A slideshow: My wife Tamara looking at art.

I took these photographs starting about in 2006 — three years into our dating life — and continuing through our 10-month stay in Europe last year up through recent months in St. Louis.

Prada Marfa, a permanent sculpture created by artist-collaborators Michael Elmgreen and Ingar Dragset. Interesting backstory at The Fox Is Black.

Love this drawing by sebastiansdrawings, made with Paper on the iPad.

H-Omer Design Featured on the Goodsie Blog »

Hey, that’s my father-in-law. Well done, Omer!

5 Highlights from Germany & Spain »

My post for the “Artful Travels” series at the TOKY Blog.

A visitor to Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie examines Gerhard Richter’s “Betty,” one of my favorite paintings and one that just happens to be owned by my hometown Saint Louis Art Museum. (When I worked at SLAM several years ago, I used to route myself through the galleries to see it often.) The photo is from a slideshow companion to a new article about Richter titled “Germans Embrace Artist as a Homegrown Hero.” (Photograph by Tobias Schwarz/Reuters)

“The Germans Dive Deeper”

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Peter Watson’s The German Genius: Europe’s Third Renaissance, the Second Scientific Revolution, and the Twentieth Century is an extraordinary 1,000-page book. It is immensely ambitious, rich in ideas and evidence of the German-speaking peoples’ world-changing achievements in music, literature, philosophy, psychoanalysis, biology, geology, bioethics, archeology, art history, and on and on. (On music, to take just one subject: “The standard ‘backbone’ of classical music consists today of Bach, Handel, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, and Brahms — all German.”)

Watson, an intellectual historian and former journalist, is a confident, resourceful, learned guide. He succeeds not just in illustrating how Germany was the leading force in the world of ideas until 1933, but also in helping the reader consider the country since it was ever-changed by the Führer and the Nazi Party (“Hitler still makes history but he also distorts it”). As a writer and historian, Watson is sharp and entertaining, as evidenced by these well-drawn, memorable sketches and assessments of just some of the book’s key figures:

Brahms:

Prickly, oversensitive, cynical, and bad-tempered, he was as much feared and disliked as Hans von Bülow, who was notorious for his tempers and antagonisms. At one party in Vienna, it is said, Brahms left in a huff, grumbling, “If there is anyone here I have not insulted, I apologize.”

Strauss:

Paradoxically, Strauss was himself a solid bourgeois, with a sober — even staid — private life. Alma Mahler was at the rehearsal of Feuersnot in 1901 and confided to her diary: “Strauss thought of nothing but money. The whole time he had a pencil in hand and was calculating the profits to the last penny.” His wife, Pauline, was a grasping woman, once a singer, who would scream at her husband, when he was relaxing at cards, “Richard, go compose!” Their house at Garmisch had three separate doormats, on each of which Pauline insisted that the composer wipe his feet.”

Schoenberg:

Richard Strauss was ambivalent about Arnold Schoenberg. He thought he would be better off “shoveling show” [!] than composing, yet recommended him for a Liszt scholarship.” … A small, wiry man, “easily unimpressed,” who went bald early on, Schoenberg was strikingly inventive — he carved his own chessmen, bound his own books, painted (Wassily Kandinsky was a fan), and built a typewriter for music.

Mann:

When war broke out, Thomas Mann — as we have seen — was as nationalistic as many others. He was not yet one of the giants of European literature but he did have a growing reputation. He volunteered for the Landsturm, or reserve army, but the doctor who examined him was familiar with his work and, reasoning that he would make a greater contribution to the war effort as a writer rather than as a soldier, failed him physically for active service.

Kafka:

Kafka is best known for three works of fiction … But he also kept a diary for fourteen years and wrote copious letters. These reveal him to have been a deeply paradoxical and enigmatic man. He was engaged to the same woman for five years, yet saw her fewer than a dozen times in that period; he wrote ninety letters to one woman in the two months after he met her, including several between twenty and thirty pages, and to another he wrote 130 letters in five months. He wrote a famous forty-five-page typed letter to his father when he was thirty-six, explaining why he was still afraid of him.

Marx:

Along with his fellow German-speaker, Adolf Hitler, Karl Marx probably had a more direct effect on the recently completed twentieth century, and the shape of the contemporary world, than any other single individual. Without him there would have been no Lenin, no Stalin, no Mao Zedong, and few if any of the other dictators who disfigured those times. Without him there would have been no Russian Revolution, and without World War II (or Max Planck and Albert Einstein), would there — could there — have been a Cold War, a divided Germany? Would decolonization have occurred in the way that it did, would there have been an Israel where it is, the Middle East problem that there is? Would there have been a 9/11? Ideas don’t come any more consequential than Marxism.

Freud:

Sigmund Freud’s influence was less catastrophic than Marx’s, but no less consequential…. Alfred Kazin, the American critic, maintained in an essay he published in 1956 to mark the one hundredth anniversary of Freud’s birth that “Freud has influenced even people who have never heard of him.” Kazin thought that, at mid-century in America, “to those who have no belief, Freudianism sometimes serves as a philosophy of life.” He thought that at “every hour of every day now,” people could not forget a name, feel depressed, or end a marriage without wondering what the “Freudian” reason might be. He thought that the novel and painting (Thomas Mann, T. S. Eliot, Ernest Hemingway, William Faulkner, Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, Expressionism, Surrealism, Abstraction) had been reinvigorated by the Freudian knowledge that “personal passion is a stronger force in people’s lives that socially accepted morality” and that the “most beautiful effect” of Freudianism was the increasing awareness of childhood “as the most important single influence on personal development.” He thought the insistence on personal happiness — the goal of psychoanalytic therapy — was the most revolutionary force in modern times, a modern form of self-realization.

