Special Exhibition
Strindberg, Schönberg, Munch
Nordic Modernism in Schönberg’s Vienna around 1900

25 September 2008 – 18 January 2009

 

Opening Hours

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday,
Friday, 12 noon to 6 pm
Wednesday, 12 noon to 7 pm
Saturday and Sunday, 10 am to 4 pm

Closed: 24, 25, 26 and on 31 December
2008, 1 January 2009

Longing for the North – Outreach program for children aged 6 to 10 concerning the exhibition


Photo service
Information

 


The artistic works of August Strindberg, Arnold Schönberg and Edvard Munch open up expanses and abysses of the human soul; they tell of extreme mental conditions, loneliness, anxieties and visions of death, linked with fantastical manifestations such as ghosts and vampires. “Inner necessity” drove the three avant-garde artists to create their work by “approximately copying Nature, especially her way of creating” (Strindberg), “directly expressing” themselves (Schönberg), in order to “experiment, develop and improve” (Munch). They mistrusted superficial perception, turning their gazes inwards instead in order to grasp the intangibles of the subjectively experienced world.

A comprehensive collection of August Strindberg’s pictorial masterpieces is now on display for the first time in Austria; he once called this country his “homeland, even more than Sweden!” Munch exhibited here several times after 1900 and Schönberg,
impressed by Munch’s paintings and Strindberg’s writings, composed and painted in Vienna. It was here that Strindberg found inspiration for some of his plays and for his most important landscape paintings.

The focus of this exhibit is on presenting Strindberg’s paintings, pointing out their mental and aesthetic proximity to the compositions of his Viennese contemporaries. Strindberg’s paintings of spiritual landscapes show similarities to Schönberg’s artwork; his cloud studies find their counterparts in Schönberg’s War-Clouds Diary. Apart from aesthetic similarities to Schönberg’s paintings, Munch’s artistic work evinces affinities with the intellectual scene in Vienna around 1900. Schönberg’s Gazes are reminiscent of Munch’s Fear, The Scream, Despair; a sketch for the set design of Die glückliche Hand recalls Munch’s Vampire, the groupings of people in Burial of Gustav Mahler echo Munch’s Death Throes, whereas his illustrations of trees seem to range between those of Munch and Strindberg (The Boulevard).

Parallel to the pictorial aspect, this exhibit also illuminates just how Schönberg and his circle were preoccupied with the Nordic literary avant-garde; stage works by the Viennese School are akin to Strindberg’s in terms of content and form. In recurring motifs surrounding the essence of femaleness and the relationship of the sexes to each other, Strindberg found an approach through writing to a “naturalism of the mind,” as his friend Stanisłav Przybyszewski called it, which Schönberg discovered for himself in a similar manner as he wrote his monodramas Erwartung (to a libretto by Marie Pappenheim) and Die glückliche Hand.

The religious orientation of Strindberg’s world – often extending to the occult and theosophy – is reflected in Schönberg’s works (the oratorio Die Jakobsleiter, for example), while Alban Berg planned several compositions based on Strindberg’s work and Anton Webern came to grips with Swedish mystic, theologian and scientist Emanuel Swedenborg in his theater piece Tot (Dead).

The polarization of an objective, scientifically exact way of world view and a mystical, irrational and subjective one pervaded the thought of the Nordic avant-garde and that of the Viennese moderns of the time.

This exhibit is an attempt at detecting and presenting the affinities among the forms of expression in music, painting and writing, as well as tracing the intellectual kinship of the influential cultural milieus in Vienna and Northern Europe in the years surrounding 1900.

Entrance fees
Entrance: 7.00 Eur
Reduced: 3.50 Eur
Groups with 10 or more persons: 5.20 Eur/2.60 Eur
10 % discount: “Vienna-Card,” members of Club Ö1
Children under 12: free
Welfare recipients, recipients of a minimum pension, unemployed and refugees with Kulturpass: free

Guided tours
Guided tours (German/English) for group-visits may be
arranged upon request by calling
(+43/1) 712 18 88/ext. 13
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