The History of Art
GA 292
15 October 1917, Dornach
XI. Fourth and Fifth Post-Atlantean Epochs, Medieval Art in the Middle, West, and South of Europe
I think that it is good right now to become familiar with the most varied areas of life and the laws of existence which I have been referring to during these lectures. I want to say these laws of existence take on an importance in their realm of the spiritual life, an importance of being, which up to now has frequently not been taken into account in world opinion. Particularly in our present time it is imperative to totally understand the current 5th post-Atlantean epoch in which we stand, with all its peculiarities, in order for us to become ever more and more conscious of how affective we are within it. You know of course that we consider the beginning of the 5th post-Atlantean epoch beginning at the start of the 15th Century, from about 1413 onward. The beginning of the 15th Century was a significant, profound, incisive point for western humanity. The creation of such an about-turn which came about didn't happen all at once, it was preparatory. In the first moments of this epoch one only sees a gradual expansion. Old patterns from the earlier epochs transform into the new one and so on. Preparations were being made for a long time which were only really being experienced as a mighty reversal at the start of the 15th Century.
If we want to consider another strong western historical impact in the centre of the Middle Ages, we may look at the rule of Charlemagne from 768 to 814. If you wish to visualize everything which happened in the West to the furthest boundaries up to the time of Charlemagne, you will have difficulties with this self-visualization. For many observers of history today such difficulties do not exist because they all shear it under the same comb. Only for those who want to look at reality, will such deep differences exist. It becomes quite difficult for people in today's world of experiences and impressions to reach a concept about the completely different condition of life in Europe up to the time of Charlemagne and beyond. We may however say that after Charlemagne, in the 10th, 11th and 12th Centuries a time began in preparation of our own epoch, the 5th post-Atlantean epoch. Up to the time of Charlemagne old relationships actually flowed which in our present day, as we have already said, we can't have a true imagination. Then again preparations were beginning for a new epoch, and in these three centuries, the 10th, 11th and 12th—it started in the 9th already—events took place in Europe in all areas of life producing forces which were expressed later, particularly in the 15th century.
One can say these centuries just mentioned was a time for preparation but people today are hardly inclined to refer to this just as little as they will say Rome is in control of European affairs. The papacy in the time from the 9th century, before the middle of the 9th century where the ruling of Europe was so vigorously taken under control, where all relationships effectively extended, must not be imagined as the same effective papacy in a later century or even today. It can rather be said that in those times the papacy knew instinctively what the most important areas of life needed, in west, central or southern Europe. I already pointed out last time that the oriental culture was gradually pushed back; it had to wait in eastern Europe, in Byzantianism, in Russianness. There it waited indeed, waited right up to our present time.
General observations can develop particular clarity in those areas which, in the broadest sense, one can refer to as artistic. If you want an idea about what had been pushed back at the time to the East, what the west, central and southern Europe should not acquire, if you want to reach an understanding about it, then compare it with a Russian icon:
In the picture of the Virgin Mary of the East is an echo of what had been pushed back into the East at the time. In such a picture quite another spirit holds sway than can ever be found reigning in western, southern and central art; it is something quite different. Such an icon picture still today presents an image which has been born directly out of the spiritual world. If you imagine it in a lively manner you can't imagine a physical space behind the Russian Madonna image. You can imagine that behind the picture is the spiritual world and out of the spiritual world this image has appeared: just so are the lines, so is everything in it. When you take the basic character of this image as it is born out of the spiritual world then you have exactly that which had been held at a distance in the 9th Century from western, southern and central Europe:
Why? Such things should be thoroughly and objectively considered historically. Why did this have to be held back? Simply on the grounds that the nations of Europe—central, western and southern Europe—had completely different soul impulses which were not in the position to understand humanity out of original elementary nature, this was being pushed back, stopped in the East. The nature of the western European soul was quite differently focussed.
When this which was being pushed back to the East was transplanted into central, western and southern Europe, it could only remain external, outside the east of Europe; it could never grow together with the central, western or southern European soul distinctions. An area had to be created in western, southern and central Europe, an area for what gradually wanted to come out of the depths of the very folk soul itself.
I would like to say Rome, in actual fact, understood this with genial instinct. With disputes regarding dogmatism showing quite a different character, the content of dogma disputes is not the real story; the content of these disputes is merely the final spiritual expression. It goes much further. Among other things it was about what I have just been characterising for you. So we see that from the 9th Century and into the next centuries Rome worked ever more strongly for a space in Europe where the real striving of the folk souls could unfold. The striving of the folk souls also appeared in greater clarity.
You see, when you focus on what could have been brought to the fore if the eastern influence had not been pushed back but could stretch over Europe—Charlemagne made a large contribution - if it had stretched over Europe then Europe, as I've already mentioned, would have made available certain observations of representations which speak directly out of the spiritual world. This did not happen, firstly because Europe had to prepare itself for the materialistic 5th post-Atlantean period which was prepared most intensely in central Europe. Interest centred mainly on everything other than what came directly out of the spiritual world like line, form and colouring. Humanity was interested in something different. Above all there was an interest in Europe for contemporary events, for reporting and for results. By studying individuals, singled out in humanity, you realize they have positioned themselves in the course of historic, relatable events. The 10th, 11th, 12th Centuries can also be called the Germanic Roman Empire because from Rome the capacity was created, a capacity which spread for an interest in relating stories, an interest in the working of time and for conceptualising a particular form set in time.
You see, this is again a different viewpoint from the viewpoint I indicated in similar lectures in previous years. This cooperation of the central European empire with the Roman church and its spread is an inner image of the way the 5th post-Atlantic epoch prepared central Europe at the time. From this it is clear that central Europe prepared itself in this period with very little interest for spatial educational art. Constituted informative art became borrowed - just remember the presentation which I gave you in previous years—borrowed from what came over from the East, spread, one might say, through to the very joints of principal interest. What shot up out of the folklore itself was being told. The content which was to be told had to be taken out of national character, intimately connected with nationality.
You can encounter amazing images of central European life, life in the areas of the Rhine, the Donau and the northern coastline in the depiction of the songs of the Nibelungen, the Walthari and `Gudrun'. The manner and way in which these writings are presented indicate their obvious interest in events of the time. Look how in the time of Charles the Great when the poem `Heiland' originated, the stories of the Gospels are woven into the poem with central European characters, characters extracted from biblical events and placed directly into the central European interests of the `Heiland'. It had to be born out of the life of the European folk soul. Through this the eastern tradition, which cares little for the temporal and historical, was pushed back. For this reason, it was pushed back. If we observe how these concerns of the European nations rise from deep underground and reach the surface, then it is often only possible, and with difficulty, to really penetrate into the depth of feeling, into the deep soul experience which the European human spirit connected to in its own deepening encounter with the essential spiritual events. One might say, that which was pushed back to the East from spatial infinity and its manifestation out of space, which had to appear superficially in central Europe should reappear directly out of the human souls themselves, out of the depths of the soul, not out of the widths of space—but out of the depth of souls.
The mysterious prevailing of soul depths under the surface of direct observation was already something living at that time in human souls. During the centuries we've been talking about, people were instinctively permeated with the knowledge that their souls had in the depths of their being secret impulses, appearing only sometimes at celebratory moments in their soul experiences. Life seemed deeper than what the eyes could see, the ears could hear and so on; something unfathomable rose from soul depths as a profound experience. I could say we experience an echo of this kind of thing when we hear something as beautiful as the poetry of Walthers von der Vogelweide, who to some extend created an ending to a purely linguistic age, an age when the ability to depict formless manifestations in soul depths in a pictorial manner had not yet developed. In these soul depths we are stirred when we allow Walthers von der Vogelweide's small poem to work on us, where he speaks about his own life in retrospect. Maturing as a man when knowledge grew in his soul and light fell on his soul depths from which knowledge had previously appeared as mysterious waves in a dream, now appeared in a mood, he expressed as follows:
“Oh, whereto did all my years disappear!
I dreaming my life or is it real?
What appears for real, was it illusion's face?
I've slept so long and didn't even know it.
I've been woken and all is as unfamiliar
once was familiar, like my own hand.”
Thus speaks Walther von der Vogelweide at the end of the three long centuries, the 10, 11, 12th centuries, the epoch in which the Holy Roman Empire blossomed at the close of this time period. It was the period of time in which the interest for current events developed. Art demanded expression, images were to express events happening and going to happen in central, western and southern Europe. A glance to the East gives the impression of existence and peace, of a quiet contemplation out of the spiritual world. Events directly taking place here, born in the human soul, binding the soul with the greatest of all, the most mysterious, all this was eager to be represented in a pictorial manner. Fertilization from the South was needed anyway, where echoes of all the traditions having come from the East were still maintained. Bringing events to expression was the primary goal.
In this way striving in art was contained in the West, one might say, in two opposing streams, for certainly the representation of existence was pushed back East, but only pushed back—many things remained. Above all, something remained which can be observed in the East where strict rules determined the depiction of the icons, and old rules were being adhered to, where no violation was allowed through lines, expression, and so on. All this was transplanted into the West and alongside this was the requirement for everything experienced in the surroundings, united with traditions coming into central Europe from the South. Naturally depictions with this requirement firstly appeared in primitive, simplistic images according to biblical narratives, Bible stories. Only at the beginning of the next three centuries, the 13th, 14th and 15th did a power, one could call it, rise up out of Central Europe which could depict image-rich pictures. This power is thanks to specific facts; facts which during these centuries, the 13th, 14th and 15th, expanded and matured over the whole Central and Southern Europe as something one could call city domination, the blossoming of rural development. The cities, so proud at the time of their powerful autonomy, developed the particular powers of their folk in their midst. Such cities were not uniform, either as the old Germanic Roman Empire which was in decline, nor uniform as in the later state communities, because these cities were autonomous and could develop their individual strength according to the needs of the specific land, lifestyle and place. One doesn't understand the times of the 13th, 14th and 15th Centuries if one does not again and again glance at the blossoming of city freedom at the time.
Let us visualize this flowering of city freedom—by roughly taking the 11th to 15th centuries—and consider what this freedom in the cities discovered in relation to art impulses. Some traditions originating from Rome remained. The main issue had been pushed to the East; yet some traditions remained behind, traditions of alignment, colour application and, in relation to facial expression, the eyes and nose had to be done in a certain way. Yet all of that counteracted with the aim to represent facts. These battles had two sides, we can see it here where the artistic element first only dares to appear, turns from within itself outward, where, I might say, the trained monk from Rome allows himself to be inundated with the influence from central Europe, the impulse to not merely depict biblical events but that the imagery appearing in the Bible, which are glimpses from the spiritual worlds, are depicted in such a manner that the Bible itself becomes the very expression of how people live in daily life. This was now imposed on the monk in his solitary work. When he paints his miniatures and represents biblical scenes in a small manner, he must be accountable on the one side for the remains of tradition and on the other side, what wants to manifest as life under the surface.
Today I have two such miniatures to show you from which you will see, how during the 11th, 12th and also in the 13th Centuries the battle between traditional painting and history was still visible in small paintings.
Look at such a painting from an evangelist representing the “Birth of Christ”—we considered this image in previous years.
See how much you are reminded of the tradition of mere existence. Consider how still here, I might say, these figures are shown in such a way which does not reflect how people in an outer naturalistic reality live but observe how the figures are born out of the imagination people made up of what the spiritual worlds were for them. From there the saints, the Christ figure himself appears; all this came out of another world. Behind the surface of the painting we can only imagine the spiritual world—of course pictorially and radically spoken.
Above all there is no trace of naturalism. Observe how there is no trace of perspective, no trace or an attempt in this painting to somehow represent space—everything is on the surface, all but intellectual representation. Despite all this, when you look at the single figures, you experience the urge of something wanting to be expressed. You will notice there are two things fighting with one another. Look at the face on the right and the one on the left and you will see how the eyes, maintaining something from tradition by the person in his monk cell had a thought from his teaching that somehow or other eyes had to be done, this and that way the expression had to be done—but he battled with it, he adjusted to a certain extent the view of the situation to the events.
Even in these tiny paintings made in the gospels, in books of the bible, this battle of the two elements can be seen in a struggle. Besides this you see again, for example in Cimabue even more, how existence was expressed in the oriental form. How we are absolutely reminded of the angel figures above - which already appear when it comes to Cimabue as an oriental echo of the conception of the pictorial—as a proclamation out of the spiritual world itself, as an experience of being, not of historical events!
Another test is the second picture, which I have prepared, which comes from the Trier Gospels:
Here we see the proclamation to the shepherds, above is Christ's birth. When you take this shepherds' proclamation of the angel announcing “Glory in the Heights and peace on earth to men of goodwill”, when you take this you discover a mixing of these two impulses.
In all three of the men's faces we find the endeavour: represent the facts! On the other side however everything at a distance is about natural observation; how traditions play into this! I would like to say, feel how the wings of the angels are in the book: wings should be depicted in such a manner that they are at an angle to the main scene, pointing to both sides, and so on. You sense the requirement and at the same time sense such a depiction impinges on the endeavour which can't be achieved according to the observation of historical events. Sense this and observe in all of them how little nature observation is apparent, how there is no trace of spatial application, no trace of perspective in this image, that everything is, I want to say, or implied in the place where they are depicted due to requirements of how something like this was to be done, teach, while still substantially in control.
