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| All photographs provided
courtesy of the Milwaukee Art Museum, with special thanks to
John Eding, Media Relations Manager. |
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Biedermeier,
The Invention of Simplicity
Milwaukee Art Museum: September 16, 2006-January 1, 2007
Albertina, Vienna: February 2, 2007-May 13, 2007
Berlin Deutsches Historisches Museum: June 8, 2007-Spetember 2,
2007
Musée du Louvre, Paris: October 15, 2007-January 15, 2008
Biedermeier, The Invention of Simplicity
Hans Ottomeyer, Klaus Albrecht Schröder and Laurie Winters
Milwaukee Art Museum: Hatje Canze Verlag, Ostfildern, Germany
400pp; 350 color illus; bibliography.
$65 [hard cover]; $45 [soft cover]
ISBN: 978-3-7757-1796-0 [hard cover]: Support NCAW: click to buy this book on Amazon
ISBN: 978-0-944110-89-8 [soft cover] |
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| Fig.
1. Exhibition installation of Biedermeier, The Invention
of Simplicity at the Milwaukee Art Museum. |
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| Fig.
2. Settee Austria c. 1820. Maple veneer, mahogany veneer,
upholstery. Private collection. Photograph by Schlapka KG, Axel
Schlapka |
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| Fig.
3. Pair of Armchairs, Austria. c, 1830. Walnut veneer,
modern upholstery. New York: Collection of Christopher Forbes.
Photograph by John Hall © Abbeville Press. |
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| Fig.
4. Artist Unknown. Living Room with Laid Table, 1830.
Pencil, watercolor, and gouache on cardboard. Nuremberg: Germanisches
Nationalmuseum. Photograph courtesy of Germanisches Nationalmuseum. |
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| Fig.
5. Johann Stephan Decker. Room in the apartment of Duchess
Sophie in Blauer Hof in Laxenburg, 1826. Gouache. Pottsdam:
Stiftung Preussische Schlösser und Gärten Berlin-Brandenburg.
Photograph courtesy of Stiftung Preussische Schlösser und
Gärten Berlin-Brandenburg. |
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| Fig.
6. Johann Stephan Decker, Emperor Franz I in His Study,
after 1821. Oil on canvas. Vienna: Österreichische Galerie
Belvedere. Photograph courtesy of Österreichische Galerie
Belvedere. |
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| Fig.
7. Friedrich von Gärtner and Johann Peter Melchior, Coffee
Service, c. 1825. Porcelain, matte-blue glaze, gilding.
Berlin: Deutsches Historisches Museum. Photograph courtesy of
Dorotheum, Vienna. |
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| Fig.
8. Franz Köll, Coffee Pot and Percolator, 1818.
Silver, fruitwood. Asenbaum Collection. Photograph by Lois Lammerhuber,
Vienna. |
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| Fig.
9. Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Chair, 1825. Polished beech,
cane seat. Potsdam: Stiftung Preussische Schlösser und
Gärten Berlin-Brandenburg. Photograph by Lois Lammerhuber,
Vienna. |
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| Fig.
10. Danhauser'sche Möbelfabrik, Chair, 1826. Mahogany,
mahogany veneer on beech, modern upholstery. Vienna: Bundesmobilien-versaltung,
Hofmobiliendepot. Möbel Museum Wien. Photograph by Lois
Lammerhuber, Vienna. |
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| Fig.
11. Chair, 1815-20. Walnut veneer on beech and softwood.
Prague: Museum of Decorative Arts. Photograph by Miloslav Sebek. |
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| Fig.
12. Jakob Alt, View of Vienna from "Spinnerin am Kreuz,"
1817. Watercolor, gouache. Vienna: Albertina. Photograph courtesy
of Albertina. |
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| Fig.
13. Eduard Gurk, The Basilica of Mariazell Seen from the
Churchyard, 1833. Watercolor. Vienna: Albertina. Photograph
courtesy of Albertina. |
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| Fig.
14. Exhibition installation of the "red gallery." |
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| Fig.
15. Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller, Catharina Baroness von
Koudelka, 1822. Oil on canvas. Vienna: Österreichische
Galerie Belvedere. Photograph courtesy of Österreichische
Galerie Belvedere. |
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| Fig.
16. Jiríkovo Údolí, Gourd-shaped Vase,
1820. Georgenthal Glassworks. Hot-shaped hyalith. Prague: Museum
of Decorative Arts. Photograph by Gabriel Urbánek. |
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| Fig.
17. Exhibition installation of Morgenstern wallpaper
from a Wallpaper Pattern Book, Vienna, 1822-24. |
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| Fig.
18. Exhibition installation with green plaid wallpaper produced
by StudioPrintworks, Chicago. |
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| Fig.
19. Settee, 1825-30. Vienna. Walnut veneer on softwood,
modern upholstery. Milwaukee Art Museum. Photograph by Lois
Lammerhuber, Vienna. |
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| Fig.
20. Settee, 1825-30, Vienna. Walnut, walnut veneer, modern
upholstery. Paris and New York: Collection Didier Aaron, Inc.
and Barry Friedman, Ltd. Photograph by Didier Aaron, Inc. and
Barry Friedman, Ltd., Paris and New York. |
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It's not often that a museum develops
an exhibition that creates a major shift in art historical understanding
of a particular period, style or artist. Biedermeier, The Invention
of Simplicity, organized by the Milwaukee Art Museum in collaboration
with the Deutsches Historisches Museum in Berlin and the Albertina
in Vienna, is one of those rare exceptions. The overarching goal of
this exhibition is the re-examination of the Biedermeier aesthetic
in Central Europe from 1815 to 1848. With a stunning display of over
400 objects, the show includes paintings, drawings, decorative arts,
and sculpture, as well as cultural artifactssuch as scientific
instruments and clothingthat inform the larger social context.
The exhibition is not only ambitious in scope, but also in its intellectual
objective of presenting a coherent body of work that defines the Biedermeier
period in a clear historical framework. Laurie Winters, curator of
Earlier European Art at the Milwaukee Art Museum, deserves much credit
for nurturing collaboration among the international scholars who have
been redefining aspects of the Biedermeier period in recent decades.
It should also be noted that this is the first time that an American
museum has ever generated an exhibition on this subject. |
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Entering
the first gallery, it is immediately clear that any preconceptions
about the definition of "Biedermeier" must be discarded.
This viewer's impression was that I'd stumbled into an exhibition
on early modernism by mistakeand that is precisely the point
that the curators wish to make. Winters defines the stylistic characteristics
of Biedermeier succinctly in the excellent catalogue accompanying
the exhibition: "purity and abstraction of form, brilliant color,
lack of superficial ornamentation, and a sensitive appreciation for
and reliance on nature" (39). These traits are apparent in the
dramatic display of furniture facing the main entrance into the gallery.
Installed on a low base against a dazzling blue and white diamond-patterned
wallpaper are two long case clocks, two settees, and two cabinets
that proclaim a clear preference for geometric purity of form, and
a taste for revealing the natural beauty of wood veneers (fig. 1).
