from one generation to the next? Or is it a deliberately unfathomable work of art, challenging us to consider the mystery of existence from what we see inside ourselves? 

 


Ed Voves, Photo (2025)
 Gallery view of the Caspar David Friedrich exhibit at The Met 

The correct explanation to these questions can best be found in Friedrich's "manifesto", quoted several times already. If the answer for the artist is what he or she sees "inside" themselves, so too for the art lover.

To search within is not a case of moral relevance where everything we decide is always and effortlessly correct. Reflection, soul-searching, listening for the voice of divinity in nature is a hard road, not an easy one.

This is the road which Caspar David Friedrich took in his art and in his life. And that is why we celebrate and honor his life and his art two and a half centuries after he was born.

***

Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved 

Introductory Image: Ed Voves, Photo (2025) Gallery view of the Caspar David Friedrich exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, showing Friedrich’s Wanderer above a Sea of Fog (1818)

Caspar David Friedrich, Wanderer above a Sea of Fog, 1818. Oil on canvas: 37 5/16 × 29 7/16 in. (94.8 × 74.8 cm). Hamburger Kunsthalle; Permanent loan from the Stiftung Hamburger Kunstsammlungen, acquired 1970. © SHK/ Hamburger Kunsthalle / bpk. Photo Elke Walford

Elina Brotherus, Der Wanderer 2, from the series “The New Painting”, 2004. Pigment ink from a digitized color negative: 105 x 128 cm (Artists Proof) Miettinen Collection, Berlin-Helsinki © Elina Brotherus / VG Bild Kunst, Bonn 2023

Caspar David Friedrich, Two Men Contemplating the Moon, 1824-30. Oil on canvas: 13 ¾ x 17 ¼ in. ( 34.0 x 43.8 cm) Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Alison Hokanson and Joanna Sheers-Seidenstein, Curators of the Caspar David Friedrich: the Soul of Nature exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Ed Voves, Photo (2025) Gallery view of the Caspar David Friedrich exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art,

Ed Voves, Photo (2025) Caspar David Friedrich’s Ruins of Oybin, 1812. Oil on canvas: 25 9/16 × 18 1/2 in. (65 × 47 cm) Hamburger Kunsthalle; permanent loan from Manfred Brockhaus

Georg Friedrich Kersting, Caspar David Friedrich in His Studio, 1811. Oil on canvas: 21 ¼ × 16 9/16 in. (54 × 42 cm) Hamburger Kunsthalle

Ed Voves, Photo (2025) Caspar David Friedrich’s Cross in the Forest, 1812. Oil on canvas: 16 5/8 × 12 13/16 in. (42.2 × 32.6 cm) Staatsgalerie Stuttgart

Johan Wolfgang von Goethe, portrait by Joseph Karl Steiler (1828) Neue Pinkothek collection; Caspar David Friedrich, portrait by Gerhard von Kugelgen (1808) Hamburger Kunsthalle collection. Photo files from Internet Creative Commons.

Caspar David Friedrich, Evening, 1824. Oil sketch on cardboard: 20 x 27.5 cm. Kunsthalle Mannheim. © Foto / Kunsthalle Mannheim / Cem Yucetas

 Ed Voves, Photo (2025) Caspar David Friedrich’s Rock Archway in the Utterwalder Grund, 1803. Brown ink and wash over pencil on wove paper: 27 13/16 × 19 11/16 in. (70.6 × 50 cm) Museum Folkwang, Essen

Caspar David Friedrich, Pflanzenstudie, 1806. Lead pencil drawing: 158 x 135 mm. Kupferstich-Kabinett. Staatliche Kuntsammlungen Dresden

Caspar David Friedrich, Monk by the Sea, 1808-10. Oil on canvas: 43 5/16 × 67 1/2 in. (110 × 171.5 cm) Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Ed Voves, Photo (2025) Caspar David Friedrich’s The Chasseur in the Forest (detail), 1813-14.Oil on canvas: 25 13/16 × 18 3/16 in. (65.5 × 46.2 cm) Private collection

Caspar David Friedrich, A Walk at Dusk, ca. 1830-35.  Oil on canvas: 13 1/4 × 17 in. (33.7 × 43.2 cm) The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Ed Voves, Photo (2025) Caspar David Friedrich's The Stages of Life, ca. 1834. Oil on canvas: 28 3/4 × 37 in. (73 × 94 cm) Museum der Bildenden Künste, Leipzig