Nietzsche:

Nietzsche’s most well-known — some might say notorious — aphorism is “God is dead.” One of his most important achievements, along with Max Weber, was to think through and confront the implications of that sentiment, to work out in what he saw as terrifying detail the consequences of modernity, a world of vast populous cities, mass transport, and mass communications, in which the old certainties had been dissolved, where the comforts and consolations of religion had disappeared for many people, and in which science had acquired an authority that was, in his view, as arid and empty as it was impersonal and impressive. It is in this sense that Martin Heidegger called Nietzsche the “culmination” of modernity — i.e., Nietzsche felt the loss of whatever had gone before more keenly than anyone else, and he described that loss in more vivid hues.

Beuys:

All this was overshadowed by the advent of Joseph Beuys, who stands apart (and, for many people, above) all else in German postwar art. Beuys, born in Krefeld in 1921, never deviated from his conviction that his artistic aim was to find a new visual language that would come to terms with the war and at the same time find a way forward that did not ignore all that had happened.

The work of art, Beuys believed, exists in “eternal time, historical time, and personal time.” Having himself been shot down over Russia as a Luftwaffe pilot in the Second Wold War, he was treated for frostbite by his Russian captors, who used felt and fat, which became the materials Beuys used in (some of) his art, fused with other, less personal substances. He felt the spectator should be aware of what these materials meant to the artist, adding a level of consciousness to the aesthetic experience (as a boy he used a tram stop near an important monument), with the national past, featuring railway lines to remind the viewer what railways were used for in Nazi Germany. But, his lines were slightly curved, to hint at progress, a way forward, and up. In experiencing the present-day beauty of his sculptures, Beuys is saying, we must relive past events — this is his dialogue with time.

Congrats to Watson for completing such a tremendous volume of history. I recommend it highly.

"Moreover, critics have been displaying a reverse-style NIMBY reaction: Nowhere EXCEPT in My Backyard! Crystal Bridges represents a form of geographical populism that does not sit well with art world elitists who believe that culture exists, and should be cultivated, in just a few cherished spots, preferably of their own choosing. But why-especially in an age of electronic communications and mass travel-must art be confined to a handful of metropoles? And if the art world has beaten a path to Bilbao or the tiny and remote Marfa, Tex., why not to Bentonville?"
- From “The Meet and Greet Museum,” Steven C. Dubin’s considered take on Crystal Bridges in this month’s Art in America. A museum-going friend who visited last month has given it her thumbs up. Tamara and I will certainly make a trip there this year.

Marge, meet Monet. One slide from the Complex article “The Complete History Of Art References In The Simpsons” (via Tamara

Tamara, at the Kemper’s “Precarious Worlds.”

This past week, I rebuilt and relaunched H-Omer.com, the website for my father-in-law, moving from Squarespace to the Goodsie integrated retail platform (a pleasure to use). His work via H-Omer Design is in a handful of U.S. galleries, and he’s had online buyers from almost all 50 states and several countries. While his wire-tree sculptures were once his most popular item (my parents actually bought one before knowing his relation to my then-girlfriend), I think his wall sculptures are some of his best work. (You can see one of them in the “Interior Photographs” part of the new site, which features shots from the house Tamara and I used to own in South City; we’ll supplement those with a few photos of his work in our new house in time.)

Tyler Green on the Walker's New Site »

From his post, “Why the Walker’s new website is a big deal”: 

Traditionally, art museum websites have been where you go to get information about the museum: its collection, its exhibitions, its public programs and so on — and that’s it. Art museum websites typically pretend that the museum is an island unto itself. Sometimes parts of museum websites have gone beyond their institution’s walls — SFMOMA’s eclectic and fascinating Open Space blog occasionally does this, for example — but not often.

The new Walker website rejects that approach by presenting the Walker as both a physical and a virtual community hub — and it defines its community appropriately broadly, as both the art world and the Walker’s home state of Minnesota. With its audience thus defined, the new website promises to provide not just information about the Walker, but information about art and artists wherever they are, with an special and appropriate focus on its home region. That’s smart. Next up: We’ll see how the website delivers on that promise.

This is the cover of the Gallery Guide for Reflections of the Buddha, an exhibition that opens tonight at the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts. The 12-page guide was written by senior curator Francesca Herndon-Consagra, designed by Ken Botnick, and edited by me. The coming months will see an expanded Web Catalogue for the exhibition designed by TOKY — for now, TOKY built this holding page — and an Exhibition Catalogue. (The reason those latter projects come out after the exhibition opens is because they include photography of the fully installed galleries, and that photography’s happening now.) If you’re close to St. Louis, I encourage you not to miss this show. The Pulitzer’s one of my very favorite places.

This is the cover of the Gallery Guide for Reflections of the Buddha, an exhibition that opens tonight at the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts. The 12-page guide was written by senior curator Francesca Herndon-Consagra, designed by Ken Botnick, and edited by me. The coming months will see an expanded Web Catalogue for the exhibition designed by TOKY — for now, TOKY built this holding page — and an Exhibition Catalogue. (The reason those latter projects come out after the exhibition opens is because they include photography of the fully installed galleries, and that photography’s happening now.) If you’re close to St. Louis, I encourage you not to miss this show. The Pulitzer’s one of my very favorite places.

Michael Eastman posts new work from his Luminosity series. Don’t miss the rest.