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"Impulses
and Desires": Klinger's Darwinism in Nature and Society
by Marsha Morton |
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It has long been recognized that the
graphic art of Max Klinger probes the mysteries of human behavior
and psychology, particularly those effected by biological drives.
Yet surprisingly scant attention has been paid to Klinger's response
to Charles Darwin, whose theories revolutionized conceptions of human
nature. Darwin's studies were so far-reaching in their implications
that even the most traditional themes of literature and art dealing
with relationships and emotionsromance, beauty, courage, aggression,
deathbecame encoded with new meanings. The impact of Darwin
was not confined to the natural sciences but also, through his breadth
of references in The Descent of Man, to the fields of anthropology,
sociology, and psychology. Civilized man was kin to animals as well
as "barbarians" whose habits, customs and mythologies were
under scrutiny by ethnographers seeking to uncover traces of ancestral
links.1 At the same time, German archaeologists like Heinrich
Schliemann began turning their attention to pre-classical cultures
in the Middle East and in Europe.2 Conversely, contemporary
society was being examined through a Darwinian lens for signs of atavistic
brutish behavior. |
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The presence
of a Darwinian worldview in Klinger's art must be sought in this larger
comprehensive sense, evidenced not only through his many references
to natural history, but in his scenes of social criticism and his
exploration of myth and dreams as vestiges of the primitive self.
Darwinian influence is especially compelling when applied to Klinger
because it provides an ideology encompassing the artist's disparate
themes and his temporal sweeps through history. Like the writings
of most German Darwinists, his work began with studies of nature and
developed into studies of contemporary society. Issues were presented
from different historical moments, tracing Darwin's "unchanging
laws" (primarily sexual selection) through the mythologies of
Genesis and in ancient Greece. In a post-Darwinian world, as the Swedish
art critic Oscar Levertin wrote, "the tie between primeval times
and the present day was knit more strongly than ever and all of the
most ancient myths and fantasies took on a deeper meaning."3 |
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Klinger had read Darwin by 1875 when
he completed the drawing Darwinian Theory (fig. 1) and wrote
to his parents in October from art school, requesting the exchange
of their Darwin material.4 The collected works of Darwin,
with over two hundred illustrations and a photograph of the author,
had been published in Germany the previous year to great acclaim.5
Klinger's interest in Darwin, at the impressionable age of eighteen,
occurred at the onset of his most fertile years of creative activity
and preceded his knowledge of Arthur Schopenhauer, for which it provided
a foundation. Since Schopenhauer, who was inspired by Georges Cuvier,
Jean-Baptiste Larmarck, and Thomas Hobbes, anticipated many of Darwin's
theories and is quoted in The Descent of Man, the philosopher
served to reinforce Klinger's Darwinian perspective. The artist's
subsequent engagement with Emile Zola and Friedrich Nietzsche provided
a similar function, as did his friendship with the Taine-influenced
Danish critic Georg Brandes during the late 1870s in Berlin. |
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Klinger would have received an extensive
education in science and anthropology through reading Darwin's books
that were crammed with citations from other publications. Indeed,
Darwin's encyclopedic references provided a discursive narrative of
the historical development of evolutionary thought with sources culled
from contributors in the arts, such as the romantic poet Jean-Paul
Richter whom Klinger admired, as well as the sciences. In Germany
information on evolutionary theory was inescapable thanks to the burgeoning
literature by Darwinist popularizersLudwig Büchner, Carl
Vogt, Carus Sterne, and Ernst Haeckel, among many othersavailable
as books or articles in a variety of magazines that devoted considerable
space to keeping the public abreast of scientific advances. Klinger's
favorite newspaper, the Leipzig Illustrirte Zeitung, was a
treasure-trove of information, publishing scholarly reviews of scientific
books (a four-part feature on Haeckel's Anthropogenie appeared
in the1875 January and February issues) as well as general reporting
on zoos, aquariums, and natural history museums. The comprehensive
scope of the newspaper, which included international coverage of cultural
events, science, politics, military exploits, and travel, resulted
in illustrations whose collage-like juxtapositions located European
high society in a global Darwinian context of geographic and ethnic
diversity. |
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Evolutionary theory was embraced in
Germany more readily than in other countries, prompting Darwin to
remark in 1861 that "the support which I receive in Germany is
my chief ground for hoping that our views will ultimately prevail."6
Germans were, to a certain extent, more prepared for the notion that
"man is not above nature, but in nature" because similar
ideas had been anticipated by revered authors like Goethe. His belief
in transformation, descent theory, and evolution were contained in
"The Metamorphosis of Plants" and Faust, Part II,
which Klinger later read.7 Romantic Naturphilosophie,
despite its spiritual idealism, also espoused the interrelationship
of man and nature, and a concept of the organic world based on process
and historical change. By mid-century, scientists Vogt, Büchner,
Jacob Moleschott and Friedrich Albert Lange examined issues in philosophy,
history and anthropology from a materialist orientation, and under
the influence of Ludwig Feuerbach and David Friedrich Strauss, rejected
a faith in divine creation and a teleological worldview. They not
only enthusiastically accepted Darwin, albeit with certain qualifications,
and popularized his theories during the 1860s, but even "scooped"
him by inferring man's kinship with apes in advance of the 1871 The
Descent of Man.8 |
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These scientific materialists were
also political activists who applied the paradigm of evolution to
the cause of social reform. The first generation of German Darwinists
adopted left-leaning political positions which ranged from the "bourgeois
socialism" of Büchner and Lange to the Marxist ideology
of August Bebel and Friedrich Engels. Opposition to church and state
was an early hallmark of the movement, initiated by Haeckel's famous
1863 Stettin speech, in which he declared that "neither the weapons
of tyrants nor the curses of priests" could suppress the truths
of evolutionary theory.9 Socialist Darwinists (in distinction
to capitalist Social Darwinists who championed the "survival
of the fittest" justification of power and wealth) confidently
predicted an ascent to a future society of greater equality predicated
on evolving human reason and compassion.10 The socialists'
adoption of Darwinism did not go unopposed, especially by more politically
conservative German biologists who, led by Rudolf Virchow, lent support
to Bismarck in the enactment of his anti-socialist laws of 1878. Within
these controversies of science and politics, Klinger and his associates
in Berlin projected an anti-establishment attitude during the late
1870s when they were characterized by their friend Georg Brandes as
"nihilists, socialists, atheists, materialists, naturalists and
egoists…[who] honored the politics of the Paris Commune."11 |
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Darwinian Theory reveals a
full grasp of issues swirling around Darwinism in Germany. The drawing
depicts, on the right, a natural scientist, presumably Darwin, with
a book and two skulls, simian and human, referencing proofs through
comparative skeletal anatomy of man's ancestry. Fossil remains of
a primitive homo sapiens closer to the catarhine ape had been discovered
in 1865 in the Neander Valley near Düsseldorf. While these objects
symbolize the materialist "new faith" described by David
Strauss, the "old faith" of revealed religion is represented
by the departing angry priest, already fading to a ghostly memory.