 

 

 

 


Sunday, January 22, 2023

Art Eyewitness Review: The Ronald S. Lauder Collection at the Neue Galerie

 

The Ronald S. Lauder Collection

The Neue Galerie, New York City

November 11, 2022 - March 20, 2023

Reviewed by Ed Voves

November 11, 2001 was not a particularly favorable moment to open a new art museum in New York City. Exactly one month before, terrorist attacks had destroyed the World Trade Center, the death toll eventually being reckoned at 2,753. Over two hundred more were killed in related acts of 9/11 terrorism. New York City, America and the civilized world were stunned.

Despite the shock, Ronald Lauder went ahead with opening the doors to his splendid museum, located at 1048 Fifth Avenue, at 86th Street. The Neue Galerie, named for a famous German art gallery from the 1920’s had been conceived nearly thirty years before to showcase art from one of the most glittering, yet controversial, eras in modern history, the art of Germany and Austria, 1890-1940. 



View of the Neue Galerie entrance. 
Photo: courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

When it opened in the autumn of 2001, the Neue Galerie achieved that goal and more. It quickly became a beacon of culture, an affirmation of civilization in a time of cruelty and horror.

Twenty-plus years later – the Neue Galerie remains so.

The Neue Galerie is currently hosting a special exhibition to celebrate its first two decades. The exhibit is not so much a look back, but rather surveys Ronald Lauder’s devotion to art and humanity, sixty-five years of collecting works of art from an impressive range of genres and historical eras. 

On view in The Ronald S. Lauder Collection are Greek and Roman portrait busts, works of medieval devotional art, gold-ground paintings from the early Renaissance in Italy, spectacular examples of knightly armor from the 1400's-1500's and, of course, Austrian and German art from that all-too-brief flowering of genius and creativity in the half-century before World War II.

The Ronald S. Lauder Collection, on view until March 20, 2023, might seem a slight departure from the thematic range of many of the nearly fifty special exhibitions which the museum curators at the Neue Galerie have mounted since March 2003. The premier exhibit examined the hard-hitting realism of German art during the 1920's, Christian Schad and the Neue Sachlicheit. 

Since then, Neue Galerie curators have addressed many provocative issues, such as the self-portraits created by German and Austrian artists during the run-up to World War II. Even with the 2018 exhibition of the paintings of Franz Marc and August Macke, one of the most beautiful art shows I have ever witnessed, the staff curators at the Neue Galerie have never flinched, never dodged serious, unsettling aspects of art.


German Weimar-era art from The Ronald S. Lauder Collection
  Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

One of the main galleries utilized for the present exhibition is devoted to the Neue Sachlicheit era, brilliant, brittle, sexually-charged. Aside from these often disturbing remains of Weimar Germany, this exhibit is a joy to behold. 



Entrance to The Ronald S. Lauder Collection at Neue Galerie New York Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

Beginning with its opening work of art, a wonderful late medieval tapestry, The Ronald S. Lauder Collection is a marvelous evocation of collecting, preserving and displaying cherished works of art.



Pasquier Grenier, Loggers Tapestry, 1460-1470

The galleries devoted to Ronald Lauder's collection of Renaissance-era armor and classical statuary are magnificent arrays of art, each piece a major work in its own right, and collectively part of a forthright assertion of the continuing importance of these masterpieces. The Neue Gallerie curators have displayed Lauder's treasures to brilliant effect, testifying that these time-honored pieces have lost none of their power.



Installation view of The Ronald S. Lauder Collection at Neue Galerie New York. Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

A skeptic visiting the Neue Galerie might take issue with including armor from the 1500's and ancient statues as being at odds with the impact of the Neue Galerie exhibits in the years since 2003. Might the display of gleaming Renaissance armor and the marble faces of Roman emperors be somewhat out-of-place (or out-of-date) in a museum noted for thoughtful examinations of the Nazi campaign against Modernism or insightful surveys of the sensual art of Egon Schiele? 



Egon Schiele, Triple Self-Portrait, 1913

The answer to any such fault-finding speculation is an emphatic no.

