“Blake was a phenomenon”: Artistic, Domestic, and Blakean Visions in Joseph Paul Hodin’s Writing on Else and Ludwig Meidner

Erle, S. (2022) “Blake was a phenomenon”: Artistic, Domestic, and Blakean Visions in Joseph Paul Hodin’s Writing on Else and Ludwig Meidner. Blake: An Illustrated Quarterly, 55 (3). ISSN 0160-628X

[img]
Preview
Text
Erle_blake_was_a_2022.pdf - Published Version

Download (18MB) | Preview

Abstract

WHEN Ludwig Meidner (1884–1966), the German- Jewish expressionist painter, printmaker, and writer, returned to Germany in 1953, he took what he could carry: personal belongings, books, and images, his prints, drawings, paintings, and watercolors.1 Refugees face difficult choices; they can take only what is absolutely necessary. Meidner never adjusted during the fourteen years of exile and there is a sense that he wanted to eradicate all that. Meidner arrived in London with three portfolios of prints, 2500 drawings, and eighty paintings (Sander 228). In a letter of 18 June 1953, he says that he created “a few hundred interesting watercolors” (“ein paar hundert interessanter Wasserfarbenbilder”) while there (Breuer and Wagemann 2: 486). reminded him of London—except for Blake. Thomas Grochowiak, who first noted the significance of Meidner’s encounter with “the painter, poet, mystic William Blake” (“Maler-Dichter-Mystikers William Blake”), suggests that he identified with Blake’s adverse living conditions and artistic neglect, and argues that the occult aspects and especially the Visionary Heads interested him: “For him the preoccupation with Old Testament figures and prophets, with mystical philosophers or religious ecstatics, was just as natural as the everyday, familiar dealings with ghosts.”2 Meidner took not only John Piper’s British Romantic Artists (1942) and Ruthven Todd’s edition of Alexander Gilchrist’s Life of Blake(1942), but also reproductions of William Blake by Thomas Phillips, the large color print God Judging Adam (then known as Elijah About to Ascend in the Chariot of Fire), and James Deville’s life mask. These images were part of a selection that were to adorn his studio in Marxheim (1955–63),3 where he shared his art with a small number of visitors who came to pay tribute to the old master of German expressionism.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: © 2022 university of Rochester. This is an author accepted manuscript of a paper subsequently published in Blake: An Illustrated Quarterly. Uploaded in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy.
Depositing User: Users 138 not found.
Date Deposited: 10 Feb 2022 09:24
Last Modified: 10 Feb 2022 09:24
URI: https://bgro.repository.guildhe.ac.uk/id/eprint/928

Actions (login required)

Edit Item Edit Item