During the 1870s anti-clericalism permeated German politics. An alliance
between Bismarck and the liberal parties had resulted in a ban on
monastic orders in Prussia, with many priests imprisoned or exiled.
Dominating the tableau is a smiling ape, identified as a Cynothecus
niger, whose hand rests familiarly on Darwin's shoulder while
the other cradles an infant playing with a rattle.12 The
intimacy of child and ape reveals man's origins, which Darwin appears
to be contemplating, while also referencing Ernst Haeckel's famed
Biogenetic Law asserting that "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny"
that "the history of the fetus is a recapitulation of the human
race."13 By this way of thinking, the baby is closer
to his simian past than a mature adult. Annegret Friedrich has suggested
that the two groups are gendered representations of the male domain
of scientific reason versus the female realm of nature and nurture.14
Her interpretation transforms this drawing into an important signpost
for Klinger's future concerns, and is reinforced through comments
by Darwin and Haeckel attesting to the intense maternal affection
observed in monkeys. Haeckel maintained that human behavior derived
from "the instinct which is found in its extreme form in the
exaggerated tenderness of the mother-ape."15 |
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| Fig.
2 Max Klinger, Siesta I from Etched Sketches,
1879, etching and aquatint, Museum der bildenden Kunste, Leipzig |
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| Fig.
3 Common and Spiny Lobsters, reproduced in A.E. Brehm,
Illustrirtes Thierleben (Illustrated Animal Life), vol.
6, Hildburghausen: Bibliographischen Institute, 1869, between
pp. 642 and 643 |
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Klinger's graphic art from the mid-1870s
through the mid-1880s is replete with images documenting Darwin's
theory of the struggle for existence and the struggle for mates. His
juvenilia reflect an earlyand typically male adolescentfocus
on soldiers and battles, as well as bugs and lizards. Klinger's mother
later recalled his absorption with his "friends" (the "butterflies
and beetles") in the family garden.16 His interest
in nature would have been later extended by Realschule classes
in natural science.17 Klinger's sketchbook from 187477,
completed while at art school in Karlsruhe and Berlin, contains frequent
scenes of violence and sexuality, many of which would provide sources
for his later prints. Darwinian evidence of the harsh lessons of survival,
dominance, and death abound, as in the monstrous Goyaesque Fox
Hunt, with animals pursued by brutes, or Buzzards with a Dead
Hare, documenting an incident observed in the backyard of his
parent's Leipzig home.18 The dark side of nature's food
chain is grimly depicted in Siesta I, (fig. 2) from his first
published graphic series Etched Sketches (1879), where two
lobsters enjoy an after-dinner snooze next to the carcass of a fish
they have consumed. Compositionally similar to the frontal "display"
format of scientific illustrations, the image recalls a scene of crustacean
combat, Common and Spiny Lobsters (fig. 3), in Alfred Brehm's widely
read multi-volume Illustrirtes Tierleben (186469). |
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Many of Klinger's animal drawings
may also have been sketched at the Berlin zoo and aquarium. Brehm,
a student of Haeckel, was the founder and director of the Berlin Aquarium,
which opened in 1869. It contained not only fish and reptiles, but
also an aviary and the city's largest collection of monkeys and anthropomorphous
apes.19 Drawings for Brehm's books were based in part on
studies made there and at the Berlin zoo, which had undergone extensive
expansions during the early 1870s. The zooa central attraction
of Berlin social life that included restaurants, band shell and skating
rinkhad been visited by Klinger shortly after his arrival in
the city.20 It featured new buildings in exotic architectural
styles (an Indian Elephant Pagoda and Islamic Antelope House) and,
beginning in 1878, served as the venue for ethnographic performances
by non-Western tribal natives, ranging from Inuits to "Nubians"
from Sudan. These shows, which were extremely popular, ensured a profit
for the zoo and source material for anthropologists, while offering
a Darwinian tableau of nature, primates and primitives.21
Klinger's drawings from this period also feature individuals of diverse
ethnicities frequently paired with predators, as in Tiger Attacking
a Chinese Man, The Lion Tamer and Moor with Tiger.22
His work reflects not only the experience of being an armchair traveler
through reading Darwinian literature, but also an awareness that most
scientists considered non-Caucasians less advanced on an evolutionary
scale and on closer terms with their animal progenitors and prehistoric
man. |
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The circumstances of life for mankind's
ancestors are explored in four prints within Klinger's cycle Intermezzos,
1881, in which deadly battles occur between members of one's own species,
more advanced species, and a hostile environment. Pursued Centaur
illustrates an evolutionary saga of adaptation, survival, and extinction.
(fig. 4) The escape of the centaur appears doomed in the face of superior
opposition by the more highly evolved men riding horses. Their helmets
and village home in the background indicate their increased level
of civilization. Klinger's image also references the natural male
attributes of "greater size and strength" (in comparison
to females), "more developed muscles…[and] greater courage
and pugnacity. . .all due in chief part to inheritance from his half-human
male ancestors."23 In Battling Centaurs the
setting shifts to an icy mountain range, with two figures locked in
mortal combat over the prize of a dead rabbit. The series concludes
with tranquil domestic scenes of everyday life in Moonlit Night
and Landslide, which allude to the importance of procreation,
inheritance, and community once the "struggle for existence"
has been accomplished. |
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Klinger suggests that any such
serenity is an illusion, however, given the realities of human and
animal behavior (the boy centaur hurling a rock at a snake in the
foreground of Landslide) and the aimless indifference of
nature (the impending landslide). These representations recall Nietzsche's
revisionist view of the Greeks, expressed in The Birth of Tragedy,
1872, as more barbaric and aggressive.24 They also echo
the uncompromising vision of Haeckel, who noted that "might
goes before right as long as organic life exists" and squelched
any innocent belief in a benign or moral nature:
We shall rather find everywhere a pitiless, most embittered Struggle
of All against All. Nowhere in nature, no matter where we
turn our eyes, does that idyllic peace, celebrated by the poets,
exist; we find everywhere a struggle and a striving to annihilate
neighbors and competitors. Passion and selfishnessconscious
or unconsciousis everywhere the motive force of life…Man
in this respect certainly forms no exception to the rest of the
animal kingdom.25
Klinger's art frequently underscores this viewpoint. Little distinction
exists between the centaurs fighting over a hare and the crazed
men fighting in Rivals (from the cycle A Life, 1882)
whose conquest will be the prostitute observing them with a satisfied
smile. The image is nearly a caricature of Darwin's animals "engaged
in desperate conflicts…in the law of battle for the possession
of the female" and a reminder that "all civilized nations
are the descendents of barbarians."26 Indeed, the
existence of semi-human hybrids was believed by many to be a fact
verified by scientific research. Carus Sterne cited medical reports
by Greek military physicians recording army recruits with partially
formed foot-hoofs and vestiges of tails. Illustrations for his book
Evolving and Vanishing, 1876, included photographs of a Greek
faun statue and a contemporary Indian boy from Calcutta who was
born with a tail.27 While Klinger lived in Berlin, he
could also have visited "freak shows," endorsed and sometimes
facilitated by anthropologists, where people with deformities such
as tails, excessive body hair growth, or small skulls (microcephalics)
were promoted as atavisms evidencing Darwin's "missing link."28 |
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Rivals testifies to Klinger's
awareness that Darwin attached tremendous significance to the role
played by sexual selection in evolution. Darwin considered it to have
been the most efficient factor separating man from animals, and responsible
for the primary human racial and gender differences, both physical
and mental. This process had benefited the male. His greater ardor
and energy in pursuit of the more submissive and "less eager"
female earned him, according to Darwin, superior strength and size,
as well as "the higher mental faculties [of]. . . genius. . .