Now we see how at the end of the three centuries of the Germanic Roman Empire the impulse from the establishment of cities to depict history and unite it with the requirements of experiential representation, how this urge in Central Europe came to a sudden and most beautiful flowering. Cologne is one of those cities where the city's freedom flowered the most intensively and at the same time had the possibility, through intensive expansion of the Roman Catholic dominance, to take up traditional design art coming over from the East. No wonder as a result that just in Cologne the possibility encounters us in how, in the most wonderful way this comes together, weaving the two impulses into one another: the one most ancient and revered tradition depicted—what a Madonna looks like—and the urge to represent history. How a Madonna had to look like—in the East was petrified spiritually, majestic, serene, but still, solidified. It had to wait. Movement was brought in from the West. The revelation brought in from above, from heaven, revealed in the Madonna figure, is to be experienced in the Russian Madonna as magnificently elevated and permeated with something one can see directly: the greatest beauty possibly revealed in a human face, the loveliest direct expression of the ability to love, human friendliness, human goodwill, everything living in the surroundings lived in an inner relationship with the revealed figure of the Madonna.
Consider this and then look at the painting done by Master Wilhelm:
Here you can see what I actually want to point out: you can see how an attempt is made to bring life, that means events, into being in the Virgin Mary depiction. Here individual observation merges with tradition right into the details, one might say: old prescriptions were only applicable to attitude, nobility of form, serenity but not much further than in the expression of line, thus tradition was already being experienced from individual observation. This is what we can admire so much in these masters.
Another painting by the same master:
Another painting by the same master ... to indicate what I have just mentioned, shown in another representation. Consider just how much has come through the traditional heavenly figure, the revealed form of the Redeemer's face, of Veronica's face, in which we can see something revealed directly out of soul depths. See for yourself how those angel faces looking up are already individualized! Consider how with this image, as a result of the individualizing of figures it is no longer possible to actually imagine heaven behind it. However, something else is possible. At the back of the image, which came out of the Eastern inclination (245) we can actually imagine the spiritual world, something in addition to what the image presents. Here (237) we can also imagine something else; we must feel something different from what the image depicts. We feel much of what has gone before due to knowledge from the Bible; we feel much of what has resulted, events have been experienced and what is depicted are scenes from before and after. Thus there is not something like a spiritual realm behind it; the experience is of something before and something afterwards. When the singular is represented—visual art does this after all—then a single element is lifted out of the events. This is what we find towards the conclusion of every time period, towards which Rome out of such a deep understanding through the three to four centuries created in the European realm, which wanted to rise out of folklore. The conclusion appears to us and how this works in Cologne, by such genial Masters being capable of creating something like this.
These two intertwining impulses which I have characterised flow together most remarkably here. Now I would like to indicate their power which had worked everywhere by showing you a couple of paintings, starting with Constance who probably learnt from this and many countries through which he travelled, to arrive in Cologne and gradually became the follower of so-called Master Wilhelm, Stephan Lochner. The first is the image of the Virgin Mary—we know it already:
In this image—you need only compare the single heads—you already notice the individualizing impulse which is fully expressed by the figures. This aspiration you can observe. You hardly see a tendency to use space; everything is on one plane, you see no possibility of somehow applying perspective, but you see the yearning, the desire and instinct which can be declared as events, fixed in the imagery, you see the desire characterized; you see the past and what will follow established in the imagery as a scene.
Now I ask you to look at the two preceding demonstrated paintings (237,238) by the Cologne masters which appeared when these masters were blossoming, somewhat around the years 1370 to 1410, therefore directly during the time the fourth post-Atlantean epoch was coming to a close. This painting by Stephan Lochner (239) already falls into the fifth post-Atlantean time. I have shown you images in consecutive order between the boundaries of the fourth and fifth post-Atlantean time.
What are the particular characteristics? Don't we see particular characteristics playing into representations in the 5th post-Atlantean time? Don't we see in the lowering gaze of Mary, the blessing little hand of the child, the differences in the right and left figures' expression, in the individual depiction of the additional figures—do we not see the characteristics of the 5th post-Atlantean time—how the character's act in the pictorial representation? Do we not see how the impact of personality arrives? Above all, don't we already here see the desire to express the element of the 5th post-Atlantean time within the imagery, the most important element for Central Europe: light-and-dark or chiaroscuro?—How little meaning the distribution of light and dark had in the old tradition! People lived in light and shadows but were not observing it, yet were feeling it - because they experienced light bringing joy, sensing life in light while darkness sank into rest, in darkness they withdrew into mysterious soul depths. This inner living in the world in the souls of single individuals which particularly comes to the fore in the 5th post-Atlantean time, as well as the application of chiaroscuro, indicate a distribution of light masses: in the middle the light is above the Child, we see this light dividing itself right and left in single masses, becoming lighter upwards, no longer completed as in earlier version only in a golden ground, but in a brightness. Thus the encroachment of individual characters is what we see here; nobody can actually look at these consecutive elements which I have demonstrated to you, without becoming aware that something, albeit quietly, but something new was coming into the 5th post-Atlantean time while the 4th post-Atlantean epoch faded.
Let us look once more at the previous Madonnas:
Memorise this child's face well and try to feel how much tradition still lives in it. Now consider once again another one:
Look at the Madonna and the Child and note how a really new impulse has entered just like a new impulse does enter with each individual. Considering the following paintings of Stephan Lochner. I want to stress that Stephan Lochner originated from a region where most people were incapable of absorbing tradition because most of them had the impulse to develop individualism. It is the region around the Bodensee in the region of Bavaria, the area of western Austria. Here the tribes strived out of their folk nature towards individualism, mostly rejecting tradition. Stephan Lochner was lucky, one might say, to aim for the Bavarian anticipation of individual expression, where, despite the striving for the individual, there still lived the great sublime sacred tradition of olden times. As a result, his individual impulse, much more pronounced than Master Wilhelm with his radical individual urge, he connected to his revolutionary individuation impulse with the smooth, typically Cologne imaging tradition to produce this image.
For an artist like Stephan Lochner depicting space within art had not yet been invented; to depict space could simply not be done at that time in Cologne, but his soul tried to introduce this into the images.
Fully within the historical events, completely within development this can be ascertained by a comparison between the Virgin Mary image of the West compared to that of the East:
Look at the next image:
... which you also know already; look at it particularly in the way the specific fits into the general, so typical in Stephan Lochner's work, how the dark and light come to the fore even if there is no continual intention of capturing space, to indicate perspective, but in the chiaroscuro we see another kind of spatial capture than that of perspective. The perspective is more to the South, one could say: invented by Brunellesco—I have explained this to you in previous years.
And now …
... in which you see there is no trace yet of composition and how here also, where the depiction would have insisted on a study of space, there is nothing about space, and how on the other side an attempt is made to depict each of the six accompanying figures as individuals, with an attempt to individualise the Redeemer Himself. Please recall the paintings of the Cologne Masters (237, 238) and compare these with the paintings of Stephan Lochner (239-242) which we have seen. It can't be overlooked how deeply this incision imprints on us what lies between the two: because this incision lies between the 4th and 5th post-Atlantean epochs. Stephan Lochner attempted to depict soul qualities, but he looked for representation in nature to find forms which express the soul. Master Wilhelm still hovered in a supersensible experience of the soul and his impressions came out of his inner feelings. He didn't depict them by looking at a model. Here (237) we still see a reference to the model in order for the soul itself to identify with it. Master Wilhelm still expresses his own feelings. Stephan Lochner is already a copier of nature. This is in fact realism: realism rising. We can clearly draw the boundaries between these two so divergent painters, during hardly decades.
So you see how the laws which we search for in spiritual science really come to expression in single spheres of life when these spheres are not taken as unimportant, but with their importance are led before the soul.
Now I would like to place this fact once again before your souls, by introducing two painters who worked more in the South. This took place in Cologne. Let us look more towards the South, to Bavaria, Ulm or the Rhine area and we will see the how conditions appear before and after the incision of the 5th into the 4th post-Atlantean epoch. I want to present two paintings to you by Lukas Moser, who lived in the beginning of the 15th Century, who can certainly be counted as being from the 4th post-Atlantean time.
Look at these paintings:
Try to sense how everything painted in it is done in such a way that one notices how the painter went through schooling which insisted: when you place figures beside one another you must place the one facing you, the other in profile; when you paint waves, you must paint them like this.
Thus you see the entire play of the sea's waves, not as they are observed, but “according to the rules”; you see the figures as prescribed “according to the rules”; nothing observed, everything composed. This image from the Tiefenbronn altar thus depicts the ocean voyage of the saints.
The following image shows the time of repose, the night time rest of the same saints:
... A medieval house built on to a church, strongly suggestive that nothing was observed but everything was painted out of the head. Look at the sleeping Saint Zedonius: he still wears the mitre as well as his gloves. It had to be painted according to the rules where the main interest is located. Consider this as an ongoing journey, because the saints are taking a trip, they sail on the sea, they rest at night, it tells a story. Yet it is presented as set out in an existed image remaining within tradition. Lazarus resting in the bosom of this mother!
We can look back to representations of earlier times when we have such an image in front of us. This is at the point where the 4th post-Atlantean time came to a close. In the West there were still prescriptions regarding how church imagery should be painted. Painting was done according to particular traditional rules. The painters obtained their method out of tradition: this is what the Saint Zedonius looked like, what Saint Lazarus looked like, Saint Magdalene and so on; they had to be painted according to prescriptions, not quite as strictly as in the East, but still according to the laws. However, he still had to depict desires, instincts and reveal a story! In this way the elements swim in and around and battle with the end of the epoch.
Let us also look back to the 13th, 12th and 11th centuries. In all the churches strict rules were set. Each picture had to look the same as another right through the whole of Christendom, only with a slight variation in the way the things were ordered. If Saint Zedonius was ordered, then he was to be painted according to prescription - that was the tradition.
Let us now think of the incision of the beginning of the 15th Century and go from Lukas Moser, the last latecomer of the 4th post-Atlantean epoch, over to Hans Multscher and see how these painters really already stood in the beginning of the initial blossoming of the 5th post-Atlantean epoch. Look at these paintings:
... and you observe how in these paintings the individual-personal appear, characterising the personality. Moser does not have any desire to look at nature. Here, (399) you find an artist who strives to work out of the soul—yet who does not have the slightest inkling of spatial treatment and above all mixes up multi-coloured things in relation to space and perspective - yet who strives to characterise it out of the soul, in such a manner as if nature itself is characterised in the soul. He already tries to depict individual figures.
It will become even clearer for you, what I've just been speaking about, particularly when you look at the three sleeping figures below. There is already an attempt, first of all, to express the soul element, but there is also an attempt to depict the nature of those sleeping. Compare this with what you can remember about the sleeping saints on their sea voyage (335) the resting time (336) and then you will realise what a mighty incision lies between these developments. See how the light-dark depiction is consciously brought in. Solely characterized this way and not by working with perspective does the painter reveal spatial relationships. Perspective is in fact incorrect because an actual cohesive vanishing point can't be found in any area of the painting; nowhere can a central point be found from where the layout is arranged; yet still a spatial relationship of a certain beauty exists through the chiaroscuro.
Look at this “burial” scene. You find everything, even in the depiction of the landscape itself, as characterised by the individual's penetration of tradition: interest in events without any indication coming out of the spiritual world.
You see here how particular individualizing elements enter the entire painting, an attempt is made in a corresponding manner to represent the guardians, the twist of their bodies enhancing the individualisation. I ask you to look up, to the left, how an attempt was made to represent the figure's particular situation, his unique experience, portraying his peculiar individual inattentiveness. Try and imagine how the painter tried to show the front view of the head, how on the right he characterises the skull of the other guardian, from behind. One can see how the attempt is made to show individual forms and also how the chiaroscuro comes in. One can see how through individualising, depiction of spatial element enters while perspective is not at all yet clear. You can imagine the point from which the individual lines go from the characters, but now you need to think apparently quite far towards the front, where the coffin is placed and you have to think again about another reference point—regarding the trees! These are painted in full frontal positions.
I wanted to show you how the legitimate developmental impulses I spoke about already last time in the Italian paintings have a profound effect and what rises as characteristic in our time, originating from the 15th Century, can only now be understood if you clearly take the entire, deep meaning of every time period, from the beginning of the 15th Century, which built the boundary between the 4th and the 5th post-Atlantean epochs.
What transformed itself here had already been living in all the events and becoming of Europe, but it was pushed back from the 9th Century because Europe was made incapable at that time; Europe first had to allow something else to take form out of the depths of its being. Those in the East waited in the meantime. We should promote an awareness today for what waited there and what wanted to rise to the surface in the East because these forces are available, these forces weave into present day events, still wanting to be active. A clear understanding of what pulsates through the world, what works in the world, we need to take possession of, this which is an urgent requirement for the present time epoch. This I am now and have repeatedly stressed in the past. Through the development of the middle age art in its characteristic time period I wanted to make this clear for you. You see, here we approach two incisive waves in history: one swell is everything which came easterly from the south, the other is, I would like to call it, coming from the depths itself. In these centuries - 13th, 14th and 15th, in the centuries of freedom in cities, what wanted to rise from soul depths to the surface was most strongly applicable. Then again from the 16th Century another setback came - development rose and fell, oscillated—and then, obviously not simultaneously, the continuation of what had been started in of the 15th Century became outwardly visible as I've indicated to you, on the one side living in van Eyck, on the other side Dürer, Holbein and so on.
We see in the lower lands, towards Burgundy on the one side and Nürnberg on the other, Augsburg, Basel, the results of what wanted to come as a wave rising from soul depths to introduce the 5th post-Atlantean period.
I wanted to introduce only one of the impulses of this 5th post-Atlantean epoch to you. About other impulses I have various opportunities to speak at the moment.
