The magic of silence Caspar David Friedrich's journey through time

Florian Illies, 1971-

Book - 2025

"No German painter evokes such strong emotions as Caspar David Friedrich: his evening skies remain icons of longing, his mountain vistas testaments to the grandeur of nature. He inspired Samuel Beckett to write Waiting for Godot and Walt Disney to create Bambi. Goethe, however, was so enraged by the enigmatic melancholy of Friedrich's paintings that he wanted to smash them on the edge of a table. In a sweeping journey through time, bestselling author Florian Illies tells the story of Friedrich's paintings and their impact on subsequent generations. Many of his most beautiful paintings were burned, first in his birthplace and then in World War II; others, like the Chalk Cliffs on Rügen, emerge from the mists of history a hund...red years after Friedrich's death. Illies recounts the story of how Friedrich's paintings ended up at the Russian czar's court, others among a pile of winter tires in a Mafia car repair shop, and others still in the kitchen of a German social housing apartment. Adored by Hitler and Rainer Maria Rilke, despised by Stalin and by the generation of 68, this compelling narrative dances through 250 years of history as seen through Friedrich's art and life. As a result, the man himself becomes flesh and blood before our very eyes"--

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Subjects
Published
Hoboken, NJ ; Cambridge, UK : Polity [2025]
Language
English
German
Main Author
Florian Illies, 1971- (author, -)
Other Authors
Tony (Translator) Crawford (translator)
Edition
English edition
Item Description
"Originally published in German as Zauber der Stille : Caspar David Friedrichs Reise durch die Zieten. Copyright ©2023 S. Fischer Verlad GmgH, Frankfurt am Main."--Title page verso.
Physical Description
v, 186 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781509567546
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An art historian documents the achievement of one of Germany's most important painters. Historian Illies writes in this admiring biography that Friedrich (1774-1840) was "the most famous German painter of the nineteenth century" yet suffered an inexplicable "descent into oblivion." Many factors influenced that decline in interest in this painter of allegorical landscapes who "inhaled nature to exhale it again as art." Illies alternates between stories of Friedrich's personal life and the creation of his works. He divides the book into sections dedicated to the four classical elements--fire, water, earth, and air--that inspired Friedrich's paintings or affected their fate, as when a blaze at the home of Princess Mathilde of Saxony destroyed two inherited Friedrichs,Morning in the Mountains andMountain Scene in Evening Light. The book shows the influence Friedrich had on other artists, from Samuel Beckett, who had a "prototypical experience" that inspiredWaiting for Godot after he viewed Friedrich's landscapes, to Kurt Vonnegut, who was in prison during the Dresden bombing of World War II and later had his character Billy Pilgrim describe "the sunsets over the destroyed city as if they were skies by Caspar David Friedrich" inSlaughterhouse-Five. Sometimes, Illies sledgehammers square pegs into round holes and forces events to fit this arrangement, as when, in the water section, he writes of the Nazis' efforts to embrace Friedrich as "a stout, seaworthy Teuton who would stand in the bow during their misguided expeditions to come." Most of the book, however, is more restrained. Sprinkled throughout are amusing if unnerving anecdotes, such as the one about Walt Disney's 1935 trip to Munich to see a compilation of his work titledIn the Realm of Mickey Mouse. "The Nazis allowed the glorification of other rulers," Illies writes, "as long as they were mice." A welcome appreciation of the greatest painter of German Romanticism. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.