perseverance. . .imagination and reason."29 Females,
who at least within the animal kingdom exercised the power of choice
in a mate, were stripped of even this level of assertiveness in human
society, resulting in a proportionately diminished brain size. |
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Klinger also believed in the centrality
of sexuality in human affairsdevoting his art principally to
an examination of the nature and consequences of desirebut he
diverged from Darwin in his conviction that women and men were equally
possessed by and suffered from their carnal drives. The drawing of
a woman embracing a lion is one of many images by Klinger that pairs
felines and females in order to portray awakening and mature sexuality.
(fig. 5) The trance-like absorption (and gaze of self-recognition)
of the woman, echoed in the face above, is in contrast to the pious
veiled figures with closed eyes, and visualizes a state of possession
by forces whose biological origins are embodied in the decorative
doodles of plants, monkey-hybrid, and giraffe.29 Klinger's
animals are not mere avatars of female appetites, however, but seem
to function as sentient male partners. His couplings of beauties and
beasts are given greater plausibility through Darwin's assertion that
"higher animals possess memory, attention…and even more
imagination and reason."30 Klinger's depictions of
women as thoughtful sexual beings would seem to free him from accusations
of prudish Victorian gender bias. Yet, while he is not guilty of presenting
"eagerly promiscuous males pursuing females, who peer from behind
languidly drooping eyelids," as Ruth Hubbard has characterized
Darwin's world, nonetheless his scenes of deviant passions do embody
another kind of "wish fulfillment dream of a proper Victorian
gentleman," who, like Darwin, associated female intuition and
perception with "a lower and past state of civilization."31
Klinger did not, however, exempt himself from that condition since
his male protagonistssubject to the same torments of loveare
frequently self-portraits. |
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Themes of incipient danger, sexuality,
and lability are announced in the Title Page (fig. 6) of Klinger's
cycle, Etched Sketches,1879, and repeated throughout his early
work, as in Bear and Elf (from Intermezzos, 1881). In
both prints, split-second moments are captured as slender, nearly
weightless girls hover on fragile reeds or tree branches. The precariousness
itself seems to thematize Darwinian theory in which, as Gillian Beer
has noted, there is "no place for stasis…or constant equilibrium.
Nor…does it allow either interruption or conclusion."32
Like actors in a Darwinian play, the nymphs "coyly" tease
the lumbering clumsy beasts, who are forever subject to gravitational
realities.33 The biological underpinnings of this courtship
are implicit in the aquatic and nocturnal environment. Oceans and
watery sites are ubiquitous in Klinger's art, setting the stage for
moments of passion and transgression. In the wake of Darwin, the sea
gained new prominence, having replaced the mythic garden as the location
of origination and primeval procreation. Darwin observed that "all…mammals
originally descended from some amphibian-like creature, and this again
from some fish-like animal."34 Man's ancestry was
now traceable to not only the ape but, according to Nietzsche "living
slime," or, as John Ruskin observed with disgust, "the filthy
heraldries…[of] the ascidian [sea squirt] and the crocodile."35
Klinger's nymph is literally kin to her pursuer, as embryonic research
confirmed, and her ability to escape, metaphorically speaking, illusory.
As Darwin cautioned, "man with all his noble qualities…still
bears in his bodily frame the indelible stamp of his lowly origins."36
Even imagination, a quality which this ethereal nymph has frequently
been seen to symbolize, had been furthered by sexual selection, according
to evolutionary theory. Those who read Darwin were additionally aware
that the moon referenced not only the Romantic night world of fantasy,
but, in combination with water, other internal atavistic evidence.
Darwin noted that "in the lunar or weekly recurrent period of
some of our functions [such as menses] we apparently still retain
traces of our primordial birthplace, a shore washed by the tides."37 |
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For Klinger, man could revisit
his ancient past in dreams, which, like the unknown watery depths,
were the gateway to the unconscious and the release of carnal desire.
In Fears, from the series A Glove, 1881, the protagonist/artist
appears in the grip of a terrifying nightmare whose erotic nature
is signaled by the shape of the glove (the symbol of the woman he
desires), the water, moon, and reptile. (fig. 7) The association
of dreams and fetishes with primitive sensibilities was informed
by recent anthropological research. Lubbock (quoted by Darwin) considered
dreams integral to the formation of early religion, remarking that
"to the savage they have a reality and an importance which
we can scarcely appreciate," while Bastian identified beliefs
in fetishes as characteristic of the lowest stage (the most sensual
and emotive) of human mental development.38 Nietzsche
asserted that the dream "takes us back again to the remote
stages of human culture and provides us with a means of understanding
them better."39 In dreams, claimed Nietzsche, we
re-experience the thought processes of our less-evolved predecessors,
which are typified by a confusing absence of logic, reduction of
memory, and a heightened visual clarity suggestive of the hallucinations
prevalent among ancient peoples. Two decades later Freud would assert
that "dream-work" (whose symbols are almost always sexual)
facilitates our return not only to childhood, but to "the archaic
prehistory" of the "entire human race."40
Klinger, like Schopenhauer, believed that it is ultimately carnal
needs which betray human ancestry to creatures whose lives were
determined by instinct rather than intellect. |
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Klinger referenced primal drives not
just through dream experiences, but through creatures of the "lower
orders" who were extinct, aquatic, or reptilian. Lobsters, for
example, frequently personify lust, as in the drawing Nightmare,
1878, where a febrile young woman is raped by one.41 Crustaceans
were recognized by Darwin as being the first class to possess secondary
sexual characteristics; flying reptiles and dinosaurs played central
roles in the evolutionary drama, representing transitional hybrid
forms which ultimately linked man to his progenitors: "even the
wide interval between birds and reptiles has been shown…to be
partially bridged over…by one of the dinosaurians.42
One of the two monstrous heads in Fears emerges in Abduction
(fig. 8), also from A Glove, as a long-tailed Pterosaur, known
to Europeans through recent paleontological discoveries in 1859 from
the Bavarian Jurassic limestone quarries. These also yielded the fossil
remains of an Archaeopteryx (a small prehistoric bird) in 1861 and
1877, which were discussed by Darwin.43 Skeletons of dinosaurs,
as well as other reptiles and vertebrates, were displayed in the Berlin
Museum for Natural History when it opened in 1889. Previously, the
collection had been housed in university buildings.44 Klinger's
familiarity with dinosaurs is confirmed by an early untitled sketch
that provocatively juxtaposes a dinosaur, lion head, human faces,
and a beached fish supporting a prostrate boy.45 |
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Myth construction, as well as dreaming,
was regarded as symptomatic of "the human intellect in its early
childlike state," and Nietzsche observed that primitives composed
mythologies with the same "confusion and capriciousness"
that marked their dreams.46 Myths were frequently invoked
by scientists as intuitive anticipations of evolutionary truths. Among
these, few were as prescient as Ovid's Metamorphosis. Aldous
Huxley began his essay "Man's Place in Nature," with an
acknowledgement that "Ovid foreshadowed the discoveries of the
geologist," noting that "though the quaint forms of Centaurs
and Satyrs have an existence only in the realms of Art, creatures
approaching man more nearly than they in essential structure…are
now not only known, but notorious."47 Klinger's decision
to base a series of etchings on three Ovidian tales"Pyramus
and Thisbe," "Narcissus and Echo," and "Apollo
and Daphne"is therefore consistent with his Darwinian orientation.