The Austrian settee and chairs from 1820 looks like nothing so much
as 1950s pedestal furniture by Eero Saarinen (figs. 2, 3). Not only
are these pieces strikingly modern in form, but the emphasis on natural
wood grains seems almost a precursor to the Japonisme that will emerge
later in the nineteenth century. This initial presentation of Biedermeier
design very effectively challenges many assumptions about early nineteenth-century
aesthetics. Any lingering thoughts about stodgy middle-class furnishings
or sentimental revivalism must be shelved in light of the crisp elegance
of the artworks on display. |
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The theme of this first gallery is
"Cultural Life", which appropriately sets the stage for
an understanding of the Biedermeier aesthetic as well as the social
context in which it developed. Once the initial impact of such unexpected
modernity abates, the exhibition's scope begins to unfold. In the
small grouping of watercolor zimmerbilder, or 'room portraits',
the viewer is introduced to a uniquely Biedermeier genre of recording
interiors as documentation of both social status and personal history
(fig. 4). Although related to French architectural drawings and interior
views, the zimmerbilder are not primarily design documents,
but rather records of an individual's taste. As Laurie Stein notes
in her essay on "Interior Views," the "Zimmerbild
can be understood as an abstracted portrait of the inhabitant"
(148). Often these charming images were made to commemorate transitional
moments in lifeas a memorial for someone who has died or as
a parting gift to a child who has married and moved away. This very
private form of imagery was typically pasted into family albums or
incorporated into souvenir collections, where it remained inaccessible
to outsiders. Fortunately, the family albums in many cases belonged
to Central European aristocratic kinship networks, and thus were preserved
for posterity. The 1826 zimmerbild of Duchess Sofie's newly
furnished apartment in the Blauer Hof in Laxenburg is a case in point
(fig. 5). Painted by Johann Stephan Decker, this refreshing interior
rendering illustrates the beautiful grain of the Biedermeier writing
desk, the bright blue and yellow wallpaper, and the elegant simplicity
of this very personal space; and for many decades it belonged to Queen
Elizabeth of Prussia. |
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The relationship between the Biedermeier
period and the aristocracy is another unanticipated aspect of this
exhibition. The conventional interpretation of Biedermeier design
has been that it was a middle-class phenomena largely based on a desire
for modest furnishings that could be purchased at a modest cost. This
interpretation was challenged as long ago as 1986 in Christian Witt-Dörring's
essay on furniture in the exhibition catalogue for Bürgersinn
und Aufbegehren: Biedermeier und Vormärz in Wien 1815-1848
mounted by the Historisches Museum der Stadt Wien; and, in 1987 by
Hans Ottomeyer in the Münchner Stadtmusseum exhibition catalogue,
Biedermeiers Glück und Ende: die gestörte Idylle.
However, these re-evaluations of the Biedermeier style were not widely
recognized outside of German-speaking regions. One of the important
benefits of the current exhibition is the availability of the catalogue
in English and the international exposure resulting from venues in
the United States and France as well as Berlin and Vienna. In his
essay, "The Invention of Simplicity," for the current exhibition
catalogue, Ottomeyer explains that Biedermeier was fundamentally an
aristocratic style. It "originated in commissions for private
domestic interiors by aristocratic and royal patrons. It evolved initially
from the court and thereafter spread into a more broad based usage
among the new moneyed social classes"(45). One of the sources
for this 'invention of simplicity' was Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the
French philosophe whose educational methodology, as articulated
in Emile (1762), was widely implemented among monarchs and
aristocrats in the nineteenth century. Just as Rousseau's idealized
main character, Emile, demonstrated the virtues of his naturally unpretentious
character, so too aristocratic children were raised to embrace plainness
and simplicity, presented in an understated manner (fig. 6). |
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Having absorbed at least the broad
outlines of this understanding of the Biedermeier aesthetic, the viewer
can then turn to the smaller scale objects in the gallery with a more
knowledgeable eye. Porcelain ware and silver objects fill six vitrines
in the center of the room, again surprising in its minimal ornamentation
and use of bright color. For example, the blue and gold porcelain
Coffee Service from Nymphenburg (1825) demands the viewer's
attention with its deep blue surfaces and bold applications of gold
leaf (fig. 7). Although related to earlier aesthetics, this is neither
the pastel blue of the rococo nor the understated hue of neoclassical
ceramics. Instead it is a clear, straightforward articulation of intense
color and clearly defined shapes. Similarly, the silver pieces in
these vitrines are astonishing in their clean precise lines and pure
geometric shapse. In fact, the Viennese Coffee Pot and Percolator
(1818) might have come from the workshops of the Bauhaus more than
a century later (fig. 8). |