Each of the works of art on view in The Ronald S. Lauder Collection testifies to astute, judicious standards of selection. Each can provide serious matter for reflection, if we are willing to make the effort.

After considering this splendid collection as an integrated assemblage, I feel that that there is a common theme which links the interests of Ronald Lauder to the important issues which the Neue Galerie has explored in the years since its founding. This unifying theme is nothing less than the constant threat of disintegration and collapse facing Civilization and the resilience of artists and patrons when human society confronts a perilous future.

The great era of Austrian and German art, 1890-1940, was such an time.  Gustav Klimt, Kolomon Moser and other Neue Galerie luminaries lived in an age fraught with political and social tension, psychological anxiety and challenges to cultural norms whose roots stretched back to the Middle Ages. 


Carl Moll, White Interior, 1905

We marvel, for instance,  at the exquisite silver Coffee Service designed by Josef Hoffman and created by the Weiner Werkstatte in 1907-1908, or the goulash plates Hoffman designed for the Cafe Fledermaus. Looking at these gleaming objects or at Carl Moll's 1905 painting, White Interior, it is hard to conceive of this period of history as anything but a blissful time of  gemütlichkeit

And yet...

These were years lived in the shadow of the 1898 assassination of the Empress Elizabeth. These were years when the drumbeat of war would result in a needless, futile conflict which led to the total destruction of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. And finally, these years climaxed in the 1918 pandemic, the misnamed Spanish influenza, which killed thousands in Vienna including Egon Schiele and his pregnant wife.


Austrian gallery from The Ronald S. Lauder Collection
  Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

The contrast between such grim historical realities and artistic beauty is especially marked in the gallery devoted to Austrian artists and designers like Klimt and Hoffman. But if we look closely at the faces of the Greek and Roman leaders displayed in the room devoted to ancient art, we will find traces of anxiety and ironic feeling not far different from what we see in the modern German and Austrian portraits painted by Klimt, Schiele, Oskar Kokoschka, Otto Dix, George Grosz and Christian Schad. 

A brief look at the identity of just a few of the ancient "faces" in the Lauder collection will dispel any temptation to place them in some Olympian "hall of fame." 



Ancient portrait busts from The Ronald S. Lauder Collection
  Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

The top, left-hand, bust is that of Julius Caesar, struck-down by his colleagues in the Roman Senate. Next to Caesar is Alexander the Great, whom a number of historians conclude was likely poisoned by his generals. Who the tousled-hair individual on Alexander's left is not known, but his fearful expression hardly equates with any sense of ancient serenity. Appearing below this trio is Livia Drusilla, the "poisonous" empress well-known to readers of I, Claudius by Robert Graves. Next to Livia is Trajan Decius, the first Roman emperor killed in battle, when a wave of Germanic marauders breached Rome's frontier defenses in the year 251.

Did Ronald Lauder and the curators at the Neue Galerie organize this display of ancient portraits to make a statement on the fragility of political power or the fickleness of fate? Most-likely not, but the accompanying wall text shows a great awareness of two of the major features of classical sculpture, namely the constant probing of the human psyche and experimentation in depicting bodily movement and facial expression by ancient artists. 

The urge to escape the static sensibility of pre-Classical art, in order to better convey reality through the rendering of the human figure, gave impetus to experimentation. This resulted in the visual play that focused on the contrast between taut and relaxed forms and between balance and static equilibrium. The search for movement on the basis of observation resulted in the development of a new canon for the representation of the body.

This dynamism in charting the way that the human body looks and moves, as well as the powerful emotional forces at work beneath the skin, unite these ancient portraits with those of later eras. 



Monumental Head of a Goddess, mid-second century BCE

It is no coincidence that we are able to study the Hellenistic Greek masterpiece, Monumental Head of a Goddess in the same exhibition as Gustav Klimt's Adele Bloch-Bauer I, 1907, the "goddess" of the Neue Galerie collection. 




Gustav Klimt, Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I, 1907

Between these ancient and modern depictions of human face and form, there was the thousand-year medieval era. These were the Dark Ages to scholars and art lovers of a certain cast of mind, an Age of Faith to others. What we can say is that around the time that the Emperor Justinian I ordered the closing of the Platonic Academy in the year 529, the conventions of art shifted almost exclusively to other-worldly, religious themes. 