In this cycle, Rescues of Ovid's Victims, 1879, Klinger rewrites
the stories (as Ovid had re-told the Greek myths) as mordant romances.
In Narcissus and Echo I (fig. 9) the protagonists are allowed
to embrace and kiss under the watchful eye of a faun and centaur,
framed by blossoming vines and Cupid's arrow. Klinger's visualization
of the text underscores the sexual nature of Nietzsche's Dionysian
Greeks not only through the action and characters, but also the lush
setting. Indeed, evolutionary themes of fertility, growth, reproduction,
and transformation pulsate throughout his art, evidenced by hybrid
figures and arabesques. Klinger's factual transcriptions of a fecund
nature echo the style and imagery of Darwinian narratives, inviting
comparisons with passages that evoke the busy richness of nature. |
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The same obsessive detail describing
a nearly claustrophobic profusion of organic life characterizes many
of Klinger's contemporary scenes of passion, such as In Flagranti
from the cycle Dramas, 1883, (fig. 10) as he traces the constancy
of biological drives through time. Living in a zeitgeist of
scientific materialism, Klinger was well aware of the reductionist
definition of romance as, in the words of Haeckel, essentially "copulation
or fertilization." The "myth" of Adam and Eve and "famous
fictions" like Paris and Helen were now regarded as "the
poetic expression of the immeasurable influence, which love, in connection
with ‘sexual selection,' has exerted.48 While Haeckel
acknowledged the "misery, vice, and crime" caused by the
"devouring flame" of passion, he remained buoyantly optimistic,
however, about a future rooted in the truths of nature and the beneficent
aegis of natural selection. Klinger, like Schopenhauer and his popularizer
Eduard von Hartmann, drew different conclusions. Noting that love
affairs often lead to suicide, murder, or insanity, Schopenhauer compared
physical attraction to being "under the influence of an impulse
akin to the instinct of insects."49 The murderous
rage of the cuckolded husband in In Flagranti reveals the thin
line that divides civilized man from his animal progenitors, suggesting
Klinger's agreement with Carus Sterne's prediction that "the
future promises the most difficult struggle of all…against the
lower drives and desires, the struggle against oneself."50
Klinger's task as an artist was to probe the ravaging psychological
scars of that battle. |
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His bleak view of eroticism's power
of entrapment is revealed in the rejected drawing, 1887, for the title
page of the cycle A Love. (fig. 11) Engulfed in despair, the
bespectacled aging ape-man and robed woman emblematize, respectively,
carnal drives confronting virtue and denialthe conflicting forces
torturing Klinger and his lover bound to the pillar. With hands folded
in devotional attitudes as if before an altar of love whose sacred
relics include the cat, top hat, and folded glove, the figures invoke
our pity as victims of forces beyond their control which will only
cause anguish. The pot-bellied old ape-man suggests that the experience
is a humbling one.51 |
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Klinger extended his historical survey
of sexual attraction to Genesis in the series Eve and the Future,
1880, reconsidering the Judaic-Christian "myth" of creation
in light of Darwin's information.52 Both accounts have
striking parallels, incorporating elements of nature, desire, death,
and loss of innocence. Klinger's first drawings on this theme were
made in 1875, the year in which he had discovered Darwin. The cycle
is composed of three pairs of prints, each including a scene from
the Biblical story with a symbolic image of the future. As the series
unfolds Eve (in Eve) sits in paradise, significantly positioned
in proximity to a body of water. She appears lost in a daydream while
absently stroking her long hair. According to Klinger, the temptation
has already occurred to her as a "thought."53
First Future depicts a narrow passageway between high boulders
at the end of which looms a seated tiger. The vision offers a shocking
contrast to Eve, establishing the carnal and dangerous nature of her
musings and the bleakness of a future in which there is no way back
to paradise or, thanks to Darwin, forward to an afterlife. Klinger
described First Future as a "terrifying creature in front
of a permanently blocked path (I am a Fatalist)."54
Both Schopenhauer and Nietzsche had previously speculated on the kinship
between the human race and "the tiger and the ape."55 |
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The temptation itself occurs in The
Snake, which depicts Eve gazing with satisfaction into a mirror
obligingly held by the snake hanging from a branch of the apple tree.
It is clear that the knowledge gained is an awareness of her own desirability;
the nearby lake and reptile also imply the discovery of her sexual
nature. The snake's anthropomorphic attributes highlight their kinship
in a post-Darwinian world where snakes "have some reasoning power,
strong passions and mutual affection."56 The focus
on beauty and vanity, while traditional, also recalls the role played
by female physical appearance as an important factor in sexual selection.
Second Future (fig. 12) presents a chilling vision of a predator
clutching a razor-sharp spear described by many critics as a "satyr"
and by Klinger as "a demon swimming from another world."57
The weapon's phallic reference suggests the dual nature of primal
pursuit, for both sustenance and procreation. Second Future
can be compared to a distant transitional stage of human evolution
as described by Darwin: "The early progenitors of man must have
been once covered with hair…their ears were probably pointed…
and their bodies were provided with a tail….at a still earlier
stage [they] must have been aquatic in their habits."58
This image touched a nerve, eliciting pejorative remarks from the
conservative critic Jonas Rasch in the Aftenposten when it
was exhibited in Kristiania, Norway in November 1880. Rasch was horrified
by the print, scoffing that even the most "ardent supporters
of Darwin" would concede that man's ancestors weren't this monstrous.59
It is not surprising that the series triggered Darwinian associations,
since the names "Adam and Eve," like apes and angels, had
become code words signifying alternative theories of creation and
human nature. References to the debunked first pair appeared in publications
by, among others, Haeckel, Vogt, Büchner, and Bebel. |
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With Second Future, Klinger
elucidates more clearly the message of the series: that the future
recapitulates the past because it is pre-determined by our origins
from which there will never be any rescue via evolutionary ascent.