11. Ikonen Miniaturen Deutsche Meister
Der Kampf der individuellen künstlerischen Darstellungsweise der Mitte mit der über den Süden heraufdrängenden traditionellen des Ostens (Ikona) im bedeutungsvollen Zeiteinschnitt zwischen Abendröte des vierten und Morgenröte des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums:
Ich denke, daß es gerade jetzt gut ist, sich auf den verschiedensten Gebieten des Lebens bekannt zu machen mit jenen Gesetzen des Daseins, die ich in diesen Vorträgen dadurch habe anzudeuten versucht, daß ich sagte: Diese Gesetze des Daseins nehmen auf in ihren Bereich, was man im geistigen Leben das Gewicht der Dinge nennen könnte, das Gewicht der Wesen, während man häufig bei dem, was sich als Weltanschauung bisher geltend gemacht hat, dieses Gewichtgeben eben außer acht läßt. Insbesondere für unsere Gegenwart scheint es mir notwendig zu sein, so recht zu verstehen diesen gegenwärtigen fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum, in dem wir drinnen stehen, ihn zu verstehen mit all seinen Eigentümlichkeiten, damit wir immer bewußter und bewußter zu einer Wirksamkeit in ihnen kommen. Sie wissen ja, wir rechnen den Beginn dieses fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums vom Anfang des 15. Jahrhunderts ab, von 1413 an etwa. Der Beginn des 15. Jahrhunderts wäre also ein bedeutungsvoller, tiefgehender Einschnitt in der Entwickelung der abendländischen Menschheit. So etwas wie ein solcher Umschwung, der sich da vollzogen hat, vollzieht sich aber nicht mit einem Male, bereitet sich vor. Und in der ersten Zeit, in der die neue Epoche läuft, sieht man auch erst das allmähliche Anwachsen. Alte Motive aus der früheren Epoche gehen in die neue herüber und so weiter. Längere Zeit hindurch hat sich vorbereitet, was eigentlich im Beginn des 15. Jahrhunderts diesen mächtigen Umschwung erlebte.
Wollen wir in der dieser Mitte des Mittelalters vorangehenden Zeit einen anderen kräftigen Einschlag im geschichtlichen Werden des Abendlandes uns vor Augen führen, so können wir etwa die Regierung Karls des Großen - Sie wissen: 768 bis 814 - ins Auge fassen. Wenn Sie sich vergegenwärtigen alles, was sich im Abendlande zugetragen hat in weitesten Grenzen bis zu Karl dem Großen hin, so werden Sie mit diesem Sich-Vergegenwärtigen einige Schwierigkeiten haben. Für viele Geschichtsbetrachter der Gegenwart bestehen allerdings solche Schwierigkeiten nicht, weil sie alles über einen Kamm scheren. Allein für den, der die Wirklichkeit betrachten will, bestehen eben solche tiefgehenden Unterschiede. Und man muß sagen: Es wird einem heutigen Menschen schon ganz schwer, aus den Erfahrungen und Eindrücken der Gegenwart heraus sich einen Begriff zu machen von der ganz andersartigen Beschaffenheit des Lebens in Europa bis zu der Zeit zu Karl dem Großen hin. Dann können wir aber sagen: Nach Karl dem Großen, im 10., 11., 12. Jahrhundert, da beginnt die Zeit, in der sich vorbereitet unser Zeitraum, der fünfte nachatlantische Zeitraum. Er bereitet sich vor. Bis in die Zeit Karls des Großen herein laufen eigentlich ab alte Verhältnisse, für die die Gegenwart, wie schon gesagt, keine rechten Vorstellungen mehr gibt. Dann aber beginnt sich vorzubereiten das neue Zeitalter. Und in diesen drei Jahrhunderten, im 10., 11., 12. Jahrhundert - im 9. beginnt es schon -, da geschehen Dinge in Europa auf allen Gebieten des Lebens, die Kräfte erzeugen, die dann in der späteren Zeit, vom 15. Jahrhundert herauf, ganz besonders zum Ausdruck gekommen sind.
Nun kann man sagen, daß für die Zeit der Vorbereitung, für die Jahrhunderte, die ich soeben genannt habe, mehr als man in der heutigen Zeit geneigt ist anzugeben, Rom die Führung der europäischen Angelegenheiten in der Hand hat. Man muß sich nur unter dem, was das Papsttum in der Zeit ist vom 9. Jahrhundert ab, von der Mitte des 9. Jahrhunderts, wo es energisch in die Hand nimmt die Führung Europas, wo es in alle Verhältnisse hinein seine Wirksamkeit erstreckt, man muß sich dieses Papsttum nur nicht vorstellen nach dem Papsttum und seiner Wirksamkeit der späteren Jahrhunderte oder gar der heutigen Zeit. Man kann vielmehr sagen: In jener Zeit wußte das Papsttum instinktiv für die wichtigsten Gebiete des Lebens, was West- und Mitteleuropa, was Südeuropa nötig hat. Und ich habe schon das letztemal darauf hingedeutet, daß gewissermaßen die orientalische Kultur zurückgestaut worden ist; sie sollte warten, sollte warten im Osten Europas, im Byzantinismus, im Russizismus. Da hat sie auch gewartet, gewartet bis in unsere gegenwärtige Zeit herein.
Das, was man so im allgemeinen sagen kann, das prägt sich mit besonderer Deutlichkeit aus auf dem Gebiete, das man im weitesten Sinne das Künstlerische nennen kann. Und wenn Sie eine Vorstellung davon bekommen wollen, was dazumal zurückgedrängt worden ist, zurückgestaut worden ist nach dem Osten hin, was der Westen, was Mitteleuropa, Südeuropa nicht haben sollten, was nach dem Osten zurückgestaut worden ist, wenn Sie eine Vorstellung davon haben wollen, so vergleichen Sie eine russische Ikone
245 Russische Ikone, um 1100 Die Gottesmutter von Wladimir
mit einer Raffaeliischen Madonna:
245a Raffael Madonna della Sedia
246a Raffael Die Sixtinische Madonna, Teil: Madonna mit dem Kinde
Sie haben in dem Marienbild des Ostens noch durchaus einen Ausklang desjenigen, was dazumal nach dem Osten hin zurückgestaut worden ist. In solch einem Bilde herrscht ein ganz anderer Geist, als er jemals in der Kunst des Westens und des Südens und Mitteleuropas geherrscht hat; etwas ganz anderes. Ein solches Ikonenbild stellt heute noch dar eine Gestalt, die eigentlich unmittelbar herausgeboren ist aus der geistigen Welt. Man kann sich, wenn man lebendig vorstellt, hinter dem russischen Madonnenbilde nicht einen physischen Raum vorstellen. Man muß sich vorstellen: Was da hinter dem Bilde ist, das ist die geistige Welt, und aus der geistigen Welt sieht dieses Bild heraus. So sind seine Linien, so ist alles das, was in ihm ist. Und wenn man den Grundcharakter eines solchen Bildes nimmt, sein Herausgeborensein aus der geistigen Welt, dann hat man das, was notwendigerweise namentlich vom 9. Jahrhundert ab dem Westen Europas, dem Süden Europas, Mitteleuropa fernegehalten werden mußte:
246* Italische Ikone, Mitte 13. Jh, Madonna mit dem Kinde, Gnadenbild «Maria Schnee»
Warum? - Solche Dinge muß man durchaus objektiv historisch betrachten. Warum mußte das ferngehalten werden? - Einfach aus dem Grunde, weil die Bevölkerung Europas, Mittel-, West-, Südeuropas ganz andere Fähigkeiten, ganz andere innere Seelenimpulse hatte als solche, die in der Lage gewesen wären, aus der ursprünglichen, elementarischen Natur des Menschen heraus das zu verstehen, was da nach dem Osten zurückgedrängt worden ist, zurückgestaut worden ist. Auf ganz anderes gerichtet war die westeuropäische Natur, ihre Seelennatur. Und es hätte, wenn hereinverpflanzt worden wäre nach Mittel-, West- und Südeuropa dasjenige, was nach dem Osten zurückgestaut worden ist, es hätte außerhalb des Ostens von Europa nur ein Äußerliches bleiben können; es hätte niemals verwachsen können mit den Seeleneigentümlichkeiten Mitteleuropas, West- und Südeuropas. Es mußte Raum geschaffen werden in diesem West-, Süd- und Mitteleuropa für dasjenige, was gewissermaßen aus den Tiefen heraufkommen wollte, aus den Tiefen der Volksseele selber heraufkommen wollte.
Das hat, ich möchte sagen mit genialischem Instinkt dazumal tatsächlich Rom begriffen. Wenn auch die Dogmenstreitigkeiten einen ganz anderen Charakter zeigen, so ist der Inhalt der Dogmenstreitigkeiten eben nicht der Inhalt der ganzen, wahren Geschichte; sondern für das, worum es sich handelt, sind die Dogmenstreitigkeiten, ich möchte sagen: nur der letzte spirituelle Ausdruck. Um viel Weitergehendes handelt es sich. Unter anderem handelt es sich auch um das, was ich eben charakterisiert habe. Und so sehen wir, daß vom 9. Jahrhundert ab durch die folgenden Jahrhunderte von Rom aus mit starker Hand Raum geschaffen worden ist in Europa, damit sich das entwickeln konnte, wonach die Volksseele strebte. Es zeigte sich aber auch mit großer Klarheit, wonach die Volksseele strebte.
Sehen Sie, wenn man den Blick darauf richtet, was hätte hervorgebracht werden können, wenn das Östliche nicht zurückgestaut worden wäre, sondern sich über Europa erstreckt hätte - Karl der Große hat einen Ansatz dazu gemacht -, wenn sich das über Europa erstreckt hätte, so würde über Europa gekommen sein - in einer äußerlichen Weise, sagte ich schon, aber es würde gekommen sein — ein gewisses Anschauen von Gegenständlichkeiten, die unmittelbar heraussprechen aus der geistigen Welt. Das sollte zunächst nicht kommen. Denn in Europa sollte sich der materalistische fünfte nachatlantische Zeitraum vorbereiten. Und er hat sich in der wichtigsten Art vorbereitet gerade in Mitteleuropa. Interesse hatte man vor allen Dingen für etwas anderes als für Linie, Form und Farbengebung, die unmittelbar aus der geistigen Welt heraus sprechen. Für etwas anderes hatte man Interesse: Man hatte Interesse vor allen Dingen in Europa für das, was sich in der Zeit abspielt, für das, was zu erzählen ist, was Freignis ist. Und auch wenn man das Einzelwesen, den einzelnen Menschen betrachtete, so betrachtete man ihn ganz unter dem Gesichtspunkt, wie er sich hineinstellt in die Folge der Ereignisse, die sich erzählen lassen. Man kann die Zeit des 10., 11., 12. Jahrhunderts auch die Zeit des römisch-deutschen Kaisertums nennen, weil sich dazumal von Rom aus eben das Raumschaffen ausgebreitet hat für die Interessen des Erzählens, für die Interessen des Wirkens in der Zeit, für die Auffassung der einzelnen Gestalt in der Zeit.
Sehen Sie, das ist wieder ein anderer Gesichtspunkt als diejenigen Gesichtspunkte waren, die ich im vorigen Jahre bei dem vorigen Zyklus solcher Vorträge hier hervorgehoben habe. Diese Zusammenwirkung des mitteleuropäischen Kaisertums mit dem Wesen der römischen Kirche und ihrer Ausbreitung, das ist durchaus das innere Bild für die Art, wie sich dazumal der fünfte nachatlantische Zeitraum in Mitteleuropa vorbereitet hat. Wir sehen daher, daß in diesem Mitteleuropa sich so vorbereitet dieser Zeitraum, daß zunächst eigentlich wenig Interesse da ist für räumliche bildende Kunst. Räumliche bildende Kunst wird entlehnt - erinnern Sie sich mancher Darstellungen, die ich Ihnen im vorigen Jahre vorgeführt habe -, entlehnt von dem, was vom Orient herübergekommen ist, sich dann ausgebreitet hat, ich möchte sagen: durch die Fugen des Hauptinteresses hindurch. Das, was aus dem Volkstum selber aufgeschossen ist, das wird erzählt. Und was Erzählung werden sollte, wollte man in das Volkstum aufnehmen, mit dem Volkstum innig zusammenfügen.
Sehen Sie doch, wie großartige Bilder mitteleuropäischen Lebens, des Lebens der Rheingegend, der Donaugegend, der Gegend der nördlichen Küste, uns entgegentreten in den Schilderungen des Nibelungen-, Walthari-, Gudrun-Liedes. In der Art und Weise, wie in diesen Dichtungen dargestellt wird, haben Sie ausgesprochen das Interesse für das zeitliche Geschehen. Und sehen Sie, wie im «Heliand», in dieser Dichtung, die im Zeitalter nach Karl dem Großen entstanden ist, hereingesponnen werden die Erzählungen des Evangeliums in mitteleuropäischen Charakteren, wie eigentlich der Charakter des biblischen Geschehens aufgenommen wird von den unmittelbaren Interessen Mitteleuropas im «Heliand». Es sollte das, was in den europäischen Volksseelen lebte, aus diesen Volksseelen selbst heraus geboren werden. Daher wurde die orientalische Tradition zurückgeschoben, die wenig auf das Zeitliche geht, die wenig historischen Sinn hat. Das wurde deshalb zurückgeschoben. Und wenn wir dann sehen, wie diese Volksinteressen Europas aus tiefen Untergründen an die Oberfläche heraufkommen, dann ist uns heute oftmals nur schwer möglich, uns so recht hineinzuvertiefen in jene Innigkeit, in jenes tiefe Seelische, mit dem dazumal der europäische Menschengeist seine eigene Vertiefung an die wesentlich geistigen Vorgänge anknüpfte. Man möchte sagen: Das, was zurückgestaut worden ist nach dem Orient, das weist hinaus in räumliche Unendlichkeiten, und seine Darstellungen schauen herein aus Raumesweiten; dasjenige, was in Mitteleuropa an die Oberfläche treten sollte, sollte unmittelbar herauftauchen aus den Tiefen der menschlichen Seelen selber, aus Seelentiefen, nicht aus Raumesweiten — aus Seelentiefen.