Since the Neue Galerie collection and special exhibitions concentrate on German and Austrian art, 1890-1940, religious art is rather conspicuous by its absence at the museum. One could hardly expect otherwise, as one of the major thinkers of that era had declared that God was dead!

It comes as no small surprise that The Ronald S. Lauder Collection exhibition is graced by a magnificent display of treasures from the Middle Ages, the early Renaissance and the Baroque period in Italy. All three historical eras were notable for the religious sentiment of artists, scholars and the general populace. Almost all of the works displayed are devotional objects with the exception of a chess piece from the famous Lewis Hoard, discovered in Scotland, but most likely made in Norway, ca. 1200.



       Early Renaissance paintings from The Ronald S. Lauder Collection          Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

The range of art works in this stunning, golden-hued gallery include two sculpture fragments from the Romanesque period, Head of an Apostle, from Thérouanne in northeast France, ca. 1235, and Torso of Christ Crucified, Southern French, ca. 1140. There is also a striking bishop's staff or Crozier, carved from ivory, accented in paint and gold. The crozier, made in Tuscany, dates to the mid-1300's. 

When the bishop's crozier was first gripped in hand, a symbol of high clerical status, the religious doctrines and social concepts of Christendom were beginning to shift to a more "this-worldly" stance. This occurred initially in Italy. We can observe this trend in the striking array of gold-ground paintings, mounted to splendid effect on a simulated stone wall. 

Here we see small devotional scenes, mounted on backgrounds covered with delicate layers of gold leaf, as in Byzantine icons. Many of these works come from predella panels, series of episodes from the life of Christ or the Acts of the Apostles, painted at the base of altarpieces. 

These include paintings by artists whose pioneering contributions have been obscured by High Renaissance titans like Raphael and Michelangelo. Exceptional works are on view, like the small rondel depicting the Prophet Isaiah by Lorenzo Monaco, ca 1410-1415, and the powerful interpretation of the features of Saint Paul, attributed to Lippo Memmi, one of the masters of the distinctive style of painting in Sienna during the 1300's. 



Bernardo Daddi, Madonna and Child with Four Angels, 1348

My favorite among these gold-ground masterpieces is the panel painting by Bernardo Daddi showing the Virgin Mary holding the infant Jesus, adored by four angels. Daddi, who is believed to have been trained by the great Giotto, was one of the leading Florentine painters of the 1300's. Combining  elements of Giotto's physicality with the gracefulness of Sienese painting, this is a pivotal work in the shift from the medieval conception of art to that of the Renaissance.

The four angels are almost entirely based on the canons of christian imagery. The golden halos of the angels in the foreground obscure the heads and necks of the angels in the rear. There is hardly any differentiation in the faces of the angels. Even the color of the robes match, light-green in front, creamy front. The bodies of the Virgin Mary, likewise, hearken back to medieval ideals, including Byzantine art. But with Daddi's depiction of the faces of the Virgin and Child, an awesome leap forward to a new art form, both human and divine, has been made.

Look closely at the eyes of Mary and Jesus. They focus upon each other, knowingly and tenderly. This is the electrifying moment in the lives of each mother and baby when they both recognize each other. However, there is an added note, a hold-over from Christian iconography. In that the perceptive look of the Christ child dawns the first moment of awareness of his destiny, again both human and divine.

If one is looking to pinpoint the moment of transition from the art of the Middle Ages to that of the Renaissance, a good choice would be Daddi's Madonna and Child, created around 1348. This was in the midst of the Black Death. It was a horrible time to live, but just when such inspirational art is needed most. 

If Bernardo Daddi's Madonna and Child represents the shift from medieval art to the Renaissance, to compare this painting with Kurt Schwitters' Untitled, 1921, would seem to be totally inexplicable. No two works of art, the Italian "primitive" of 1348 and the post World War I Dada collage, could be further apart. Or maybe not.



Kurt Schwitters, Untitled, 1921

Daddi's Madonna and Child is a devotional work, painted with rare color pigments and backed with tooled gold leaf. Kurt Schwitters' Untitled is one of his "Merz" constructions or collages. Merz was a word initially related to bits of refuse, to be used wherever and whenever needed. For Schwitters that became all the time. His Merzbilden (Merz pictures) led in due course to Merz sculptures, Merz buildings and Merz poems. When Schwitters had to flee Nazi persecution, he took his Merz theory of art with him into exile, first to Norway and then to England where he died in 1948.