Together with all organic matter, we are part of the cycles of growth
and decay, no longer graced by immortal salvation. Eve's awareness
of her sexuality is an acknowledgment of her links with an animal
ancestry. Klinger's pessimist vision echoed the sentiments of Nietzsche,
who observed that modern man "thinks with sorrow of his origins
and is often shamed. . .he gazes sadly into the future: he knows in
advance that his posterity will suffer from the past as he does."60
The series concludes with Adam and Third Future, scenes
of expulsion and punishment. Adam strides forth into a barren rocky
landscape like a "little Hercules," as Rasch observed, his
role of dominance asserted in the post-paradise world. The entwined
bodies of Adam and Eve imply their new relationship as lovers and,
in an earlier drawing, they were accompanied by Cupid. Assessments
of blame, guilt, and reprisal are introduced here against Adam and,
in the macabre Third Future, the institution of Christianity.
Borrowing a scene from Jean-Paul's novel Hesperus, Klinger
represents death as a skeleton vigorously pounding sinners' heads
into construction material for paving the streets of hell. Klinger
observed that the only certainty about the future is that "there
is no future."61 In Third Future, the presence
of the cross in the background above the skeleton highlights the duplicity
of the church, wielding, as Carl Vogt had concluded earlier, "the
fear of punishment," and "the hope of reward in a dreamt-of
beyond" to enforce moral standards directed against, among other
things, the satisfaction of sexual desires.62 |
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Within the context of this graphic
cycle, the cross is also a reminder that the creation narrative in
Genesis is equally a misogynist myth of female guilt, a theme which
Klinger explores in the sequels to Eve and the Future set in
contemporary Germany: the series A Life. 1884, and A Love,
1887. The first two prints for A Life return to paradise, with
Preface I and II depicting Eve and a demonic Adam. The
inscription below the image in Preface I quotes from the serpent's
deceitful promise to Eve: "Ye shall not surely die, but your
eyes shall be opened." In subsequent scenes, Klinger chronicles
the story of a young girl who, like Eve, submits to temptation. Deserted
by her lover and ostracized by society, she is forced to turn to prostitution
and, finally, commits suicide. Klinger's historical saga of injustice,
rooted in the Garden of Eden, perpetrated by an androcentric society
and church was inspired by the experimental naturalism of Emile Zola,
the social criticism of Brandes (who had translated Mill's The
Subjection of Women into Danish in 1869), and the work of his
close art school friend, the Norwegian painter Christian Krohg, to
whom he had dedicated Eve and the Future. Krohg's advocacy
of women's rights culminated in his painting and novel Albertine;
his criticism of Social Darwinism was the subject of his painting
Struggle for Existence,1889, depicting starving children on
a snow-covered urban street fighting for bread crumbs.63 |
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A Life also parallels the theme of
the Darwinian socialist August Bebel's 1879 book Woman in the
Past, Present, and Future (originally titled Woman and Socialism),
which reviews the history of female oppression.64 Bebel
lays the blame especially on the "Christian State," first
evidenced in Genesis. He notes that this misogynist spirit, in which
Eve is stigmatized as a seductress, "is still active today…the
myth of Adam being beguiled by Eve in Paradise still holds its own
in our ideas and laws."65 Bebel's central thesis
is an indictment of the bourgeois social order, which has deviated
from nature in a manner that is discriminating and exploitative.
He regards the sexual impulse in Darwinian terms as a "law
of nature" for both men and women whose denial, as Freud later
maintained, results in debilitating mental and physical conditions.
Bebel asserts that the patriarchal church and state condemn and
punish women for the extra-marital "gratification of [their]
natural impulses," while sanctioning similar male behavior.
He cites the high female suicide rate and observes that prostitution
instances "the revolting illustration of the subjection of
woman to man."66 Klinger also gives a Darwinian
spin to his tale, highlighting the collision between biological
drives and social strictures. Sexual consummation occurs in Temptation
during, predictably, a descent into oceanic depths between embracing
lovers astride two giant fish. In Chained (fig. 13) the carnal
nature of the woman's transgressions are symbolized by her bondage
to a prehistoric bat-like creature. Chained reveals the hypocrisy
and condescension of the upper class "gentlemen" who are
responsible for her ruin. The image recalls Bebel's unmasking of
high society's double standards:
These men appear by day and in society with the grave and
dignified air of guardians of morality, order, marriage and the
family; they are at the head of Christian charities and of societies
for the suppression of prostitution. Our social organization resembles
a great carnival festival…in which everyone wears his official
disguise with decorum, and indulges his inclinations and passions
all the more unrestrainedly in private.67
The development of Klinger's Darwinian themes from biology to sociology
resulted from his awareness of humanity as participants in a larger
universe. In his essay Malerei und Zeichnung, he wrote: "man
is not a person confined by his individual form, but a being who
exists in relation to and dependence on external forces; he is above
all a representative of his species."68 Klinger's
shift to studies of behavior in contemporary society paralleled
the direction taken by many German Darwinists. Like Darwin, who
discussed the conflict between man's "social instincts…and
his lower, though momentarily stronger, impulses and desires,"
they believed, in the words of Ludwig Büchner, that "the
struggle with nature" had become the "social struggle
of man…in the domain of morals" waged against the weakest
members of society for the self-interests of "political and
material" gain.69 |
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Class inequality and revolutionary tensions in
Germany had risen in the years following the enactment of the reactionary
Socialist Law in 1878, causing Bebel to comment: "In social life…the
struggle for existence assumes its most brutal…shape, it throws
man back into his primeval state."70 As a specific
example he cited two incidents in the Leipzig Illustrirte Zeitung
where impoverished parents were driven "in despair to commit
the most fearful crimes on their children and themselves."71
A similar tragic event, reported in the same newspaper, inspired Klinger's
A Mother IIII (fig. 14) from the series Dramas,
1883, where a drunken man, ruined by the 1873 financial crash, beats
his wife, who then attempts suicide with her child. Organized aggression
occurs in March Days IIII (from the same series) with
an armed proletarian insurrection against repressive government troops.