Das geheimnisvolle Walten der Seelentiefen unter der Oberfläche der unmittelbaren Wahrnehmungen, das war schon etwas, was dazumal in den Seelen lebte. Daß solch eine Menschenseele auf dem Grunde ihres Wesens geheimnisvolle Impulse hat, die nur manchmal in Feieraugenblicken des seelischen Erlebens heraufschlagen, davon war man instinktiv in den genannten Jahrhunderten durchdrungen. Daß gewissermaßen das Leben tiefer ist als das, was Augen sehen, Ohren hören und so weiter, daß es aus unergründlichen Seelentiefen heraufkommt, das empfand man tief. Und ich möchte sagen: Wir vernehmen eine Art Nachklang dieser Tiefe, wenn wir so etwas Schönes hören wie eine kleine Dichtung Walthers von der Vogelweide, der gewissermaßen den Abschluß bildet des reinen sprachlichen Zeitalters, jenes Zeitalters, in dem man noch nicht die Fähigkeit gehabt hat, wirklich zum Ausdruck zu bringen in bildhafter Weise, was gestaltenlos in den Seelentiefen sich kundgibt. Von dieser Tiefe werden wir berührt, wenn wir Walthers von der Vogelweide kleines Gedichtchen auf uns wirken lassen, wo er als alter Mann von seinem eigenen Leben spricht, wenn er so zurückschaut auf sein Leben. Als er gereift war als Mann, als Weisheit eingezogen war in seine Seele und manches Licht geworfen hatte auf Seelentiefen, aus denen früher ihm geheimnisvolle Wogen nur heraufschlugen wie im Traum, da kam etwas von Stimmung in Walther von der Vogelweide, welche er so ausdrückt:
«O weh, wohin entschwanden alle meine Jahre!
Träumte mir mein Leben, oder ist es wahr?
Was mir stets dünkte wirklich, war’s ein Traumgesicht?
Ich habe lang geschlafen und weiß es selber nicht.
Nun bin ich erwacht, und mir ist unbekannt,
was sonst mir war so kundig als meine Hand.»
So spricht Walther von der Vogelweide am Abschluß dieses drei Jahrhunderte langen Zeitraumes, 10., 11., 12. Jahrhundert, des Zeitraumes der Blüte des römisch-deutschen Kaisertums, das mit diesem Zeitraum abgeschlossen ist. Es ist der Zeitraum, in dem sich vorzugsweise das Interesse für das Geschehen ausbildet. Die Kunst verlangt Darstellung, bildlichen Ausdruck des Geschehens, in Mittel-, West- und Südeuropa, des Geschehens, des Werdens. Nach dem Osten hinblickend ist der Ausdruck des Seins, des Daseins, der Ruhe, des ruhigen Herausblickens aus der geistigen Welt. Das Geschehen, das unmittelbar hier sich abspielt, in das die menschliche Seele hineingeboren ist, in dem die menschliche Seele verbunden ist mit dem Größten, mit dem Geheimnisvollsten, das drängte auch nach bildlicher Darstellung. Dazu bedurfte es allerdings der Befruchtung vom Süden, der sich noch erhalten hatte die Nachklänge eben all der Traditionen, die dort vom Orient herübergekommen sind. Geschehen auszudrücken also war vor allen Dingen das Bestreben.
Und so waren enthalten im Kunststreben des Abendlandes, ich möchte sagen zwei sich bekämpfende Impulse; denn gewiß, es war zurückgestaut worden nach Osten die Darstellung des Seins, aber eben nur zurückgestaut; es waren viele Dinge geblieben. Vor allen Dingen war geblieben etwas von dem, was wir dann im Osten sehen, wo nach strengen Regeln die Ikonen gebildet werden mußten, und andere Dinge, nach Regeln, die vom alten Herkommen aufgenommen sind, gegen die man nicht verstoßen darf bei der Linienführung, im Ausdruck und so weiter. Das alles verpflanzt sich auch ins Abendland hinein; aber daneben das Bedürfnis, das, was man in der Umwelt erlebte, zu verbinden mit dem, was als Tradition über den Süden nach Mitteleuropa hereingekommen war. Natürlich gestaltete sich dieses Bedürfnis zuerst aus in der Darstellung, in der primitiven, einfachen Darstellung der biblischen Erzählungen, der biblischen Geschichten. Erst als die drei nächstfolgenden Jahrhunderte beginnen, das 13., 14., 15., da erhebt sich auch in Mitteleuropa die Kraft, möchte ich sagen, zur bildlichen Darstellung. Diese Kraft verdankt man einer ganz bestimmten Tatsache. Man verdankt diese Kraft der Tatsache, daß in diesen Jahrhunderten, also im 13., 14., 15. Jahrhundert, vor allen Dingen groß wurde über ganz Mittel- und Südeuropa hin dasjenige, was man die Städteherrschaft nennen könnte, die Blüte des Städtetums. Die Städte, die dazumal stolz waren auf ihre kraftvolle Souveränität, die entwickelten in ihrer Mitte die volkseigentümlichen Kräfte. Und weil solche Städte nicht in dieser Weise hinein-uniformiert waren — weder in das alte römisch-deutsche Kaisertum, das damals im Niedergang war, noch hinein-uniformiert waren in die späteren Staatsgemeinschaften -, weil diese Städte in sich souverän waren, konnten sie individuelle Kräfte entwickeln, so wie es die Individualität des Bodens, der Lebensweise in den einzelnen individuellen Orten verlangte. Man versteht die Zeit des 13., 14., 15. Jahrhunderts nicht, wenn man nicht immer wieder und wiederum seinen Blick wirft auf die damalige Blüte der Städtefreiheit.
Vergegenwärtigen wir uns einmal jetzt diese Blüte der Städtefreiheit - wir können sie im 11., 12., 13., 14., 15. Jahrhundert approximativ annehmen -, was diese Städtefreiheit vorgefunden hat in bezug auf das Künstlerische. Von Rom ausgehend waren gewisse Traditionen geblieben. Die Hauptsache hatte man nach dem Osten abgestaut; aber gewisse Traditionen waren geblieben, Traditionen in der Linienführung, in der Farbengebung, in bezug auf den Ausdruck des Gesichtes; Augen mußten in einer gewissen Weise, die Nase mußte in einer gewissen Weise gemacht werden. Aber das alles stritt mit dem Bedürfnis, das Geschehen darzustellen. Dieses Streiten der zwei Impulse, wir können es da beobachten, wo das Künstlerische sich erst hervorwagt, wo es erst heraus sich stülpt, wo, ich möchte sagen der von Rom aus geschulte Mönch sich überfluten läßt von dem, was ihm von Mitteleuropa kommt, von dem Bedürfnis, die biblischen Dinge nicht bloß so darzustellen, daß man die Gestalten, die in der Bibel vorkommen, wie herausschauend aus den geistigen Welten darstellt, sondern so darstellt, daß das Biblische selbst ein Abdruck ist davon, wie der Mensch unter Menschen lebt. Das ist ihm nun aufgedrängt, dem Mönch, in seinem einsamen Arbeiten. Wenn er seine Miniaturen malte und da in einer kleinen Weise die biblischen Szenen darstellte, da mußte er Rechnung tragen auf der einen Seite dem Reste der Traditionen und auf der andern Seite dem, was sich als Gestaltung des Lebendigen an die Oberfläche bewegen wollte.
Ich habe Ihnen heute zwei Proben solcher Miniaturmalereien vorzuführen, aus denen Sie ersehen werden, wie im 11., 12. Jahrhundert - auch im 13. Jahrhundert ist es noch sichtbar - sich da zeigt gerade in dieser Kleinmalerei, was traditionelle Malerei ist im Kampfe mit dem Geschehen.
Sehen Sie sich ein solches Bild aus einem Evangeliar an, darstellend «Die Geburt Christi» — wir kennen das Bild schon vom vorigen Jahre:
247 Evangeliar des Klosters Limburg, 11. Jh. Die Geburt Christi
Sehen Sie sich an, wieviel Sie hier noch erinnert an die Tradition des bloßen Seins. Sehen Sie, wie hier noch, ich möchte sagen die Gestalten so dargestellt sind, daß sie nicht aufgenommen haben, was der Mensch in der äußeren naturalistischen Wirklichkeit, in der er lebt, beobachtet, sondern wie die Gestalten hier alle noch herausgeboren sind aus den Vorstellungen, die sich der Mensch von der geistigen Welt macht. Da kommen die Heiligen, da kommt die Christus-Figur selbst, alles das kommt noch herüber aus einer anderen Welt. Hinter der Bildfläche können wir uns nur die geistige Welt vorstellen natürlich bildhaft und radikal gesprochen. Von alledem, was an den Naturalismus erinnert, noch nicht eine Spur. Beachten Sie, wie nicht eine Spur von Perspektive, nicht eine Spur von Versuch da ist in diesem Bilde, den Raum irgendwie darzustellen; alles auf der Fläche; alles aber Geistiges darstellend noch. Und dennoch, wenn Sie den Blick werfen auf die einzelnen Gestalten, so werden Sie - noch ungeschickt, aber dennoch - schon darinnen bemerken den Drang, etwas auszudrücken. Sie werden bemerken, daß da zwei Dinge miteinander kämpfen. Sehen Sie sich in der Figur rechts und in der hier links die Augen an, und Sie werden durchaus bemerken können, daß da noch etwas von Tradition darin ist; daß der, der das gemalt hat in seiner Klosterzelle, noch in seinem Kopf hatte die Lehre: Augen mußt du in einer gewissen Weise machen; so und so muß der Ausdruck sein - aber er kämpft schon damit; er paßt in gewissem Sinne schon den Blick der Situation und dem Geschehen an.
Gerade in diesen Kleinmalereien, die in die Evangelien, in die Bibelbücher hineingemalt worden sind, da sehen wir, wie die genannten Prinzipien miteinander kämpfen. Daneben sehen Sie aber wieder das, was zum Beispiel bei Cimabue noch so stark hervortritt, was da das Orientalisch-Bildende des Seins ausdrückt. Wie erinnern hier die Engelfiguren oben durchaus — was aber auch schon, wenn es bei Cimabue auftritt, nur ein orientalischer Nachklang der Auffassung des Bildlichen ist - an ein Heraussprechen aus der geistigen Welt selber, an eine Darstellung des Seins, nicht des Geschehens!
Eine andere Probe ist das zweite Bild, das ich vorbereitet habe, das aus einem Trierer Evangeliar ist:
248 Codex Egberti, 10. Jh. Die Geburt Christi und die Verkündigung an die Hirten
Hier sehen Sie unten die Hirtenverkündigung, oben Christi Geburt. Gerade wenn Sie diese Hirtenverkündigung nehmen, wie da die Engel den Hirten verkündigen das «Gloria in den Höhen und Friede auf Erden den Menschen, die eines guten Willens sind», wenn Sie dies nehmen, so finden Sie da ganz, ich möchte sagen das Ineinandermischen dieser zwei Impulse. Wie tritt uns bei all den drei Männergesichtern schon entgegen das Bestreben, Geschehen darzustellen! Wie aber auf der anderen Seite alles fern ist aller Naturbeobachtung; wie spielt noch Tradition hinein! — Ich möchte sagen: fühlen Sie es doch den Flügeln der Engel oben an, daß in einem Buche gestanden hat: Flügel müssen in einer solchen Weise gestaltet sein, daß sie gegen die Hauptszene hin schief verlaufen, daß sie nach einer Seite weisen, und dergleichen. Sie fühlen die Vorschrift, und Sie fühlen zu gleicher Zeit aus einer solchen Darstellung das Hereinbrechen des Dranges, der sich aber noch nicht betätigen kann, nach Beobachtung des Geschehens. Fühlen Sie es dem an und beachten Sie bei alledem, um eben zu sehen, wie wenig Naturbeobachtung noch vorhanden ist, daß nicht die Spur von Raumesbehandlung, nicht die Spur von Perspektive in diesem Bild vorhanden ist, daß das alles erst, ich möchte sagen noch iimplizite, in der Anlage nur, bei dem, der darstellt, vorhanden ist; während Vorschriften, wie man so etwas zu machen hat, die Lehren, während die noch im wesentlichen gewaltet haben.
Und nun sehen wir, wie bei Ablauf der drei Jahrhunderte römisch-deutschen Kaisertums vor der Städtebegründung der Drang, Geschehen darzustellen im Verein mit demjenigen, was Vorschrift ist, was Seins-Darstellung ist, wie der Drang in Mitteleuropa mit einer gewissen Plötzlichkeit zur schönsten Blüte führt. Köln ist eine derjenigen Städte, in denen die Städtefreiheiten am intensivsten geblüht haben, und die zu gleicher Zeit die Möglichkeit gehabt haben, durch intensive Verbreitung der katholisch-römischen Herrschaft das aufzunehmen, was an alter traditioneller Gestaltungskunst aus dem Osten gekommen ist. Kein Wunder daher, daß gerade in Köln eine Möglichkeit uns entgegentritt, wie da in der wunderbarsten Weise ineinandergeführt werden, ineinander verwoben werden die beiden Impulse: dasjenige, was man, ich möchte sagen hatte durch uralt-ehrwürdige Tradition, so daß man sich daran vorstellte: so sieht eine Madonna aus — und der Drang, Geschehen darzustellen. Wie eine Madonna auszusehen hat - im Osten ist es in Spiritualität erstarrt; majestätisch, erhaben, aber in Spiritualität erstarrt. Es soll warten. Die Bewegung wird hineingebracht im Westen. Das, was vom Himmel herabgekommen ist als Offenbarung über die Madonnagestalt, was sich in der russischen Madonna so großartig-erhaben darlebt, das wird durchdrungen von dem, was man unmittelbar sieht: Schönstes, das sich offenbaren kann im menschlichen Angesicht, Lieblichstes, unmittelbarer Abdruck menschlicher Liebefähigkeit, menschlicher Freundlichkeit, menschlichen Wohlwollens, alles das, was in der Umgebung lebt in inniger Verbindung mit der geoffenbarten Gestalt der Madonna.