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In the second gallery, the focus
is on chairs, chairs, and more chairs. There are straight chairs with
beautiful veneers such as the beech wood chair designed by Karl Friedrich
Schinkel in 1825 where the curved back and splayed back legs suggest
a welcome awareness of the configuration of the human spine, and the
elegant unadorned line allows the beauty of the natural wood to shine
(fig. 9). There is a Viennese chair from 1826 with a similar elegance
of line, but with a curving open back carved from a single piece of
beech wood (fig. 10). Designed for Danhauser'sche Möbelfabrik,
a very early ready-made furniture showroom established by Josef Danhauser,
this type of chair presages Thonet's famous bentwood chair; the difference
is that Danhauser carved his curved forms from solid wood rather than
creating them by bending the steamed wood. In contrast, a Bohemian
chair from 1815 presents an even more minimalist approach with a mesmerizing
walnut veneer on the back with a dramatic pattern cut from the center
of the tree (fig. 11). Perhaps less comfortable than the other two
chairs, it is nonetheless an object to be admired purely for the natural
beauty it reveals. |
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The furniture display was augmented
in this gallery with an installation of ironwork, including two iron
portrait busts, in the center of the space as well as paintings of
cityscapes on the walls. As Cornelia Reiter remarked in her essay
on "Central European Painting and Drawing", city scenes
were "core subjects" for Biedermeier painters, in part because
this type of scene was particularly suitable for visual artists who
were concerned with capturing empirical reality (284). Eschewing romanticism
as well as neoclassical history painting, the artists of these cityscapes
were certainly aware that there was a market for contemporary, regionally
focused vedute in the tradition of Canaletto. Jakob Alt's 1817 watercolor,
View of Vienna from "Spinnerin am Kreuz," exemplifies
this trend with a precisely delineated vista of the city, undoubtedly
destined for the home of a wealthy entrepreneur (fig. 12). |
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The third gallery continues this
exploration of Biedermeier painting, this time with an emphasis on
Alpine landscapes, and one of the more intriguing features of the
exhibition, The Emperor's Peepshow. Despite the salacious-sounding
title, this 'peepshow' consisted of a series of over 300 watercolor
views of scenic highlights of the Austrian Empire, commissioned in
1833 by the archduke Ferdinand who would eventually become Emperor
Ferdinand I. These large-format watercolors were viewed through a
box equipped with a concave mirror so that the images appeared to
be three-dimensional projections. Eduard Gurk's work, The Basilica
of Mariazell Seen from the Churchyard (1833) was one of many that
were part of the Peepshow image bank (fig. 13). Here the imposing
basilica of Mariazell is surrounded with lively activity, most of
which appears to have little to do with religious services or events.
Rather, it is a portrait of a place just as the zimmerbilder
are portraits of roomsin this case perhaps an extension of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire's national identity as it was embodied in
the landscape. |
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This gallery might also be dubbed
the "red gallery" for the gold star-studded red wallpaper
that forms the backdrop to another furniture installation (fig. 14).
Here the curators have hung chairs on the wall as well as Ferdinand
Waldmüller's1822 portrait of the fashionable Catharina Baroness
von Koudelka, dressed in a yellow-green gown with a bright red shawl
(fig. 15). Most surprising is the juxtaposition of the stylish baroness'
portrait with a graceful daybed upholstered in an acid green fabric
that contrasts with the starry scarlet wallpaper in a startling reiteration
of the colors of the baroness's clothes. This intensely colored and
rather tart contrast serves to remind the viewer that the simple forms
that characterize the Biedermeier aesthetic do not imply innocuous
design. |
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Nearby, the red theme is underscored
with a display of hyalith glass, an exceptionally hard dark red glass
developed in Count Georg of Buquoy's glasshouse near Gratzen in Bohemia
(fig. 16). Jutta Annette Page, author of the catalogue essay on glass,
explains that hyalith glass was part of a "quest for complex
colored glass formulas" (203). Count Georg was the first to succeed
in creating a completely opaqueand very durablematerial
that he christened "hyalith" to signify that it was a "glass
stone". Initially this new glass was made in black, but the Georgenthal
glasshouse also produced a glistening red hyalith that emphasized
minimalist forms and the beauty of the blown glass. |
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A taste for brilliant color, natural
materials, and simple forms also found expression in porcelain decorated
with botanical imagery, often based on scientific publications. The
nineteenth-century European fascination with overseas exploration,
and the categorization of new species, is particularly evident in
the use of natural history collections as source materials for the
extensive dinner sets produced throughout the German-speaking world.