Spring, Klinger later observed, "is the most dangerous moment
in nature and politics."72 |
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While Klinger found abundant evidence confirming
man's descent from animals, he saw little proof that natural selection
had resulted in human improvement. His immersion in the writings of
Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, coupled with his disgust over Germany's
philistine materialist society and the rise of violence in Berlin
(rape cases doubled between 1872 and 1878), reinforced his pessimistic
belief that, as Nietzsche remarked, "man as a species is not
progressing."73 These convictions ultimately set him
apart from Darwin's "cheerful view that progress has been much
more general than retrogression" and his "hope for a still
higher destiny in the distant future."74 Most German
Darwinists reassured readers of a moral order rooted in nature and
the reward of a utopian future. Despite vitriolic attacks on current
conditions, Bebel believed that man's rational self would prevail,
producing a socialist society of legislated equality; Büchner
envisioned a "struggle against the struggle for existence,"
resulting in universal harmony.75 |
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For Klinger, however, man's "lowly
origins" precluded any ascent to a future paradise of enlightened
human altruism. Describing progress as "the modern surrogate
for God," he came to dismiss the concept as "false and
illogical" when applied to the human race. In a journal entry
from early in 1887, he attempted to sever the equation between change
and progress, while also revealing his discomfort with the rejection
of teleology:
"But with man, with species, to speak of progress over
time is nonsense….everything continues to develop but remains
equal in value….To think of the human race in a condition
that endures and remains unchanged without revolution [a concept
that had been displaced, within the scientific community, by evolution],
is to place it on the same level as vegetables and stones….Progress
is only a lazy dim-witted crutch for people lacking feelings and
ideas, who are incapable or unwilling to see God, or another superior
power"76
This statement was written at a time of artistic crisis that signaled
his increasingly conservative rejection of naturalism for Neo-Idealism
and of the graphic arts for painting and sculpture.77
His growing disenchantment with aspects of Darwinian theory was
accompanied by a developing interest in Nietzsche, especially following
the 1889 publication of Brandes' book on the philosopher. While
Nietzsche never doubted Darwin's "true but deadly doctrine,"
he rejected the notion of progress and tempered evolutionary theory,
as Walter Kaufmann has argued, with the conviction that certain
extraordinary individuals"philosophers, artists, and
saints"could rise above the animal kingdom.78
Klinger's later art, with its celebration of human genius, suggests
that he ultimately felt the need for the same reassurance. |
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Bibliography
1. Foremost among anthropologists who studied mythology and religion
were John Lubbock, Edward Burnett Tylor, and Adolf Bastian, director
of the Royal Museum of Ethnography in Berlin. Major studies by Lubbock
and Tylor were translated and published in Germany during the mid-1870s.
Tylor defined mythology as a "means of tracing the history
of the laws of mind" and the best source for revealing "the
processes of the imagination." Edward Burnett Tylor, The
Origins of Culture. 1871. (Reprint, Gloucester, Mass.: Peter
Smith, 1970) pp. 274- 275. Andrew Zimmerman, Anthropology and
Antihumanism in Imperial Germany. (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2001) pp. 49-50, it should be noted, argues that most early
German anthropologists, unlike their British counterparts, were
not Darwinists and refused to establish evolutionary links between
"primitives" and modern man.
2. Suzanne L Marchand, Down from Olympus: Archaeology and Philhellenism
in Germany, 17501970. (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1996) Chapters 4 and 5. The close ties between German archaeology
and anthropology can be seen in the friendship and collaboration
of Schliemann and Rudolf Virchow, president of the German Society
for Anthropology, Ethnology, and Prehistory. Schliemann's collection
of Trojan antiquities were exhibited at Berlin's Ethnography Museum.
3. Oscar Levertin "Böcklin och Klinger," Samlade
skrifter. Vol. 7. Stockholm, 1916, pp. 108-120.
4. Max Klinger, Briefe aus den Jahren 18741919. Ed.
Hans W. Singer. (Leipzig: E.A. Seemann, 1924) pp. 13-14.
5. Charles Darwins Gesammelte Werke, trans. J. Victor Carus
(Stuttgart: F. Schweizerbart, 1874) included The Descent of Man
and The Origin of Species as well as Darwin's travel accounts
and his work on insect-eating plants. For a review see W. Von Kleist,
Literaturbriefe," Westermann's Jahrbuch der Illustrirten
Deutschen Monatshefte, 40 (April-Sept. 1876), pp. 553-555.
6. Charles Darwin, The Life and Letters of Charles Darwin.
Vol. 2. Ed. Francis Darwin. (New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1896)
p.270.
7. Ernst Haeckel, The Evolution of Man. 2 vols. (London:
C. Keegan Paul and Co., 1879) vol. 2., p.456; Julius Vogel, Max
Klinger und seine Vaterstadt Leipzig. (Leipzig: A. Deichertsche
Verlagsbuchhandlung,1924) p. 102. The literature on Goethe as a
scientist is considerable. For recent discussions consult Matthew
Bell, Goethe's Naturalistic Anthropology: Man and Other Plants.
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994) and Peter Matussek, ed., Goethe
und die Verzeitlichung der Natur. (Munich: C.H. Beck, 1998).
Goethe was routinely cited as a forerunner of Darwin. See, for example,
David Friedrich Strauss, The Old Faith and the New. Vol.
2. 1872. (Reprint, trans. Mathilde Blind. Oxford: Prometheus Books,
1997) p. 206; Frederick Gregory, Scientific Materialism in Nineteenth
Century Germany. (Boston: D. Reidel, 1977) p. 185; and Von Kleist
1876, p.554. Goethe, in the "Classical Walpurgis Night"
scene of Faust: Part II, describes the evolution of man through
transmutational forms originating in the ocean.
8. Scientists who asserted or inferred the ape-man connection included
Vogt, Vorlesungen über den Menschen (Lectures on Man)
(1863), Büchner, Der Mensch und seine Stellung in der Natur
(Man and his Place in Nature), 1870, and Haeckel, Natürliche
Schopfungsgeschichte (History of Creation), 1868. For detailed
information on the positions of these artists regarding Darwin,
as well as the contributions of the theologians Feuerbach and Strauss,
see Gregory 1977 and Frederick Gregory, Nature Lost?: Natural
Science and the German Theological Traditions of the Nineteenth
Century. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1992).
9. Alfred Kelly, The Descent of Darwin: The Popularization of
Darwinism in Germany, 18601914. (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 1981) p.22.
10. For details on the different applications of evolutionary science
to social theory by various socialist Darwinians, who argued over
the role of the "struggle for existence" and the necessity
for revolution, see Richard Weikart, Socialist Darwinism: Evolution
in German Socialist Thought from Marx to Bernstein. (San Francisco:
International Scholars Publications, 1999); and Mike Hawkins, Social
Darwinism in European and American thought, 18601945.
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997). Weikart also discusses
the positions of politically conservative scientists who were involved
in Bismarck's anti-socialist propaganda of the 1870s. Darwin himself
was displeased with the affiliation between his teachings and socialism
in Germany. (Weikart 1999, p.108-109.) The anti-socialist Virchow
was one of the few prominent German scientists who was not a Darwinist.
11. Georg Brandes, "Max Klinger," Moderne Geister.
(Frankfurt am Main: Rütten und Loening 1897) p.61. During the
late 1870s Klinger was living in the Prussian capital with several
Scandinavian artists who included the painters Christian Krohg and
Edvard Diriks.
12. Hans-Georg Pfeiffer, Max Klingers Graphikzyklen. (Giessener
Beiträge zur Kunstgeschichte, vol. 5. Giessen: W. Schmitz,
1980) p. 27. Pfeiffer, one of the few scholars to discuss this drawing,
was the first to identity the scientist as Darwin and to notice
the similarity between this ape and an illustration in Darwin's
The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals.