Denken Sie sich das und sehen Sie sich dann an das Bild, das ein Kölner Meister Wilhelm gemalt hat, die sogenannte «Maria mit der Bohnenblüte»:
243 Meister der Veronika Madonna mit der Wickenblüte, Teil von 238
Hier können Sie sehen, was ich eigentlich andeuten wollte; hier können Sie sehen, wie versucht ist, Leben, das heißt Geschehen, Werden in die Mariendarstellung hineinzubringen. Hier ist individualistisches Beobachten in das Traditionelle hineingetragen, bis in die Einzelheiten hinein, ich möchte sagen: die alten Vorschriften nur noch in bezug auf ihre Gesinnung beachtend, edel die Gestalten, erhaben die Gestalten, aber nicht mehr bis in die Linienführung hinein, also die Tradition ganz belebt schon von der individuellen Beobachtung. Das ist es, was wir eben an diesem Meister so sehr zu bewundern haben.
Ein anderes Bild von demselben Meister, das «Schweißtuch der Veronika»,
237 Meister der Veronika Hl. Veronika mit dem Schweißtuch
das Ihnen das, was ich eben ausgeführt habe, an einer anderen Darstellung zeigt. Denken Sie sich, wieviel in die traditionell himmlische Gestalt, in die geoffenbarte Gestalt des Erlöser-Antlitzes, des «Veronika-Antlitzes» hineingekommen ist von dem, was man unmittelbar beobachten kann als sich offenbarend aus den Seelentiefen heraus. Versuchen Sie sich zu vergegenwärtigen, wie individualisiert unten die Engelangesichter schon sind! Versuchen Sie sich zu vergegenwärtigen, wie bei diesem Bilde durch die Individualisierung der Gestalten es nicht mehr möglich ist, hinten unmittelbar sich den Himmel vorzustellen. Aber etwas anderes ist möglich! Hinter dem Bilde, das aus der orientalischen Gesinnung hervorgegangen ist (245), kann man sich unmittelbar die geistige Welt vorstellen, etwas anderes noch, als das Bild also darstellt. Hier (237) kann man sich auch etwas anderes vorstellen, muß etwas anderes emp Onmuvriinht Diiirnif Stainar Marhlsaoco \Yamiamltiina DiiÄb:9309 Brit AO A finden, als das Bild darstellt. Man empfindet vieles von dem, was vorangegangen ist, was man weiß aus der Bibel; man empfindet vieles von dem, was nachzufolgen hat; Geschehen empfindet man. Und das, was dargestellt ist, ist eine Szene aus einem Vorher und Nachher. Also nicht etwas wie ein Geisterreich dahinter, aber etwas wie ein Vorher und Nachher empfindet man. Wenn auch das Einzelne dargestellt wird - die bildende Kunst muß ja das -, so ist das Einzelne doch herausgehoben aus dem Geschehen. Das ist es, was uns, ich möchte sagen wie der Abschluß jener Periode entgegentritt, in welcher Rom aus so tiefem Verständnisse heraus durch drei bis vier Jahrhunderte in Europa Raum geschaffen hat für das, was aus den Volkstümern herauswollte. Wie der Abschluß erscheint uns dieses bei dem in Köln wirkenden, so genialischen Meister, der solches geschaffen hat.
Da tritt also dieses Ineinanderfließen der zwei Impulse, die ich charakterisiert habe, ganz besonders hervor. Und nun möchte ich, um Ihnen die Kräfte vorzuführen, die da überall wirkten, Ihnen ein paar Bilder zeigen von dem Maler, der von Konstanz aus, wo er wahrscheinlich gebildet worden ist, und der dann andere Länder durchzogen hat, verschiedenes gelernt hat, dann nach Köln gekommen und gewissermaßen der Nachfolger wurde des sogenannten Meister Wilhelm, Stefan Lochner. Das erste ist ein Marienbild - wir kennen es auch schon:
244 Stefan Lochner Die Anbetung der Heiligen Drei Könige, Teil: Die Madonna
An diesem Bilde sehen Sie — Sie brauchen nur die einzelnen Köpfe zu vergleichen - schon den Drang, das Werden durch die individuelle Gestaltung des Bildes völlig zum Ausdruck zu bringen. Dieses Bestreben sehen Sie. Sie sehen zwar noch keine Möglichkeit, den Raum zu gebrauchen; alles ist auf der Fläche, Sie sehen noch keine Möglichkeit, irgendwie Perspektive anzuwenden; aber Sie sehen die Sehnsucht, den Trieb, den Instinkt, das, was man erzählen könnte als Geschehen, festzuhalten in der bildlichen Darstellung; Sie sehen den Trieb, zu charakterisieren; Sie sehen auf ein Vorher, auf ein Nachher, herausgestellt dasjenige, was bildlich dargestellt ist, als Szene.
Nun bitte ich Sie, ins Auge zu fassen, daß die zwei vorhergehenden Bilder (237, 238), die wir von dem Kölner Meister vorgeführt haben, eben in die Blütezeit des Wirkens dieses Meisters fallen, das ist etwa vom Jahre 1370 bis 1410, also unmittelbar in die Zeit hinein, in der seinen Abschluß findet der vierte nachatlantische Zeitraum. Dieses Bild von Stefan Lochner (239) fällt nun schon in den fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum hinein. Ich habe Ihnen also hier aufeinanderfolgend Bilder gezeigt, zwischen denen die Grenze liegt zwischen dem vierten und dem fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum.
Und was ist das besonders Charakteristische? — Sehen wir denn nicht dieses besonders Charakteristische des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums hineinspielen in diese Darstellung? Sehen wir denn nicht in dem Augenniederschlag der Maria, in dem segnenden Händchen des Kindes, in dem Unterschiede der rechten und linken Figur im Gesichtsausdruck, in der individuellen Ausgestaltung der übrigen Figuren — sehen wir denn nicht dasjenige, was im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum das Charakteristische wird: die Persönlichkeit in die bildliche Darstellung hineinspielen? Sehen wir denn nicht, wie da der Einschlag der Persönlichkeit kommt? Und sehen wir nicht vor allen Dingen hier schon die Sehnsucht, gerade das zum Ausdruck zu bringen, was in diesem fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum bildnerisch das Bedeutungsvollste ist für Mitteleuropa: das Hell-Dunkel? -— Wie wenig Bedeutung hat das Hell-Dunkel für das, was alte Tradition ist, das Hell-Dunkel, in dem der Mensch lebt, das der Mensch nicht nur sieht, sondern in dem er sein Leben fühlt, weil ihn das Licht erfreut, weil ihn das Helle belebt, weil er mit Dunkel in die Ruhe eingeht, weil er im Dunkeln sich zurückzieht in die geheimnisvollen Seelentiefen. Dieses Drinnenleben in der Welt der einzelnen individuellen Seelen, das insbesondere im fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum zum Vorschein kommt, auch im Auftreten des Hell-Dunkel sehen wir es, in dem Verteilen der Lichtmasse: in der Mitte das Licht über dem Kinde. Wir sehen dieses Licht sich links und rechts in einzelnen Massen verteilen, nach oben hell werden, nicht mehr in der früheren Weise den Abschluß findend in dem Goldgrunde bloß, sondern in dem Hellen. Also das Hineinspielen des Individuell-Persönlichen, das ist es, was wir hier beobachten; und niemand kann eigentlich aufeinanderfolgend diese Dinge betrachten, die wir jetzt vorgeführt haben, ohne aufmerksam zu werden, daß, wenn auch nur ganz leise, etwas ganz Neues hineinspielt als Element des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraums in den abklingenden vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum.
Nehmen wir noch einmal das vorige Madonnenbild:
243 Meister der Veronika Madonna mit der Wickenblüte, Teil von 238
Prägen Sie sich dieses Kindergesicht gut ein, und versuchen Sie zu empfinden, wie viel hier noch Tradition lebt. Und jetzt stellen wir noch einmal das andere ein,
244 Stefan Lochner Die Anbetung der Heiligen Drei Könige, Teil: Die Madonna
betrachten die Madonna und das Kind und sehen hier, wie da wirklich ein neuer Einschlag hineingekommen ist, wie ein ganz neuer Impuls des Individuellen wirklich hineinschlägt. Und so bei den nachfolgenden Bildern des Stefan Lochner, wobei ich ausdrücklich bemerke, daß Stefan Lochner aus der Gegend ja herkommt, in der man am meisten unfähig war, die Tradition aufzunehmen, weil man am meisten Trieb hatte, das Individuelle, in das der Mensch hineingestellt ist, zu bilden. Es ist die Gegend um den Bodensee herum, die Gegend Südbayerns, die Gegend Westösterreichs. Da waren die Stämme, die aus ihrer Volksnatur heraus am meisten nach dem Individuellen gestrebt haben, die am meisten abgelehnt haben das Traditionelle. Nun hat Stefan Lochner das Glück gehabt, mit diesem, ich möchte sagen bayrischen Gespanntsein auf das Individuelle dorthin zu zielen, wo trotz des Strebens nach dem Individuellen noch gelebt hat die große erhaben-heilige Tradition des Alten. Da hat er, weil stärker als in dem Meister Wilhelm in ihm der revolutionäre, der individuelle Drang gelebt hat, durch die Verbindung dieses revolutionär-individuellen Dranges seines Innern mit dem abgeglätteten Typischen der Tradition, die nach Köln gekommen war, dieses Bild hervorgebracht.
241 Stefan Lochner Madonna mit dem Veilchen
Die Raumkunst ist gewissermaßen für solch einen Künstler wie Stefan Lochner noch nicht erfunden; den Raum darstellen, das konnte man dazumal in Köln nicht; aber die Seele versuchte man in die Bildlichkeit hineinzubringen.
Und völlig in welthistorisches Geschehen, in welthistorische Entwickelung hereingestellt hat man diese Dinge, wenn man solch ein Bild des Westens vergleicht mit einer Madonna des Ostens:
245 Russische Ikone, um 1100 Die Gottesmutter von Wladimir Sehen Sie sich in dem nächsten Bilde, 242 Stefan Lochner Madonna in der Rosenlaube
das Sie ja auch schon kennen, noch besonders an, wie dieses Ineinanderfügen, dieses Ineinanderweben des Individuellen und des allgemein Typischen bei Stefan Lochner hervortritt, wie bei ihm schon hervortritt das Hell-Dunkel, wenn auch in diesen Bildern noch durchaus kein Streben ist, den Raum zu bezwingen, die Perspektive sich anzueignen; aber im Hell-Dunkel sehen wir eine andere Art der Raumesbezwingung als die durch die Perspektive. Und die Perspektive ist ja gerade im Süden, man könnte sagen erfunden worden durch Brunellesco - ich habe es Ihnen im vorigen Jahre ausgeführt. Und nun ein «Christus am Kreuz»,
240 Stefan Lochner Christus am Kreuz mit Heiligen
an dem Sie ja sehen, wie von Komposition noch nicht eine Spur da ist, wie auch dort, wo die Darstellung selbst gedrängt hätte, den Raum zu studieren, noch nichts von Raum da ist, wie aber auf der anderen Seite versucht wird, die sechs Nebengestalten jede individuell auszubilden, wie versucht ist, den Erlöser selbst zu individualisieren. Erinnern Sie sich nur bitte an die Bilder des Kölner Meisters (237, 238) und vergleichen Sie sie mit den vier Bildern von Stefan Lochner (239 — 242), die wir gesehen haben. Es kann nicht ausbleiben, daß sich Ihnen tief einprägt der Einschnitt, der zwischen den zweien liegt; denn dieser Finschnitt ist der zwischen dem vierten und dem fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum. Stefan Lochner sucht seelisch darzustellen; aber er sucht schon in den Gestalten der Natur selber die Formen zu finden, in denen sich die Seele ausspricht. Der Meister Wilhelm, der hat noch geschwebt in einer übersinnlichen Seelenempfindung, und die prägt er aus, aus einem inneren Gefühl heraus. Er prägt sie nicht so aus, daß er auf das Modell hinschaut. Hier (237) sehen Sie schon ein Hinschauen auf das Modell, damit die Seele selbst zeigt, wie sie sich ausweist. —- Der Meister Wilhelm ist noch ein Ausdrücker seines eigenen Empfindens. - Stefan Lochner ist schon ein Nachahmer der Natur. Das ist in der Tat der Realismus; der Naturalismus, er kommt herauf. Und wir können so scharf die Grenze ziehen, wie wir sie zwischen diesen eigentlich kaum Jahrzehnte auseinanderliegenden zwei Malern haben.
Da sehen Sie, daß die Gesetze, die wir suchen durch die Geisteswissenschaft, sich wirklich in den einzelnen Lebenssphären zum Ausdruck bringen, wenn man diese Lebenssphären nur nicht ohne Gewicht, sondern mit ihrer Gewichtigkeit sich vor die Seele führen würde.
Und nun möchte ich Ihnen noch einmal diese Tatsache vor die Seele führen, indem ich Ihnen zwei Maler zeige, die mehr im Süden gewirkt haben. Das war also in Köln geschehen. Nun sehen wir mehr nach dem Süden, nach Bayern, nach der Konstanzer, Ulmer oder der Rheinischen Gegend und sehen wir da, wie sich die Verhältnisse vor und nach dem Einschnitt darstellen, durch den der vierte vom fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum getrennt ist. Da möchte ich Ihnen zunächst zwei Bilder vorführen von Lucas Moser, der im Anfang des 15. Jahrhunderts lebte und durchaus zugezählt werden kann noch dem vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraum.
