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The Rudolf Steiner Archive

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Search results 5851 through 5860 of 6549

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291. Titian's “Assumption of Mary” 09 Jun 1923, Dornach

A world emerges all by itself. Because if you understand color, then you understand an ingredient of the whole world. You see, Kant once said: Give me matter, and I will create a world out of it.
If Mary were down there, for example, one would not understand the purpose. If she were sitting among the apostles, yes, she could not look as she does in the middle between heaven and earth.
And if you accept that there is a relationship to the spiritual from the artistic point of view, you will understand that the artistic is something through which one can enter the spiritual world, both in creating and in enjoying.
292. The History of Art I: Cimabue, Giotto, and Other Italian Masters 08 Oct 1916, Dornach
Translator Unknown

First you will see some picture by Cimabue. Under this name there go, or, rather, used to go—a number of pictures, church paintings, springing from a conception of life altogether remote from our own.
Strangely enough, this discussion went on into the time when in the West, under the influence of Rome, men had already lost the faculty to represent real beauty—a faculty which they had still possessed in former centuries under the more immediate influence of Greece.
The birds are his brothers and his sisters; the stars, the sun, the moon, the little worm that crawls over the Earth—all are his brothers and his sisters; on all of them he looks with loving sympathy and understanding. Going along his way he picks up the little worm and puts it on one side so as not to tread it underfoot.
292. The History of Art I: Leonardo, Michelangelo and Raphael 01 Nov 1916, Dornach
Translator Unknown

I still remember with a shudder how at the beginning of the theosophical movement in Germany a man once came to me in Berlin, bringing with him reproductions of a picture he had painted. The subject was: Buddha under the Bodhi Tree. It is true there sat a huddled figure under a tree, but the man—if you will pardon me the apt expression—understood as little of Art as an ox, having eaten grass throughout the week, understands of Sunday.
For Leonardo was truly a man who sought to understand Nature. He tried in an even wider sense to understand the forces of Nature as they play their part in human life.
Summing up, therefore, we may say: Leonardo lives in the midst of a large and universal understanding. He strikes us, stings us, as it were, into awakeness with his keen World-understanding. Michelangelo lives in the policical understanding of his time; this becomes the dominant impulse of his feeling.
292. The History of Art I: Dürer and Holbein 08 Nov 1916, Dornach
Translator Unknown

The sign or token, and the inner life which it contains underlies this kind of imagination, which is able, therefore, to unite itself far more with the individual expression of the soul's life; with all that springs directly from the Will-impulse of the soul.
It contains, if I may describe it so, a practicality of life, a cleverness in skill and understanding, a certain realism. It comes to Europe on the Norman waves of culture. The other impulse comes from Spain, and more especially from Southern France. Thus we have coming from the North an element of intelligence, utility and realism (but we must not confuse this with the later realism; this early realism sought to understand the Universe, the Cosmos, and wanted to see all earthly things in their connection with the heavenly).
292. The History of Art I: Mid-European and Southern Art 15 Nov 1916, Dornach
Translator Unknown

You will remember what I emphasised last time. From underlying impulses of the Mid-European spiritual life, there arose what we may call the art of expression—expression of Will and Intelligence—the power to express the ever-mobile life of the soul.
Most, if not all of them are the independent work of the Dutch sculptor, Sluter, or else done under his direction. He brought to the Chartreuse at Dijon, from the Netherlands, an almost unique power of individual characterisation.
Infinitely much is contained in such a simple statement. But we only learn to understand these things of Spiritual Science rightly when we follow them into the several and detailed domains of human life.
292. The History of Art I: Rembrandt 28 Nov 1916, Dornach
Translator Unknown

As the plants grow forth from the common soil under the influence of the common sunlight, so do the phenomena of history grow from cut a common soil, conjured forth by the activity of the Spiritual that ensouls humanity.
What, after all, did the late 19th century (I refer to wider circles, a few individuals always excepted) understand of such writers as Goethe or Lessing? They understood practically nothing of their greatest works.
We ourselves, in recent lantern lectures, have brought before our souls the flowering of artistic life in that age. Hermann Grimm rightly says that to understand what took its start in that period we must go back to the Carolingian era. Nothing can teach us to understand so well what was living in the age of Charlemagne as the Song of Valthari, written by a monk of St.
277c. The Development of Eurythmy 1920–1922: Eurythmy Address 17 Apr 1921, Dornach

So the artistic element must first be drawn out of what underlies this eurythmic language. But now we can see that the artistic element can indeed be expanded if we try to translate the human form itself into movement; and we arrive at the sources of movements that are naturally and elementarily present in the human organism.
277c. The Development of Eurythmy 1920–1922: Eurythmy Address 24 Apr 1921, Dornach

Goethe with “Elven Prelude” “Good Night” (children's group) “Guests at the Beech” (children's group) Humorous poems by Christian Morgenstern: ‘The Sniffles’; ‘Under Times’; ‘The Priestess’; ‘The Dog's Grave’; ‘Moon Things’ Distinguished attendees!
Perhaps the best way to express what is involved in terms of the human being is to recall Goethe's theory of metamorphosis, that work of Goethe's that is still far too little considered today, but that will one day, when we see these things more impartially, play a great role in our understanding of the living. In the individual plant leaf Goethe sees an entire plant, only simply formed.
277c. The Development of Eurythmy 1920–1922: Eurythmy Address 01 May 1921, Dornach

For what underlies this eurythmic language is observed – to use this Goethean expression – through sensual-supersensory observation of everything that, as movement tendencies, as movement intentions, underlies, so to speak, the emergence of phonetic language and song.
It is to be hoped — although I have not yet succeeded — that the underlying principles of other dramatic poetry, that is, of realism in drama, will also be able to find their eurythmic expression.
Yes, but if the matter were such that the law of the world simply does not reveal itself when one applies only abstract logic to it, namely human life. It is impossible to understand it if one wants to stick to abstract laws, for example abstract historical laws, if one does not move on to a pictorial understanding of what plays a role in human life.
277c. The Development of Eurythmy 1920–1922: Eurythmy Address 05 May 1921, Dornach

This is the case in the scene that is to be presented today and in which the eurythmic means of expression is used in particular. It shows how John undergoes such inner psychological processes. But it would only give a pale picture if, for example, John were to express them or if they were to be depicted symbolically.

Results 5851 through 5860 of 6549

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