13. Hawkins 1997, p.134; Haeckel (1879) 1910, vol. 1, p.2.
14. Friedrich 1997, p. 199.
15. Haeckel (1879) 1910, vol. 2, p. 738.
16. Elizabeth Pendleton Streicher, "Max Klinger's 'Paraphrase
on the Finding of a Glove' (18781881)." (Ph.D. dissertation,
Columbia University, 1990) p. 36.
17. Klinger's "class report," which includes "Naturbeschreibung,"
is reprinted in Klinger 1924, opposite p. 1. By contrast, the Gymnasium,
attended by university-bound students, did not offer scientific
instruction in its curriculum.
18. Max Klinger 18571920. Exh. cat. Frankfurt am Main:
Städtische Galerie im Städelschen Kunstinstitut, 1992
p. 305. The best source of illustrations for the student sketchbook
drawings is Leipzig 1995. These two drawings appear on p.154; a
satirical sketch of an amateur naturalist is reproduced on p. 144.
19. Heinz-Georg Klös, Hans Frädrich, and Ursula Klös,
Die Arche Noah an der Spree: 150 Jahre Zoologischer Garten Berlin.
(Berlin: FAB Verlag, 1994) pp. 83-86 and 348-351. This aquarium
acquired the first gorilla in Germany in 1876.
20. Klinger's friend Diriks reported that "on one of our first
days in Berlin we went round the zoo and looked at all the strange
animals." This information is cited in Streicher 1990, p. 87.
For a contemporary description of the zoo with illustrations see
Henry Vizetelly, Berlin under the New Empire. Vol. 1. 1879.
(Reprint, New York: Greenwood Press, 1968) pp. 195-216. At that
time the zoo's collection numbered over 1500 animals and birds.
The skating rink played a prominent role in Klinger's print series
A Glove (Paraphrase on the Finding of a Glove.)
21. Klös 1994, pp.89, 90. For a critical analysis of these
Völkerschauen within the context of German anthropology,
Imperialism, and commercial interests see Zimmerman 2001, pp.18-23.
22. For illustrations consult Max Klinger. Exh. cat. Leipzig:
Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig, 1995, p.167; and Max
Klinger: Zeichnungen, Zustandsdrucke, Zyklen. Exh. cat. Munch:
Villa Stuck; Munich: Prestel, 1996, p.172. Klinger mentions the
drawing of the Moor (noting Krohg's approval) in the same letter
as his reference to Darwin. See Klinger 1924, p.8. For Darwin's
discussion of "African Moors" see Darwin 1874, p.886.
Race remained a contentious issue among scientists who argued over
whether human ancestry derived from a single original pair.
23. Darwin 1874, p. 872.
24. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy. Trans. Walter
Kaufmann. (New York: Random House, 1967. First published 1872) pp.
39, 61. Nietzsche described the satyr as "not a mere ape,"
but "the archetype of man." See also R.J Hollingdale,
Nietzsche: The Man and His Philosophy. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana
State University Press, 1965) pp. 90, 91 on Nietzsche's essay "Homer's
Contest," in which he referenced the "vein of cruelty"
in the Greek people. Illustrations of prints by Klinger not reproduced
in this article can be found in Hans Wolfgang Singer, Max Klinger:
Radierungen, Stiche, und Steindrucke; Etchings, Engravings, and
Lithographs, 18781903. (1909) (Reprint, German-English
ed., trans. Bernd K. Estabrook. San Francisco: Alan Wofsy Fine Arts,
1991); or Munich 1996
25. Haeckel (1879) 1910, vol. I, p.72 and 1876, vol. I, pp. 19,
20.
26. Darwin 1874, pp. 818, 863, and 510. These two prints were discussed
together within the context of Darwinian combat in Frankfurt 1992,
p. 305.
27. Carus Sterne, Werden und Vergen: Eine Entwicklungsgeschichte
des Naturganzen in gemeinverständlicher Fassung. 4th ed.
Vol. 2. (Berlin: Gebrüder Bornträger, 1901. First published
1876) p.327.
28. Zimmerman 2001, pp. 73-83. Zimmerman includes photographs of
the deformed performers. Darwin discussed these defects as "reversions"
and "arrests of development." See Darwin 1874, pp. 416
and 421. An illustrated article on microcephalics, entitled "Ein
'Affenmensch'," appeared in the Leipzig Illustrirte Zeitung
(30 March 1878, p.257). The figure in the illustration, with its
small pointed head, recalls the cranial structure of the creature
in Klinger's drawing Demon. For an illustration see Leipzig
1995, p.170.
29. Darwin 1874, pp. 578, 579, 873, and 874. Darwin, citing Carl
Vogt's research, averred that the male "brain is absolutely
larger" p.867.
30. Giraffes had achieved fame as animals at the center of evolutionary
debates between Lamarck and Wallace regarding the roles played by
either conscious willpower or chance variation. See Gillian Beer,
Darwin's Plots: Evolutionary Narrative in Darwin, George Eliot
and Nineteenth-Century Fiction. 2nd ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2000) pp. 18, 19; and James Rachels, Created
from Animals: The Moral Implications of Darwinism. (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1990) pp. 39, 40. The face above the woman
and lion is probably a study for Psyche in Klinger's etching Psyche
on the Cliff, 1880.
31. Darwin 1874, p.460. Darwin's research also offered scientific
justification for the traditional association of lions and male
prowess: "As far as I can discover, he [the lion] is the only
polygamist amongst all the terrestrial carnivores, and he alone
presents well-marked sexual characteristics." Darwin 1874,
p. 576.
32. Hubbard quoted in Eveleen Richards,"Darwin and the Descent
of Woman," in The Wider Domain of Evolutionary Thought,
ed. David Oldroyd and Ian Langham. (London: D. Reidel, 1983) p.77.
For Darwin see ibid., p.873.
33. Beer 2000, p.8.
34. Darwin 1874, p.579.
35. Ibid., p.911,
36. Ruskin (1873) quoted in Beer 2000, p.8 and Nietzsche (1874)
1990, p.107.
37. Darwin 1874, p.920.
38. Ibid., p.524.
39. John Lubbock, The Origin of Civilization and the Primitive
Condition of Mankind. (London: Longman, Green and Co., 1870)
p.126; and Klaus-Peter Koepping, Adolf Bastian and the Psychic
Unity of Mankind. (St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press,
1983) pp. 95, 96. Darwin cited Lubbock and Tylor's studies about
fetishes and dreams, which Tylor regarded as the inception of a
belief in spirits. (Darwin 1874, p.469.) Darwin viewed dreams as
reflections of man's highest powers of imagination, quoting the
Romantic poet Jean-Paul Richter on the topic. For Darwin, however,
this offered further evidence of our descent from animals, since
they also dream. (Ibid., p.453.)