Sehen Sie sich dieses Bild an, die Heiligen, die auf dem Schiff ins Meer hinaus fahren.
335 Lucas Moser Der Magdalenen-Altar, Teil: Die Meerfahrt der Heiligen
Versuchen Sie bei diesem Bilde noch zu spüren, wie alles darauf so gemalt ist, daß man merkt, der Maler hat noch durchgemacht die Schule, die ihm gesagt hat: Wenn du Gestalten nebeneinander malst, so mußt du die eine en face, die andere im Profil malen; wenn du Wellen malst, so mußt du sie so malen. — Da sehen Sie das ganze Wellenspiel des Meeres, nicht angeschaut, aber «nach Vorschrift» gemalt; da sehen Sie die Figuren «nach Vorschrift» angeordnet; da sehen Sie nichts beobachtet; das alles ist zusammengestellt. Dieses Bild vom Tiefenbronner Altar zeigt also die Seefahrt der Heiligen.
Das nächste Bild stellt die Rast, die Nachtruhe derselben Heiligen dar
336 Lucas Moser Der Magdalenen-Altar, Teil: Die schlafenden Heiligen
ein mittelalterliches Haus, an eine Kirche angebaut, nun da fällt es Ihnen wohl stark auf, wie wenig irgend etwas dabei angeschaut ist, wie alles aus dem Kopf gemalt ist. Sehen Sie sich an dort den schlafenden Heiligen Cedonius; die Mitra hat er auf beim Schlafen, den Handschuh hat er noch an. Es sollte ganz nach Vorschrift gemalt werden - und nur verstohlen geht dasjenige hinein in die Darstellung, woran das Hauptinteresse gelegen ist. Denken Sie sich: Das ist ein fortlaufender Zug, den die Heiligen machen, eine Reise der Heiligen; sie fahren durchs Meer, sie halten Nachtruhe - Erzählung ist es. Und dennoch, es wird das dargestellt, was sich festgesetzt hat als seiendes Bild, noch ganz in Tradition. Lazarus dort, im Schoße seiner Mutter ruhend!
Wir können zurückblicken, wenn wir eine solche Darstellung vor uns haben, auf das, was dargestellt worden war in früheren Zeiten. Also das ist die letzte Zeit des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraums. Man hat auch im Westen noch vorgeschrieben, wie solche Bilder, die man in Kirchen zu malen hatte, gemalt sein müssen. Nach fest bestimmten Traditionsregeln malte man. Der Maler bekam sozusagen aus der Tradition heraus selber seine Aufgabe: so schaute ein heiliger Zedonius, so schaute ein heiliger Lazarus aus, eine heilige Magdalena und so weiter; die hatte er zu malen; das war Vorschrift, nicht so streng als im Osten, aber doch Vorschrift. Aber er muß auch auf die Triebe, auf die Instinkte, auf die Interessen sehen und Erzählung bilden! So schwimmen die Dinge ineinander, sie streiten sich am Ende eines Zeitalters.
Nun sehen wir zurück also ins 13., 12., ins 11. Jahrhundert. In allen Kirchen wurde das dargestellt, was strikte Vorschrift war. Ein Bild schaute dem andern gleich, durch die ganze Christenheit hin, nur ein wenig variiert nach der Art, wie die Dinge bestellt wurden. Aber wurde einmal der heilige Zedonius bestellt, so wurde er so gemalt, wie er vorgeschrieben war. Das war die Tradition.
Jetzt denken wir uns den Einschnitt, den Beginn des 15. Jahrhunderts, und gehen von Lucas Moser, dem letzten Nachzügler des vierten nachatlantischen Zeitraumes, herüber zu Hans Multscher und sehen, wie dieser Maler nun wirklich schon ganz darinnen steht in dem Aufgang, in der ersten Morgenröte des fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraumes. Sehen Sie sich dieses Bild an,
339 Hans Multscher Die Geburt Christi
eine «Geburt Christi», so haben Sie bereits in diesem Bilde wiederum das Auftreten des Individuell-Persönlichen, die Charakteristik des Persönlichen. Sie sehen bei Moser noch nicht die geringste Sehnsucht, die Natur anzuschauen. Hier (339) finden Sie einen Menschen, der sich schon bemüht - trotzdem er keinen Schimmer hat von irgendwelcher Raumbehandlung, trotzdem alles kunterbunt durcheinandergeht, nichts stimmt in bezug auf Raumbehandlung, auf Perspektive -, der bestrebt ist, aus der Seele heraus zu charakterisieren, aber so, wie die Natur selber schon aus der Seele heraus charakterisiert. Er versucht schon die individuellen Gestalten nachzubilden.
340 Hans Multscher Christus am Ölberg
Es wird Ihnen das, was ich eben gesagt habe, bei diesem Bild noch mehr auffallen, insbesondere, wenn Sie die drei unten schlafenden Gestalten ins Auge fassen. Wie wird da schon versucht, erstens der Ausdruck des Seelischen, wie wird aber auch versucht, die Natur des Schlafes zum Ausdruck zu bringen. Vergleichen Sie das mit dem, was Sie in Erinnerung haben von den schlafenden Heiligen auf der Meerfahrt (335), auf der Rast (336), dann werden Sie sehen, was für ein mächtiger Einschnitt in der Entwickelung zwischen beiden liegt. Und sehen Sie, wie bewußt das Hell-Dunkel in die Darstellung hereindringt. Denn einzig und allein dadurch, nicht durch irgendwelche Perspektive, bekommt der Maler eine Raumanordnung heraus. Die Perspektive ist durchaus unrichtig, denn es ist ja nicht einmal ein einheitlicher Augenpunkt vorhanden; Sie können nirgends einen Punkt finden, von dem aus sich die ganze Situation angeordnet denken ließe; aber eine Raumanordnung, die trotzdem von einer gewissen Schönheit sogar ist durch das Hell-Dunkel.
341 Hans Multscher (?) Die Grablegung
Sehen Sie sich diese «Grablegung» an. Sie werden finden: alles, sogar bis auf die Behandlung der Landschaft hin alles so, wie es charakterisiert werden mußte als Eindringen des Individuellen in das Traditionelle - das Interesse am Geschehen, nicht an der Darstellung dessen, was aus der geistigen Welt heraus kommt.
342 Hans Multscher Wurzacher Altar: Die Auferstehung
Sie sehen hier, wie die Individualisierung insbesondere hineinkommt in das ganze Bild dadurch, daß versucht ist, in einer entsprechenden Weise die Wächter darzustellen; die Verdrehung des Körpers soll zur Individualisierung beitragen. Ich bitte Sie, den einen dort oben links anzusehen, wie versucht ist, seine besondere Situation, sein besonderes Erleben, sein eigenartiges Unaufmerksamsein individuell auszuführen. Versuchen Sie zu sehen, wie der Maler versucht hat, den Kopf hier von vorne zu zeigen, wie er hier rechts charakteristisch den Schädel von hinten zeigt bei dem anderen Wächter. Man sieht, wie das Streben, individuell zu gestalten, hineinkommt; man sieht auch wiederum, wie das Hell-Dunkel hineinkommt. Man sieht, wie durch die Individualisierung versucht wird, den Raum zu gestalten, denn Perspektive ist ja noch gar nicht vorhanden. Wenn Sie sich vorstellen wollen den Punkt, von dem aus die Sehlinien für die Figuren gehen, so werden Sie ihn ziemlich weit hier vorne denken müssen; für den Sarg, der da aufgestellt ist, müssen Sie ihn wiederum an einem andern Ort denken - und gar für die Bäume! Die sind in völliger Frontalansicht gemalt.
Nun, ich wollte Ihnen zeigen, daß die gesetzmäßigen Entwickelungsimpulse, von denen ich schon das letzte Mal hier gesprochen habe, in den Bildern der italienischen Malerei, daß diese tief wirksam sind, und daß man dasjenige, was vom 15. Jahrhundert ab als das Charakteristische unseres Zeitalters heraufkommt, nur verstehen kann, wenn man sich die ganze tiefe Bedeutsamkeit jenes Zeiteinschnittes klar macht, die im Beginne des 15. Jahrhunderts die Grenze bildet zwischen dem vierten und fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum. Was da sich umgestaltet, das lebt schon im ganzen Geschehen und Werden von Europa, nachdem vom 9. Jahrhundert ab zurückgestaut worden ist das, wozu Europa nicht fähig war, weil Europa etwas anderes aus den Tiefen des Wesens heraus gestalten mußte. Das im Osten hat mittlerweile gewartet. Und man sollte sich heute ein Bewußtsein von dem aneignen, was da gewartet hat und was im Westen an die Oberfläche kommen wollte; denn diese Kräfte sind noch durchaus vorhanden, diese Kräfte walten noch in dem gegenwärtigen Geschehen darinnen, wollen noch immer tätig sein. Und ein klares Verständnis dessen, was die Welt durchpulst, was in der Welt tätig ist, uns anzueignen, das ist eine dringende Notwendigkeit für das gegenwärtige Zeitalter. Das habe ich jetzt und seit längerer Zeit ja schon immer und immer wiederum betont. Durch die Entwickelung der mittelalterlichen Kunst in dem charakteristischen Zeitpunkt wollte ich Ihnen das heute klarmachen. Sie sehen, da kommt man, ich möchte sagen auf zwei Wellenschläge des Geschehens: Ein Wellenschlag ist derjenige, der noch etwas Östliches vom Süden heranbringt, einer ist, ich möchte sagen aus den Tiefen selbst heraufgekommen. In diesen Jahrhunderten — dem 13., 14., 15. Jahrhundert, in den Jahrhunderten der Städtefreiheiten, da machte sich am stärksten geltend, was aus den Seelentiefen an die Oberfläche kommen wollte. Dann kommt vom 16. Jahrhundert ab wieder ein Rückschlag — die Entwickelung geht wellenförmig, die Entwickelung oszilliert -, der dann, selbstverständlich nicht gleich, nach außen hin sichtbar geworden ist; denn die Fortsetzung dessen, was ich Ihnen hier gezeigt habe als im 15. Jahrhundert heraufkommend, lebt auf der einen Seite in van Eyck, auf der andern Seite in Dürer, Holbein und so weiter.
Wir sehen in die Niederlande, nach Burgund hinein auf der einen Seite, auf der andern Seite nach Nürnberg, Augsburg, Basel und wir sehen die Nachwirkungen dessen, was da kommen wollte, sehen die Woge, die aus Seelentiefen heraufschlägt, um den fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraum einzuleiten.
Ich wollte nur einen der Impulse dieses fünften nachatlantischen Zeitraumes Ihnen heute vorführen. Von anderen Impulsen habe ich ja bei den verschiedensten Gelegenheiten gerade jetzt zu sprechen.
11. Icon Miniatures by German Masters
The struggle between the individual artistic style of the center and the traditional style of the East (Ikona) pushing up from the South in the significant period between the twilight of the fourth and the dawn of the fifth post-Atlantic period:
I think that right now it is good to become acquainted in the most diverse areas of life with those laws of existence that I have tried to indicate in these lectures by saying: These laws of existence take into account what in spiritual life could be called the weight of things, the weight of beings, whereas the worldview that has prevailed until now has often disregarded this weight. Especially for our present time, it seems necessary to me to understand this current fifth post-Atlantean epoch in which we find ourselves, to understand it with all its peculiarities, so that we may become more and more conscious of its effects. As you know, we date the beginning of this fifth post-Atlantic period from the beginning of the 15th century, from around 1413. The beginning of the 15th century would therefore be a significant, profound turning point in the development of Western humanity. However, such a radical change as this does not happen all at once, but is preceded by a period of preparation. And in the early days of the new epoch, we see only a gradual growth. Old motifs from the earlier epoch carry over into the new one, and so on. What actually experienced this powerful upheaval at the beginning of the 15th century had been in preparation for a long time.
If we want to consider another powerful influence on the historical development of the West in the period preceding the Middle Ages, we can look at the reign of Charlemagne—from 768 to 814, as you know. If you try to picture everything that happened in the West in the broadest sense up to Charlemagne, you will encounter some difficulties. For many contemporary historians, however, such difficulties do not exist because they lump everything together. But for those who want to look at reality, there are profound differences. And it must be said that it is very difficult for people today to form a concept of the completely different nature of life in Europe up to the time of Charlemagne based on the experiences and impressions of the present. But then we can say: after Charlemagne, in the 10th, 11th, and 12th centuries, the period begins in which our period, the fifth post-Atlantic period, is prepared. It is being prepared. Until the time of Charlemagne, old conditions actually continue, for which, as already mentioned, the present no longer has any real ideas. But then the new age begins to prepare itself. And in these three centuries, the 10th, 11th, and 12th centuries—it already begins in the 9th century—things happen in Europe in all areas of life that generate forces which then find particular expression in later times, from the 15th century onwards.
Now, it can be said that during the period of preparation, during the centuries I have just mentioned, Rome had more control over European affairs than we tend to acknowledge today. One must not imagine the papacy as it was in the period from the 9th century onwards, from the middle of the 9th century, when it energetically took control of Europe and extended its influence into all areas of life, but rather as it was in the later centuries or even today. Rather, one can say that at that time, the papacy instinctively knew what Western and Central Europe and Southern Europe needed in the most important areas of life. And I already pointed out last time that, in a sense, Eastern culture had been held back; it was to wait, to wait in Eastern Europe, in Byzantinism, in Russicism. And there it waited, waited until our present time.