Albrecht Pyritz's catalogue essay on porcelain details the history
of this development, noting that the market for this type of porcelain
continued to thrive well into the 1840s (186-187). In the fourth gallery
of the exhibition, a large selection of these porcelain wares was
displayed in conjunction with similarly decorated glassware to create
a strong sense of how these sets might have been used in daily life. |
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This gallery also contains one of
the most intriguing set of objects in the exhibition; a series of
wallpaper sample books that seem to have been preserved in environmentally
controlled conditions since the day they came off the presses (fig.
17). The quality of the printingand perhaps more importantly,
the quality of the preservationis remarkable. Although the catalogue
essay by Sabine Thümmler does not address this issue, the sample
books were loaned by two institutions, the Technisches Museum Wien
and the Staatliche Museen in Kassel, both of which deserve kudos for
their stewardship of these fragile documents. The manufacture of paper
wallpaper begins in the late eighteenth century, but expands dramatically
in the early nineteenth century. Increasingly sophisticated printing
techniques facilitated the production of complex patterns such as
plaids and iridescent effects, which in turn nurtured the Biedermeier
love of color. The curators have made this point abundantly clear
in their use of wallpapered partitions in several galleries; these
wallpapers were created from the sample books in the exhibition specifically
for this purpose. (The Biedermeier wallpapers were recreated by StudioPrintworks
of Chicago.) The green and yellow plaid wallpaper was particularly
striking (fig. 18). By contemporary tastes, this combination of contrasting
colors might seem overly bright or forceful, and yet it is an ideal
counterpoint to the understated furniture that accompanies it. |
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At the heart of this fascination with color was
the 1810 publication of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's book Theory
of Colors in which he lays out his understanding of complementary
shades, visual harmonies, and the optimal uses for neutrals in relation
to color. In fact, Goethe himself is known to have designed wallpaper
for such illustrious colleagues as Friedrich Schiller (174). Goethe's
exploration of color theory receives pride of place in the final gallery
where several plates from Theory of Colors as well as a large
color wheel were displayed. In addition, there were a number of the
writer's wallpaper designs in which he gives visual form to his theories.
Although Goethe's science was questioned even in his own time, his
perception of how color affects psychological well being remains valid,
as does his understanding that afterimages of complementary colors
remain in the eye. As if to underscore Goethe's point some two hundred
years later, the curators positioned two breathtakingly brilliant
settees in orange and yellow next to the color theory materials (figs.
19, 20). |
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For anyone interested in the history
of design or aesthetics, this exhibition should be on the "must
see" list, as should the exhibition catalogue which received
The New York Times 2006 award for Best Decorative Arts Book.
More importantly, the catalogue provides a coherent and detailed compendium
for an overlooked and largely misunderstood field within nineteenth-century
studies. This reader would have appreciated more accessible source
citations so that I could have noted them as I read without flipping
back and forth through the substantial text. I also wonder why the
catalogue entries were separated from the related images. This was
bewildering as well as awkward. However, the merits of the catalogue
far outweigh these pragmatic difficulties in usage. |
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Biedermeier, The Invention of Simplicity
is an exhibition that is long overdue. It offers a necessary intellectual
adjustment to a long-standing misperception of this aesthetic, as
well as an opportunity for art historians, especially those who do
not read German, to broaden their scope. As a re-evaluation of early
nineteenth-century design history, it is hard to over-estimate the
importance of this exhibition. It brings contemporary German scholarship
to a wider audience and initiates a serious discourse on the seminal
role of the Biedermeier aesthetic on the development of modernism. |
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Janet Whitmore
Harrington College of Design
janetwhitmore[at]earthlink.net |
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© 20078 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
and Janet Whitmore. All Rights Reserved. |
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