Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Beethoven-Geflechte ‒ A Beethoven Tapestry

View through CrossRef
Beethoven, the loner – that is the historiographical image that has long dominated biographies and research on Beethoven. But while this image resonates with the enduring impression of the artistic genius, its credibility founders when one examines more closely his life and environment during his first decades in Vienna. Here, as a pianist and composer, as a teacher and witty conversationalist, Beethoven belonged to an expansive and close-knit tapestry of social, artistic, professional, family and friend-based relationships. And it is the social circles Beethoven encountered as he settled in the cultural and political metropolis, as well as how he negotiated his way through and communicated musically within them, that are newly put up for discussion in this edited volume. The political turbulence of the early 19th century saw the aristocracy’s authority increasingly displaced, transforming the social and cultural conditions in countless ways and newly determining who should be remembered and how. This meant that a composer like Beethoven – aided by his self-mythologization as an anti-feudal, bourgeois artist and eccentric genius – could easily be incorporated into the heroic historical narrative that characterized the contemporary political tide. The occasion celebrated in the present volume – the Beethoven anniversary year of 2020 – therefore also offers the opportunity to trace and rethink the after-effects of this culture of remembrance, including how Beethoven’s image continued to evolve throughout the 20th century.
Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften
Title: Beethoven-Geflechte ‒ A Beethoven Tapestry
Description:
Beethoven, the loner – that is the historiographical image that has long dominated biographies and research on Beethoven.
But while this image resonates with the enduring impression of the artistic genius, its credibility founders when one examines more closely his life and environment during his first decades in Vienna.
Here, as a pianist and composer, as a teacher and witty conversationalist, Beethoven belonged to an expansive and close-knit tapestry of social, artistic, professional, family and friend-based relationships.
And it is the social circles Beethoven encountered as he settled in the cultural and political metropolis, as well as how he negotiated his way through and communicated musically within them, that are newly put up for discussion in this edited volume.
The political turbulence of the early 19th century saw the aristocracy’s authority increasingly displaced, transforming the social and cultural conditions in countless ways and newly determining who should be remembered and how.
This meant that a composer like Beethoven – aided by his self-mythologization as an anti-feudal, bourgeois artist and eccentric genius – could easily be incorporated into the heroic historical narrative that characterized the contemporary political tide.
The occasion celebrated in the present volume – the Beethoven anniversary year of 2020 – therefore also offers the opportunity to trace and rethink the after-effects of this culture of remembrance, including how Beethoven’s image continued to evolve throughout the 20th century.

Related Results

Beethoven's Lives
Beethoven's Lives
Beethoven's Lives will be required reading for anyone interested in understanding how Beethoven biography has evolved through the ages. When Ludwig van Beethoven died in March 1...
Beethoven's Lives
Beethoven's Lives
Beethoven's Lives will be required reading for anyone interested in understanding how Beethoven biography has evolved through the ages. When Ludwig van Beethoven died in March 1...
European Tapestries
European Tapestries
Tapestry, the most costly and coveted art form in Renaissance and Baroque Europe, has long fascinated scholars. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, researchers delved into archiv...
The Principles and Techniques of Artur Schnabel’s Performance of the Piano Sonatas by Ludwig van Beethoven
The Principles and Techniques of Artur Schnabel’s Performance of the Piano Sonatas by Ludwig van Beethoven
The piano sonatas by Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827) represent the highest achievement of the First Viennese School in modern piano performance. The complexity and depth of the st...
The "Beethoven Folksong Project" in the Reception of Beethoven and His Music
The "Beethoven Folksong Project" in the Reception of Beethoven and His Music
Beethoven's folksong arrangements and variations have been coldly received in recent scholarship. Their melodic and harmonic simplicity, fusion of highbrow and lowbrow styles, seem...
Beethoven im „Brockhaus“
Beethoven im „Brockhaus“
Full-length biographies about Ludwig van Beethoven were not published until after the composer's death. During his lifetime, biographical articles in dictionaries and encyclopaedia...
“Beethoven”
“Beethoven”
Abstract ‘Beethoven’ asks why Beethoven’s contemporaries knew relatively little about him as an individual. It was only after his death that an image of him began to...

Back to Top