What can be said in general terms is particularly evident in the field that can be called art in the broadest sense. And if you want to get an idea of what was suppressed at that time, what was held back in the East, what the West, what Central Europe, Southern Europe were not supposed to have, what was held back in the East, if you want to get an idea of this, then compare a Russian icon
245 Russian icon, around 1100 The Mother of God of Vladimir
with a Raphaelesque Madonna:
245a Raphael Madonna della Sedia
246a Raphael The Sistine Madonna, detail: Madonna with Child
In the Eastern image of Mary, you still have a remnant of what was once held back in the East. Such an image is dominated by a spirit that is completely different from anything that has ever prevailed in the art of the West, the South, and Central Europe; something completely different. Even today, such an icon depicts a figure that has actually been born directly out of the spiritual world. If you imagine it vividly, you cannot imagine a physical space behind the Russian image of the Madonna. You have to imagine that what is behind the image is the spiritual world, and that this image looks out from the spiritual world. Such are its lines, such is everything that is in it. And if one takes the basic character of such an image, its emergence from the spiritual world, then one has what necessarily had to be kept away from Western Europe, Southern Europe, and Central Europe, especially from the 9th century onwards:
246* Italian icon, mid-13th century, Madonna with Child, miraculous image “Maria Schnee”
Why? - Such things must be viewed objectively from a historical perspective. Why did it have to be kept away? Simply because the population of Europe, Central, Western, and Southern Europe, had completely different abilities, completely different inner soul impulses than those who would have been able to understand, from the original, elemental nature of human beings, what had been pushed back, dammed up, in the East. The nature of Western Europe, the nature of its soul, was directed toward something completely different. And if what had been dammed up in the East had been transplanted to Central, Western, and Southern Europe, it could only have remained an external phenomenon outside of Eastern Europe; it could never have grown together with the soul characteristics of Central, Western, and Southern Europe. Space had to be created in Western, Southern, and Central Europe for that which, in a sense, wanted to rise up from the depths, from the depths of the soul of the people itself.
I would say that Rome understood this at the time with genius-like instinct. Even if the dogmatic disputes show a completely different character, the content of the dogmatic disputes is not the content of the whole, true story; rather, for what is at stake, the dogmatic disputes are, I would say, only the final spiritual expression. It is about much more than that. Among other things, it is also about what I have just characterized. And so we see that from the 9th century onwards, throughout the following centuries, Rome used its strong hand to create space in Europe for the development of what the soul of the people was striving for. But it also became very clear what the soul of the people was striving for.
You see, if we consider what might have been achieved if the East had not been held back but had spread across Europe — Charlemagne made a start on this — if it had spread across Europe, then what would have come to Europe — in an external way, as I said, but it would have come — would have been a certain way of looking at objects that speak directly from the spiritual world. That was not to come at first. For in Europe, the materialistic fifth post-Atlantic period was to prepare itself. And it prepared itself in the most important way, especially in Central Europe. People were interested above all in something other than line, form, and color, which speak directly from the spiritual world. People were interested in something else: above all, in Europe, they were interested in what was happening at the time, in what could be told, in what was Freignis. And even when they looked at the individual being, the individual human being, they looked at him entirely from the point of view of how he fitted into the sequence of events that could be told. The 10th, 11th, and 12th centuries can also be called the time of the Roman-German Empire, because it was then that the creation of space spread from Rome for the interests of storytelling, for the interests of working in time, for the conception of the individual figure in time.
You see, this is yet another perspective, different from those I emphasized last year in the previous cycle of such lectures here. This interaction between the Central European Empire and the nature of the Roman Church and its expansion is indeed the inner image of how the fifth post-Atlantic period was prepared in Central Europe at that time. We therefore see that this period is being prepared in Central Europe in such a way that, at first, there is actually little interest in spatial visual art. Spatial visual art is borrowed — remember some of the illustrations I showed you last year — borrowed from what came over from the Orient and then spread, I would say, through the cracks of the main interest. What sprang from the folk culture itself is recounted. And what was to become narrative was to be incorporated into the folk culture, intimately interwoven with it.
See how magnificent images of Central European life, of life in the Rhine region, the Danube region, the northern coast, confront us in the descriptions of the Nibelungenlied, the Waltharilied, and the Gudrunlied. In the way these poems are presented, you have a distinct interest in the events of the time. And see how in the “Heliand,” in this poem, which was written in the age after Charlemagne, the stories of the Gospel are woven into Central European characters, how the character of the biblical events is actually taken up by the immediate interests of Central Europe in the “Heliand.” . What lived in the souls of the European people was to be born out of these souls themselves. Therefore, the Oriental tradition, which has little to do with the temporal and little historical significance, was pushed back. That is why it was pushed back. And when we then see how these popular interests of Europe rise to the surface from deep underground, it is often difficult for us today to really immerse ourselves in that intimacy, in that deep spirituality with which the European human spirit at that time linked its own deepening to the essential spiritual processes. One might say: that which has been held back in the Orient points to spatial infinities, and its representations look in from spatial expanses; that which was to come to the surface in Central Europe should emerge directly from the depths of human souls themselves, from the depths of the soul, not from spatial expanses — from the depths of the soul.
The mysterious workings of the depths of the soul beneath the surface of immediate perceptions was something that lived in souls at that time. People in those centuries were instinctively imbued with the knowledge that the human soul has mysterious impulses at its core, which only sometimes surge to the surface in moments of spiritual celebration. People felt deeply that life is, in a sense, deeper than what the eyes see, the ears hear, and so on, that it comes from unfathomable depths of the soul. And I would like to say: we hear a kind of echo of this depth when we hear something as beautiful as a little poem by Walther von der Vogelweide, which in a sense marks the end of the pure linguistic age, that age in which people did not yet have the ability to truly express in a pictorial way what manifests itself formlessly in the depths of the soul. We are touched by this depth when we allow Walther von der Vogelweide's little poem to affect us, in which he, as an old man, speaks of his own life as he looks back on it. When he had matured as a man, when wisdom had entered his soul and shed some light on the depths of his soul, from which mysterious waves had previously risen like in a dream, something came over Walther von der Vogelweide, which he expresses as follows:
"Oh dear, where have all my years gone!
Did I dream my life, or is it true?
What always seemed real to me, was it a dream?
I have slept long and do not know myself.
Now I am awake, and I do not know
what else was as familiar to me as my own hand."
So says Walther von der Vogelweide at the end of this three-century period, the 10th, 11th, and 12th centuries, the heyday of the Roman-German Empire, which came to an end with this period. It is the period in which interest in events develops most strongly. Art demands representation, pictorial expression of events in Central, Western, and Southern Europe, of events, of becoming. Looking to the East, the expression is of being, of existence, of tranquility, of calmly looking out from the spiritual world. The events that take place directly here, into which the human soul is born, in which the human soul is connected with the greatest, with the most mysterious, also called for pictorial representation. However, this required the fertilization of the South, which had still preserved the echoes of all the traditions that had come over from the Orient. Expressing events was therefore the primary endeavor.
And so, I would say that there were two conflicting impulses in the artistic endeavors of the West; for certainly, the representation of being had been pushed back to the East, but only pushed back; many things had remained. Above all, something remained of what we then see in the East, where icons had to be formed according to strict rules, and other things, according to rules taken from ancient traditions, which must not be violated in terms of line, expression, and so on. All this was also transplanted into the West; but alongside this was the need to combine what was experienced in the environment with what had come to Central Europe as tradition from the south. Of course, this need first manifested itself in the depiction, in the primitive, simple depiction of biblical narratives, of biblical stories. It was not until the beginning of the next three centuries, the 13th, 14th, and 15th, that the power, I would say, for pictorial representation arose in Central Europe. This power is due to a very specific fact. It is due to the fact that during these centuries, the 13th, 14th, 15th centuries, what could be called city rule, the flowering of urbanism, became particularly important throughout Central and Southern Europe. The cities, which at that time were proud of their powerful sovereignty, developed the forces of the people in their midst. And because such cities were not uniformed in this way — neither into the old Roman-German Empire, which was in decline at the time, nor into the later state communities — because these cities were sovereign in themselves, they were able to develop individual forces, as required by the individuality of the soil and the way of life in the individual places. One cannot understand the period of the 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries without repeatedly turning one's gaze to the flourishing of city freedom at that time.
Let us now consider this flowering of urban freedom – we can assume it took place approximately in the 11th, 12th, 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries – and what this urban freedom found in relation to the arts. Certain traditions had remained from Rome. The main thing had been dammed up in the East; but certain traditions had remained, traditions in the lines, in the colors, in the expression of the face; eyes had to be done in a certain way, the nose had to be done in a certain way. But all this conflicted with the need to depict events. We can observe this conflict between the two impulses where art first ventures forth, where it first emerges, where, I would say the monk trained in Rome allows himself to be overwhelmed by what comes to him from Central Europe, by the need to depict biblical things not merely in such a way that the figures that appear in the Bible are depicted as looking out from the spiritual worlds, but in such a way that the biblical itself is an imprint of how man lives among men. This is now imposed on him, the monk, in his solitary work. When he painted his miniatures and depicted the biblical scenes in a small way, he had to take into account, on the one hand, the remnants of tradition and, on the other hand, what wanted to come to the surface as a representation of life.
Today I have two examples of such miniature paintings to show you, from which you will see how in the 11th and 12th centuries — and it is still visible in the 13th century — traditional painting is shown in struggle with events, precisely in this small-scale painting.
Take a look at such a picture from a gospel book depicting “The Birth of Christ” — we already know the picture from last year:
247 Gospel book of Limburg Monastery, 11th century. The Birth of Christ
See how much here still reminds us of the tradition of mere being. See how here, I would say, the figures are still depicted in such a way that they have not absorbed what human beings observe in the external naturalistic reality in which they live, but how the figures here are all still born out of the ideas that human beings have of the spiritual world. Here come the saints, here comes the figure of Christ himself, all of this still comes across from another world. Behind the picture surface, we can only imagine the spiritual world, figuratively and radically speaking, of course. There is not yet a trace of anything reminiscent of naturalism. Notice how there is not a trace of perspective, not a trace of an attempt in this picture to represent space in any way; everything is on the surface, but everything still represents the spiritual. And yet, if you look at the individual figures, you will notice—still clumsily, but nevertheless—the urge to express something. You will notice that two things are struggling with each other. Look at the eyes of the figure on the right and the one on the left, and you will certainly notice that there is still something of tradition in them; that the person who painted this in his monastery cell still had the teaching in his head: you must paint eyes in a certain way; the expression must be such and such—but he is already struggling with it; in a certain sense, he is already adapting the gaze to the situation and the events.
It is precisely in these small paintings, which have been painted into the Gospels, into the books of the Bible, that we see how the principles mentioned above struggle with each other. But alongside this, you see again what is still so prominent in Cimabue, for example, which expresses the Oriental-plastic nature of being. Here, the angel figures at the top are reminiscent of a message from the spiritual world itself, a representation of being, not of events – although in Cimabue's work, this is only an Oriental echo of the pictorial concept.
Another example is the second image I have prepared, which is from a Trier Gospel book:
248 Codex Egberti, 10th century. The birth of Christ and the annunciation to the shepherds
Here you can see the annunciation to the shepherds at the bottom and the birth of Christ at the top. Especially when you take this Annunciation to the Shepherds, where the angels proclaim to the shepherds “Glory in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men,” when you take this, you find there, I would say, the intermingling of these two impulses. How, in all three of the men's faces, we already encounter the striving to depict events! But on the other hand, how far removed everything is from any observation of nature; how much tradition still plays a part! — I would say: feel it in the wings of the angels above, that it was written in a book: wings must be designed in such a way that they run obliquely towards the main scene, that they point to one side, and so on. You feel the rule, and at the same time you feel the urge to observe the events breaking in from such a depiction, but it cannot yet be acted upon. Feel it and note in all this, in order to see how little observation of nature is still present, that there is not a trace of spatial treatment, not a trace of perspective in this picture, that all this is only, I would say, still implicit, only in the layout, in the mind of the artist; while rules on how to do such things, the teachings, still essentially prevailed.
And now we see how, at the end of three centuries of the Roman-German Empire before the founding of the city, the urge to depict events in conjunction with what is prescribed, what is the representation of being, leads to the most beautiful blossoming in Central Europe with a certain suddenness. Cologne is one of those cities in which urban freedoms flourished most intensively and which, at the same time, had the opportunity to absorb what came from the East in terms of ancient traditional art through the intensive spread of Roman Catholic rule. No wonder, then, that it is precisely in Cologne that we encounter an opportunity to see how the two impulses are wonderfully intertwined and interwoven: that which, I would say, was based on ancient and venerable tradition, so that one imagined: this is what a Madonna looks like — and the urge to depict events. What a Madonna should look like—in the East, it is frozen in spirituality; majestic, sublime, but frozen in spirituality. It must wait. Movement is brought in in the West. That which has come down from heaven as a revelation about the figure of the Madonna, which is so magnificently and sublimely portrayed in the Russian Madonna, is permeated by what one sees immediately: the most beautiful that can be revealed in the human face, the loveliest, the immediate imprint of human capacity for love, human friendliness, human benevolence, everything that lives in the environment in intimate connection with the revealed figure of the Madonna.
Think about this and then look at the painting by a Cologne master named Wilhelm, the so-called “Mary with the Bean Blossom”:
243 Master of the Veronica Madonna with the Vetch Blossom, part of 238
Here you can see what I actually wanted to suggest; here you can see how an attempt is made to bring life, that is, events and becoming, into the depiction of Mary. Here, individualistic observation has been carried over into the traditional, down to the details. I would say that the old rules are only observed in terms of their spirit; the figures are noble, sublime, but no longer in terms of their lines, so tradition is already enlivened by individual observation. That is what we admire so much about this master.
