|
Exhibitions
|
|
|
Arnold
Schönberg and His God
3 May 13 September 2002
Arnold Schönberg Center
Opening Hours
Monday Friday 10 am 5 pm, closed on legal holidays |
Schönberg was brought up in the Jewish faith but in 1898
converted to Protestantism and was baptised in the Viennese Dorothee Parish.
With his reconversion to Judaism in Paris in 1933 he made both a religious
and national-political statement. The exhibition "Arnold Schönberg and
his God" expresses his religious development in historical-biographical
documents and works of art, a development that also helped shape the history
of his oeuvre, and the varied artistic reflection of an inexpressible,
ineducible God.
Special emphasis is placed on the sources of the unfinished oratorio "Die
Jakobsleiter" as the concept of a monumental stage work and on the topic
of the "confluence of a moderately skeptical realistic consciousness with
faith" (Schönberg) likewise on the widely ranging documentary materials
to the opera "Moses und Aron" (some shown here for the first time in Vienna),
pinnacle of the religious-philosophical questions that forcibly arose
from socio-political events of the 1920s. Arnold Schönberg was among those
politically engaged intellectuals who early on recognized and spoke out
against National Socialism long before the Shoah became the object
of journalistic interest and historical-political discourse. The manuscripts
from his musical estate demonstrate the indivisibility of Schönberg's
idea of God and a general ethical concept.
One part of the exhibition is devoted to the architectonic concept of
the recently opened Jewish Museum of Daniel Libeskind in Berlin, which
makes concrete reference to Schönberg's "Moses and Aron."
|