Photo: Musée de Montaubon.
57. THE CHILDREN’S FRIEND. This picture of Stalin embracing a young admirer at the Communist Party Congress of 1938 at the height of the purges was widely repro duced by Soviet propaganda agencies. It even inspired a public statue erected in Moscow. The girl, Gelya Sergeyevna, learned much later that her father had been shot on Stalin’s orders, and that her mother had been cast into the Gulag for enquiring about his fate.
Photo: David King.
58. KNIGHT IN SHINING ARMOUR. H. Lanzinger,
Adolf Hitler als Ritter
(c.1939). The Nazis’ search for
Lebensraum
in the East was often seen as a continuation of the medieval
Drang nach Osten
and the campaigns of the Teutonic Knights.
Photo: AKG, London.
59. ETERNAL WANDERER. C. D. Friedrich,
Wanderer above the clouds
(1818). The supreme image of the Romantic spirit.
Photo: © Elke Walford, Hamburger Kunsthalle.
60. DYNAMO. J. M. W. Turner,
Rain, Steam and Speed
(1844). A pioneering example of Impressionism, and the supreme image of the nineteenth century’s obsessions both with Nature and with Mechanical Power.
Photo: National Gallery, London.
61. NO SURRENDER, 1831. W. Kossak (1856–1942),
Sowiñski on the Ramparts of Wok
(1922). Facing the Russian assault on Warsaw, the Napoleonic veteran, General Jozef Sowiñski, ordered his men to fix his wooden leg in the ground, resolving never to bow down to tyrants.
Photo: Museum Wojska Polskiego, Warsaw.
62. FREE HELLAS. Ch. Perlberg,
Popular festivities at the Olympeion in Athens, 1838
. This scene from the newly independent Kingdom underlines both Greece’s Classical heritage and her legacy of four centuries of Ottoman rule.
Photo: National Historical Museum, Athens.
63. MUSICAL EVENING. J. Danhauser,
Liszt am Flugel
(1840). From the left: Alfred de Musset (or Alexandre Dumas), Victor Hugo, Georges Sand, N. Paganini, Gioacchino Rossini, Marie d’Agoult. Nationalgalerie, Berlin.
Photo: Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz.
64. CONCERT OF EUROPE. A. von Werner,
The Congress of Berlin
(1881). From the left: Count Karolyi (Austria), Prince Gorchakov (Russia), Benjamin Disraeli (Britain), Count Andrassy (Hungary), Chancellor von Bismarck (Germany), Count Shuvalov (Russia), Mehmet Ali (Ottoman Empire). Staatlichen Museum, Berlin.
Photo: AKG, London/Berlin.
65. RURAL POVERTY. J.-F. Millet,
Les Glaneuses (The Gleaners)
(1857). The summer countryside of Normandy seen by a master of French realism.
Photo: Bridgeman Art Library.
66. INDUSTRIAL GRIME. L. S. Lowry (1887–1976). Though painting in the mid-20th-century, the Lancashire artist evoked a quaint and anachronistic vision of the early industrial landscape, which had all but disappeared.
Photo: Bridgeman Art Library.
67. IMPRESSIONIST. Claude Monet (1840–1926),
The Seine at Bougival
(1869). An experimental study of suburban Paris painted by a young Monet taking his first cau tious steps into Impressionism. See
[IMPRESSION]
.
Photo: The Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, New Hampshire.
68. PRIMITIVE. Henri Rousseau (1844–1910),
War
(1894). One of the vivid, dream-like images of‘Le Douanier’ Rousseau, instinctively produced by a naive artist in the era of Freud’s discovery of the subconscious and in the middle of the great European peace. Musée d’Orsay, Paris.
Photo: Bridgeman Art Library.
69. SURREAL. P. Blume,
The Eternal City
(1937). A dislocated vision of Rome from the years when Mussolini sought to build a new Roman Empire and when Eliot’s
Waste Land
suggested that European civilization had been shattered. See
[WASTE LAND]
.
Museum of Modern Art, Guggenheim Fund, New York.
© Estate of Peter Blume/DACS, London/VAGA, New York 1997
70. EUROPE DECEIVED. A. Vasilev,
They are Writing About Us in Pravda
(1951). A practitioner of Stalinist ‘Socialist Realism’ presents an idyllic imaginary scene from a collective farm in Moldavia. In reality, Moldavia’s population had been purged and repressed after the Soviet invasion of 1940, and the peasantry collectivized by force. Private Collection. See
[MOLDOVA]
.
Photo: Museum of Modern Art, Oxford.
71. EUROPE DIVIDED. Sigmar Polke,
Watch Tower with Geese
(1987–8). An image of the Iron Curtain painted two years before its collapse by a German who had himself escaped across ‘the Wall’ in 1953. On the left, in the East, a concentration camp: in the West, floating consumer
kitsch
.
Photo: © 1994 The Art Institute of Chicago. All Rights Reserved.
72. EUROPE IN TORMENT. Marc Chagall (1889–1985),
White Crucifixion
(1938). The central symbol of Christian Europe is overlain with Jewish imagery: painted by a Russian Jewish exile to Western Europe on the eve of the Second World War.
© 1993 The Art Institute of Chicago. All Rights Reserved; © 1994 DACS, London.