40. Nietzsche (1878) 1986, pp. 18, 16. A similar function was provided
by music. Darwin believed that "man possessed these faculties
[singing and dancing] in a very remote period," so that "the
sensations and ideas thus excited in us by music…appear…like
mental reversions to the emotions and thoughts of a long-past age"
associated with "the season of courtship." [Darwin 1874,
p. 878-880.] This would have been of particular interest to Klinger
who was a pianist and regarded his graphic art as inextricably linked
to music through its content (as in the Brahmsphantasie)
and serial format (variations on themes).
41. Freud," Introductory Lectures," quoted in Frank J
Sulloway, Freud, Biologist of the Mind.(New York: Basic Books,
1979) p. 338.
42. For a discussion of this drawing see Frankfurt 1992, p. 301;
it is reproduced in Munich 1996, p. 191.
43. Darwin 1860, p.266.
44. Darwin 1874, pp. 522, 523. Klinger's "bird" appears
to be a fusion of two types of Pterosaurs, the head of a Rhamphorhynchus
on a Dimorphodon body. For illustrations and further information
see Carroll Lane Fenton and Mildred Adams Fenton, The Fossil
Book: A Record of Prehistoric Life. (Garden City, New Jersey:
Doubleday, 1958) pp. 363-368.
45. Das Museum für Naturkunde 1889, pp. 3, 7, 8. The
museum included collections in geology, paleontology, mineralogy,
petrology and zoology.
46. The drawing is illustrated in Leipzig 1995, p.159.
47. Tylor (1871)1970, p.284 and Nietzsche (1878) 1986, p.17.
48. Charles Huxley, Evidence as to Man's Place in Nature.
(London: Williams and Norgate, 1863) p.1. This statement was quoted
and discussed within the context of Darwinian myths of transformation
by Beer 2000, p.129. Nineteenth-century books on the natural sciences
were, in fact, usually laced with references to Greek literature
and culture. Haeckel, for example, begins The Evolution of Man
with Goethe's poem "Prometheus."
49. Haeckel 1879, vol. 2, p.394.
50. Arthur Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation.
Vol. 2. 1819. (Reprint, trans. E.F.J. Payne. New York: Dover Publications,
1958) p.556. In the same passage, he averred that love is "always
ready ruthlessly to destroy personal happiness in order to carry
out its ends."
51. Sterne (1876) 1901, p.552.
52. For a detailed interpretation of the drawing's symbolism, see
Pfeiffer 1980, pp.47-49.
53. Biblical truths had been discredited after the publication
of Strauss's books The Life of Jesus (1835) and Doctrine
of Faith (1840), in which he had exposed events in Genesis and
the Gospels as fictional myths, the latter created in response to
psychological needs of first-century Jews. For further information
see Gregory 1992, pp. 76-87.
54. Klinger to Ludwig Pietsch, 20 Sept. 1880 in Klinger 1924, p.35
55. Ibid.
56. Nietzsche (1872) 1967, p. 40. Schopenhauer's statement, contained
in Parerga und Paralipomena (1851), was cited by Dückers
(1976), p. 62. An article on tigers also appeared in the Leipzig
Illustrirte Zeitung (23 February 1878) describing their greater
power and danger in comparison to lions.
57. Darwin 1874, p. 692.
58. Klinger 1924, p.35.
59. Darwin 1874, p.524. As noted earlier, similar hairy humans
were featured at freak shows; their photographs were reproduced
in articles and books. For further information on "ape-men"
in Germany during the later nineteenth century see Nigel Rothfels,
"Aztecs, Aborigines, and Ape-People: Science and Freaks in
Germany, 18501900." In Freakery: Cultural Spectacles
of the Extraordinary Body, ed. Rosemary Garland Thomson. (New
York: New York University Press, 1996) pp. 158*72.
60. Jonas Rasch, "Fra Kunstforeningen," Aftenposten,
1 Dezember 1880. Reprinted in Lange, Marit, "Max Klinger und
Norwegen," Niederdeutsche Beiträge zur Kunstgeschichte
33 (1994), pp. 205, 206.
61. Nietzsche (1878) 1986, p.118.
62. Klinger to his parents, 20 April 1881 in Klinger 1924, p. 37.
63. Vogt 1864, p.469. Hostility towards organized religion was
expressed by many German scientists who supported Darwin.
64. For illustrations and discussions of Albertine in the Police
Doctor's Waiting Room and Struggle for Existence see
Kirk Varnedoe, Northern Light: Nordic Art at the Turn of the
Century. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1988) p. 152 (cat.
59) and 32 (fig. 11). For further information on Krohg see Oscar
Thue, Christian Krohg. (Oslo: Aschehoug, 1997)
65. The connection between Bebel's book and Klinger's work was
first discussed in Sylvia Heinje, "Zwischen Synnlichkeit und
Moral," in Max Klinger. Exh. cat. Bielefeld: Kunsthalle,
1976, p. 282-285. Through his sympathetic presentation of women
in these print cycles, Klinger distanced himself from the attitudes
of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche. In addition to Bebel, Büchner
also condemned what he perceived as the enslaved position of women
in society. See Ludwig Büchner, Man in the Past, Present
and Future. Trans. W.S. Dallas. (London: Asher and Co., 1872.
First published in German 1870) pp. 200-208.
66. August Bebel, Woman in the Past, Present and Future.
1879. (Reprint, London: Zwan, 1988) p.94.
67. Ibid., p. 91.
68. Ibid., p. 97.
69. Klinger (1891) 1984, p. 216.
70. Darwin 1874, p. 494; Büchner 1872, p.158.
71. Bebel (1879) 1988, p. 158.
72. Ibid., p. 156.
73. Klinger to Max Lehrs, 1 March 1916 in Klinger 1924, p. 208.
74. Nietzsche, unpublished notes (1888) quoted in Kaufmann 1974,
p. 328.
75. Darwin 1874 pp. 511 and 920.
76. Büchner 1872, p. 175.
77. Klinger 1985, p. 79.
78. For a more extensive discussion of this transition see Jay
Anne Clarke,"The Construction of Artistic Identity in Turn-of-the-Century
Berlin: The Prints of Klinger, Kollwitz, and Liebermann." (Ph.D.
dissertation, Brown University, 1999) pp. 95-100. Klinger did, however,
keep in touch with scientific circles in Leipzig. In 1895 he designed
the commemorative print honoring the famous Leipzig zoologist Rudolph
Leuckart on the fiftieth anniversary of his doctorate.
79. Nietzsche (1874) 1990, p.112; Walter Kaufmann, Nietzsche:
Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist. (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1974) p.152. For Nietzsche's influence on Klinger
see, among others, Martin Michalski, Max Klinger. (Augsburg:
AV-Verlag, 1986) pp. 19-24; and Elizabeth Tumasonis, "Klinger's
Christ on Olympus: The Confrontation between Christianity
and Paganism," RACAR 20, no. 1-2 (1993), pp. 83-97.
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