Another painting by the same master, the “Veil of Veronica,”
237 Master of Veronica St. Veronica with the Veil
shows you what I have just explained in another representation. Just think how much of what can be directly observed as revealing itself from the depths of the soul has entered into the traditionally heavenly figure, into the revealed figure of the Savior's face, the “face of Veronica.” Try to imagine how individualized the angel faces at the bottom already are! Try to imagine how, in this picture, the individualization of the figures makes it no longer possible to imagine heaven directly behind them. But something else is possible! Behind the picture, which has emerged from the Oriental mindset (245), one can directly imagine the spiritual world, something else than what the picture depicts. Here (237) one can also imagine something else, must find something else than what the picture depicts. One senses much of what has gone before, what one knows from the Bible; one senses much of what is to follow; one senses events. And what is depicted is a scene from a before and after. So it is not something like a spirit realm behind it, but something like a before and after that one senses. Even if the individual is depicted—the visual arts must do this—the individual is nevertheless lifted out of the event. This is what confronts us, I would say, as the conclusion of that period in which Rome, out of such deep understanding, created space in Europe for three to four centuries for what wanted to emerge from the peoples. This seems to us to be the conclusion of the work of the ingenious master who created such things in Cologne.
This is where the intertwining of the two impulses I have characterized becomes particularly apparent. And now, in order to show you the forces that were at work everywhere, I would like to show you a few pictures by the painter who, from Constance, where he was probably educated, then traveled through other countries, learned various things, then came to Cologne and became, in a sense, the successor to the so-called Master Wilhelm, Stefan Lochner. The first is a picture of Mary—we already know it:
244 Stefan Lochner The Adoration of the Magi, detail: The Madonna
In this painting, you can already see—you only need to compare the individual heads—the urge to fully express becoming through the individual design of the image. You can see this endeavor. You don't yet see any possibility of using space; everything is on the surface, you do not yet see any possibility of applying perspective in any way; but you see the longing, the urge, the instinct, what one might call the event, captured in the pictorial representation; you see the urge to characterize; you see a before and an after, highlighting what is depicted pictorially as a scene.
Now I ask you to consider that the two previous images (237, 238) that we have shown from the Cologne master fall precisely into the heyday of this master's work, which is from about 1370 to 1410, i.e., directly into the period in which the fourth post-Atlantean epoch comes to an end. This painting by Stefan Lochner (239) now falls into the fifth post-Atlantean period. So I have shown you a series of paintings that mark the boundary between the fourth and fifth post-Atlantean periods.
And what is particularly characteristic? — Do we not see this particularly characteristic feature of the fifth post-Atlantean epoch playing into this depiction? Do we not see in Mary's downcast eyes, in the child's blessing hand, in the differences in the facial expressions of the right and left figures, in the individual design of the other figures — do we not see what becomes characteristic of the fifth post-Atlantean period: personality playing into the pictorial representation? Do we not see how personality comes into play here? And do we not see, above all, the desire to express precisely what is most significant for Central Europe in the fifth post-Atlantean period in terms of art: chiaroscuro? — How little significance chiaroscuro has for what is ancient tradition, the chiaroscuro in which human beings live, which human beings not only see, but in which they feel their lives, because light delights them, because brightness enlivens them, because they enter into tranquility with darkness, because in darkness they retreat into the mysterious depths of the soul. This inner life in the world of individual souls, which comes to the fore especially in the fifth post-Atlantean period, can also be seen in the appearance of light and dark, in the distribution of the light mass: in the middle, the light above the child. We see this light spreading out in individual masses to the left and right, becoming brighter upwards, no longer ending in the golden background as before, but in the light. So what we are observing here is the interplay of the individual and the personal; and no one can actually look at the things we have just presented in succession without noticing that, even if only very quietly, something completely new is coming into play as an element of the fifth post-Atlantean period in the fading fourth post-Atlantean period.
Let us take another look at the previous image of the Madonna:
243 Master of the Veronica Madonna with the Sweet Pea, part of 238
Take a good look at this child's face and try to feel how much tradition still lives on here. And now let us look at the other one again,
244 Stefan Lochner The Adoration of the Magi, part: The Madonna
look at the Madonna and Child and see how a new influence has really come into play here, how a completely new impulse of individuality really strikes. And so in the following paintings by Stefan Lochner, whereby I expressly note that Stefan Lochner comes from the region where people were most incapable of accepting tradition because they were most driven to form the individuality in which man is placed. It is the area around Lake Constance, the area of southern Bavaria, the area of western Austria. There were the tribes who, out of their national character, strove most for the individual, who rejected the traditional most. Now Stefan Lochner had the good fortune to aim this, I would say Bavarian, tension toward the individual to a place where, despite the striving for the individual, the great sublime and sacred tradition of the old still lived on. Because the revolutionary, individual urge lived more strongly in him than in Master Wilhelm, he produced this image by combining this revolutionary-individual urge within himself with the smoothed-out typicality of the tradition that had come to Cologne.
241 Stefan Lochner Madonna with the Violet
In a sense, spatial art had not yet been invented for an artist such as Stefan Lochner; depicting space was not possible in Cologne at that time, but attempts were made to bring the soul into the imagery.
And these things were placed entirely within world historical events and developments when one compares such a painting from the West with a Madonna from the East:
245 Russian icon, around 1100 The Mother of God of Vladimir Take a look at the next picture, 242 Stefan Lochner Madonna in the Rose Arbor
which you are already familiar with, and note in particular how this interweaving of the individual and the generally typical emerges in Stefan Lochner's work, how chiaroscuro already emerges in his work, even though in these pictures there is still no attempt to conquer space or to appropriate perspective; but in chiaroscuro we see a different kind of conquest of space than that achieved through perspective. And perspective was, after all, invented in the south, one might say by Brunelleschi—I explained this to you last year. And now a “Christ on the Cross,”
240 Stefan Lochner Christ on the Cross with Saints
in which you can see that there is not yet a trace of composition, that even where the representation itself would have urged us to study the space, there is still no trace of space, but that on the other hand, an attempt has been made to develop each of the six secondary figures individually, just as an attempt has been made to individualize the Savior himself. Please recall the paintings by the Cologne Master (237, 238) and compare them with the four paintings by Stefan Lochner (239–242) that we have seen. You cannot fail to be deeply impressed by the difference between the two, for this difference is that between the fourth and fifth post-Atlantean periods. Stefan Lochner seeks to depict the soul, but he already seeks to find the forms in which the soul expresses itself in the figures of nature itself. Master Wilhelm still hovered in a supersensible soul feeling, and he expresses this from an inner feeling. He does not express it by looking at the model. Here (237) you can already see him looking at the model so that the soul itself shows how it reveals itself. Master Wilhelm is still an expresser of his own feelings. Stefan Lochner is already an imitator of nature. That is indeed realism; naturalism is emerging. And we can draw the line as sharply as we have between these two painters, who are actually only a few decades apart.
You can see that the laws we seek through spiritual science are truly expressed in the individual spheres of life, if only we would bring these spheres of life before our souls not without weight, but with their weightiness.
And now I would like to bring this fact before your souls once again by showing you two painters who worked more in the south. So that was what happened in Cologne. Now let us look further south, to Bavaria, to the Constance, Ulm, or Rhine regions, and see how conditions were before and after the turning point that separates the fourth from the fifth post-Atlantean epoch. First, I would like to show you two paintings by Lucas Moser, who lived at the beginning of the 15th century and can certainly be counted as belonging to the fourth post-Atlantean period.
Look at this painting, the saints sailing out to sea on a ship.
335 Lucas Moser The Magdalene Altar, part: The Sea Voyage of the Saints
Try to sense in this painting how everything is painted in such a way that you realize the painter still went through the school that told him: When you paint figures next to each other, you must paint one en face and the other in profile; when you paint waves, you must paint them this way. — Here you see the entire play of the waves of the sea, not observed, but painted “by the book”; here you see the figures arranged “by the book”; here you see nothing observed; everything is composed. This painting from the Tiefenbronn Altar thus depicts the voyage of the saints.
The next picture depicts the rest, the night's repose of the same saints.
336 Lucas Moser The Magdalene Altar, part: The sleeping saints
A medieval house, attached to a church, now you probably notice how little anything has been observed, how everything has been painted from memory. Look at the sleeping Saint Cedonius there; he is wearing his mitre while sleeping, and he still has his glove on. It should be painted entirely according to the rules – and only what is of primary interest is allowed to creep into the depiction. Consider: this is a continuous journey that the saints make, a journey of the saints; they travel across the sea, they rest at night – it is a narrative. And yet, what is depicted is what has become established as the image, still entirely in keeping with tradition. Lazarus there, resting in his mother's lap!
When we see such a depiction before us, we can look back on what was depicted in earlier times. So this is the last period of the fourth post-Atlantean epoch. In the West, too, there were still rules governing how such images, which were to be painted in churches, had to be painted. Paintings were created according to strictly defined traditional rules. The painter received his task, so to speak, from tradition itself: this is what Saint Zedonius looked like, this is what Saint Lazarus looked like, Saint Magdalene and so on; he had to paint them; that was the rule, not as strict as in the East, but still a rule. But he also had to pay attention to drives, instincts, interests, and create a narrative! Thus, things flow into one another, they clash at the end of an era.
Now let us look back to the 13th, 12th, and 11th centuries. In all churches, what was strictly prescribed was depicted. One image looked like another throughout Christendom, varying only slightly in the way things were ordered. But once Saint Zedonius was appointed, he was painted as prescribed. That was the tradition.
Now let us consider the turning point, the beginning of the 15th century, and move from Lucas Moser, the last latecomer of the fourth post-Atlantean period, to Hans Multscher and see how this painter is now truly immersed in the dawn, in the first light of the fifth post-Atlantean period. Look at this picture,
339 Hans Multscher The Birth of Christ
a “Birth of Christ,” so you already have in this picture the appearance of the individual-personal, the characteristic of the personal. You do not yet see in Moser the slightest longing to look at nature. Here (339) you find a person who is already striving—even though he has no idea about any kind of spatial treatment, even though everything is jumbled together, nothing is right in terms of spatial treatment or perspective—who is striving to characterize from the soul, but in the same way that nature itself already characterizes from the soul. He is already trying to recreate the individual figures.
340 Hans Multscher Christ on the Mount of Olives
What I have just said will strike you even more in this picture, especially when you look at the three figures sleeping below. How the artist attempts to express the soul, but also the nature of sleep. Compare this with what you remember of the sleeping saints on the sea voyage (335) and at rest (336), and you will see what a powerful break there is in the development between the two. And see how consciously light and dark penetrate the depiction. For it is solely through this, and not through any kind of perspective, that the painter achieves a spatial arrangement. The perspective is completely incorrect, because there is not even a uniform viewpoint; you cannot find a point from which the whole situation could be thought of as arranged; but a spatial arrangement that nevertheless has a certain beauty, even through the chiaroscuro.
341 Hans Multscher (?) The Entombment
Take a look at this “Entombment.” You will find that everything, even down to the treatment of the landscape, can be characterized as the intrusion of the individual into the traditional—an interest in the event, not in the representation of what comes from the spiritual world.
342 Hans Multscher Wurzach Altar: The Resurrection
Here you can see how individualization enters into the whole picture, in particular, through the attempt to depict the guards in an appropriate manner; the twisting of the body is intended to contribute to individualization. I ask you to look at the one up there on the left, how an attempt is made to individually express his particular situation, his particular experience, his peculiar inattentiveness. Try to see how the painter has attempted to show the head from the front here, and how he characteristically shows the skull from behind in the other guard on the right. You can see how the striving for individuality comes into play; you can also see how chiaroscuro comes into play. You can see how individualization is used to try to create space, because there is no perspective at all. If you want to imagine the point from which the lines of sight for the figures originate, you will have to think of it quite far forward here; for the coffin that is set up there, you will have to think of it in another place – and even more so for the trees! They are painted in a completely frontal view.
Now, I wanted to show you that the lawful impulses of development, which I already spoke about here last time, are deeply effective in the paintings of Italian art, and that one can only understand what has emerged since the 15th century as characteristic of our age if one realizes the profound significance of that turning point, which at the beginning of the 15th century forms the boundary between the fourth and fifth post-Atlantic periods. What is being transformed there already lives in the whole of Europe's history and development, after what Europe was not capable of had been held back since the 9th century, because Europe had to shape something else from the depths of its being. That in the East has been waiting in the meantime. And today we should become aware of what has been waiting there and what wanted to come to the surface in the West; for these forces are still very much present, these forces still prevail in current events, still want to be active. And to acquire a clear understanding of what pulsates through the world, what is active in the world, is an urgent necessity for the present age. I have emphasized this again and again, now and for a long time. I wanted to make this clear to you today through the development of medieval art at this characteristic point in time. You see, there are, I would say, two waves of events: one wave is that which still brings something Eastern from the South, and one is, I would say, that which has risen up from the depths themselves. In these centuries — the 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries, the centuries of city freedoms — what wanted to come to the surface from the depths of the soul made itself felt most strongly. Then, from the 16th century onwards, there is another setback — development proceeds in waves, development oscillates — which, of course, did not immediately become visible to the outside world; for the continuation of what I have shown you here as emerging in the 15th century lives on, on the one hand, in van Eyck, and on the other, in Dürer, Holbein, and so on.
We look to the Netherlands, to Burgundy on the one hand, and to Nuremberg, Augsburg, and Basel on the other, and we see the aftereffects of what was to come, we see the wave rising from the depths of the soul to usher in the fifth post-Atlantic period.
I just wanted to show you one of the impulses of this fifth post-Atlantic period today. I will be talking about other impulses on various occasions right now.