APPENDIX III
HISTORICAL COMPENDIUM
Geological and Historical Time | 1215 |
Ancient Mediterranean Civilizations | 1216 |
Minoan Scripts | 1217 |
European Alphabets | 1218 |
Crossing the Alps | 1219 |
Phenology and Sägesignatur | 1220 |
Pythagorean Food Classification | 1221 |
Ancient Greek Colonies | 1222 |
The Roman Emperors | 1223 |
The Popes, Patriarchs of Rome | 1224–5 |
Palaeography | 1226–7 |
Eagles and Crosses | 1228–9 |
The Chicago ‘Great Books Scheme’ | 1230 |
Illyria, ancient and modern | 1231 |
The Indo-European Languages | 1232 |
Slavonic and Uralian Languages | 1233 |
Runes and Oghams | 1234–5 |
The Christianization of Europe | 1236 |
The Byzantine Empire | 1237 |
Europe’s Cultural Circles | 1238 |
The Frankish Empire, AD 800–77 | 1239 |
Khazaria at its greatest extent, | |
c . AD 900 | 1240 |
The Christian Reconquista in Iberia | 1241 |
Numerals and Mathematical Notation | 1242–3 |
Growth of France’s Royal Domain | 1244 |
Bulgaria, Medieval and Modern | 1245 |
German Emperors, French Kings | 1246–7 |
European University Foundations | 1248 |
Partitions of Kievan Rus | 1249 |
Timekeeping in History | 1250 |
Aragon: Kingdom and dependencies | 1251 |
The Plantagenet Realm, c .1170 | 1252 |
The Roads to Santiago | 1253 |
Orange and the Venaissin | 1254 |
The Republic of Venice | 1255 |
Lithuania, Medieval and Modern | 1256 |
The Swiss Confederation | 1257 |
Medieval Serbia and Bosnia | 1258 |
Growth of the Ottoman Empire | 1259 |
Fifteenth-Century Burgundy | 1260 |
Central European Dynasties | 1261 |
The Jagiellonian Realm | 1262 |
Paris Rentes , 1420–1787 | 1263 |
Polish Kings, Russian Tsars | 1264 |
Early Modern Political Systems | 1265 |
Europe’s Wars, 1494–1670 | 1266–7 |
Rise and Fall of European States | 1268 |
Renaissance Italy | 1269 |
Habsburg Dominions in Europe | 1270 |
The Price Revolution in Spain | 1271 |
Discoveries and Inventions | 1272–3 |
The Papal Index, 1559–1952 | 1274 |
The Revolt of the Netherlands | 1275 |
The Prussian Agglomeration | 1276 |
Russia’s Expansion into Europe | 1277 |
Grand Opera, 1607–1969 | 1278 |
The Colonization of Ireland | 1279 |
Germany, 1618–48 | 1280 |
Lorraine and Alsace | 1281 |
Europe’s Wars, 1648–1789 | 1282–3 |
The ‘Eastern Question’ 1683–1920 | 1284 |
The United Kingdom, 1707–1922 | 1285 |
French Revolutionary Era 1789–1815 | 1286–7 |
The French Revolutionary Calendar | 1288–9 |
The Crimea | 1290 |
The French Empire, 1812 | 1291 |
Grillenstein: A Peasant Household | 1292 |
Modernization | 1293 |
European Demography, 1800–1914 | 1294 |
Indices of Liberalization | 1295 |
Indices of Industrialization | 1296–7 |
The Caucasus Region | 1298 |
Germany 1815–1918 | 1299 |
Queen Victoria’s Relatives | 1300–1 |
Expansion of Greece, 1821–1945 | 1302 |
Springtime of Nations 1846–9 | 1303 |
The Unification of Italy | 1304 |
Slesvig (Schleswig) and Holstein | 1305 |
Growth of Romania, 1861–1945 | 1306 |
Nationalities of Austria-Hungary | 1307 |
The Pedigree of Socialism | 1308 |
Macedonia 1913 | 1309 |
Greater Albania | 1310 |
The Jewish Pale in the Russian Empire | 1311 |
The ‘Great Triangle’: 1914–91 | 1312 |
Italo-Slav Borders, 1939–92 | 1313 |
Soviet Expansion in Europe | 1314 |
Ukraine, 1918–91 | 1315 |
Poland, 1921–45 | 1316 |
Czechoslovakia, 1918–92 | 1317 |
Hungary, 1918–45 | 1318 |
Serbia and Yugoslavia, from 1817 | 1319 |
Inter-War Dictatorships | 1320 |
Communist ‘Party-States’ | 1321 |
Non-Aggression Treaties, 1925–39 | 1322 |
Rise of Nazi Power, 1933–43 | 1323 |
Spanish Civil War, 1936–9 | 1324 |
International Brigades in Spain | 1325 |
The Waffen-SS Divisions, 1939–5 | 1326–7 |
Europe’s Death Toll, 1914–45 | 1328–9 |
The Gulag Archipelago | 1330 |
The Baltic Countries, 1993 | 1331 |
Europe, 1992: Assorted Statistics | 1332–3 |
Parliamentary Assemblies | 1334 |
Europe 1995: Five Organizations | 1335 |
Geological and Histotrical Time
Ancient Mediterranean Civilization:Periodization
Minoan Scripts