Schwitters, like Daddi, lived during difficult, seemingly apocalyptic, times. But he endured and so did the motivational spirit impelling him to create art. Merz is the art of survival and of connecting with others. 

When I look at the abstract composition of Schwitters' Untitled from 1921, I see geometric forms and blocks of color coming together in a mutual embrace, in a manner very much like Daddi's Madonna cradling the Infant Jesus in her arms, their faces tenderly touching.

Am I correct in this unorthodox compare/contrast? Yes or no, there are certainly unifying threads - ideas and ideals, aspirations and inspiration -which draw great works of art and great artists together. This bond of unity is discernible in all of Ronald Lauder's treasures on view at the Neue Galerie. One can only be grateful to him and to the curators and staff of the Neue Galerie, itself a work of art.

This is the appropriate moment to highlight the role of Serge Sabarsky in the Neue Galerie saga. A great art curator and an enthusiast for German and Austrian art, Sabarsky played a crucial role in planning the Neue Galerie, but sadly died before it opened.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) View of Cafe Sabarsky at the Neue Galerie

As a way to preserve Sabarsky's memory, the museum's restaurant is named in his honor. Cafe Sabarsky replicates a cafe from Old Vienna with light fixtures designed by Josef Hoffmann, furniture by Adolf Loos and upholstery from a 1912 Otto Wagner design. There are gleaming mirrors and a Bosendorfer grand piano which is used for cabaret, chamber and classical music performances. The menu serves outstanding Viennese cuisine and there is an endless supply of gemütlichkeit. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Apple strudel at Cafe Sabarsky

I have never traveled to Vienna, nor has my wife, Anne. It does not look like we will be going there any time soon. 

However, to paraphrase a line from the movie, Casablanca (of which Ronald Lauder is a great admirer): "We'll always have the Neue Galerie."

***

Text: Copyright of Ed Voves. Original Photos: Anne Lloyd, All rights reserved      

Introductory image: Ronald S. Lauder in his home, 2022. Photo: Shahar Azran. Image courtesy Neue Galerie New York

View of the Neue Galerie entrance. Photo: courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

German Weimar-era art from The Ronald S. Lauder Collection. Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

Entrance to The Ronald S. Lauder Collection exhibition. Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

Workshop of Pasquier Grenier (Flemish, 1447–1493), The Loggers Tapestry, ca.1460–70, unbleached and polychrome wool. Private Collection. Image courtesy Neue Galerie New York

Installation view of The Ronald S. Lauder Collection exhibition. Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

Egon Schiele (Austrian, 1890-1918), Triple Self-Portrait, 1913. Watercolor, gouache, and pencil on paper. Private Collection. Image courtesy Neue Galerie New York

Carl Moll (Austrian, 1861-1945) White Interior, 1905. Oil on Canvas. Private Collection. Image courtesy Neue Galerie New York

Monumental Head of a Goddess, Greek, Hellenistic, ca. mid-second century BCE. Marble. Private Collection. Image courtesy Neue Galerie. Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York. 

Gustav Klimt (Austrian, 1862–1918) Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I,
1907. Oil, gold, and silver on canvas. Neue Galerie New York. Acquired
through the generosity of Ronald S. Lauder, the heirs of the Estates of
Ferdinand and Adele Bloch-Bauer, and the Estée Lauder Fund

Early Renaissance paintings from The Ronald S. Lauder Collection exhibition. Photo: Hulya Kolabas, courtesy of Neue Galerie New York

Bernardo Daddi (Italian, Florence, active ca. 1312/20; died 1348),
Madonna and Child with Four Angels (Central predella panel from the
San Giorgio a Ruballa altarpiece), Florence, 1348, tempera and gold on
panel. Private Collection. Image courtesy Neue Galerie New York

Kurt Schwitters (German, 1887-1948) Untitled (Yours Treufrischer),1921. Oil, paper, metal, cotton, wool, and button nailed on board. Private Collection. Image courtesy Neue Galerie New York

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) View of Cafe Sabarsky at the Neue Galerie.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2022) Apple Strudel at Cafe Sabarsky.