Read The Lady in Gold Online

Authors: Anne-Marie O'Connor

The Lady in Gold (52 page)

BOOK: The Lady in Gold
7.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
THE WOUNDED CREATOR

  
1
KLIMT'S VIENNESE MOTHER, ANNA:
Pirchan,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 13.

  
2
“THERE WASN'T EVEN ANY BREAD”:
Whitford,
Klimt,
p. 24.

  
3
“RELIGIOUS MADNESS”:
Pirchan,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 44.

  
4
AN IMPORTANT MENTOR, PROFESSOR FERDINAND LAUFBERGER:
Gilles Neret and Charity Scott-Stokes,
Gustav Klimt: 1862–1918
(Cologne: Taschen, 2002), p. 9.

  
5
“HE WAS NOT NATURALLY”:
Alfred Weidinger,
Gustav Klimt
(Munich: Prestel, 2007), p. 211.

  
6
“GUSTL, WHY DON'T YOU KNOW HOW”:
Pirchan,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 19.

  
7
“WHAT SEDUCERS YOU ARE
!” Ibid., p. 25.

  
8
SERENA PULITZER:
Tobias Natter and Gerbert Frodl,
Klimt's Women
(Vienna: Österreichische Galerie Belvedere, 2000), p. 90.

  
9
WHEN THE OMISSION WAS NOTICED:
Morton,
A Nervous Splendor,
p. 169.

10
BUT AS SOMEONE WOULD REMARK:
Ibid.

11
IN A DAZE OF ASTONISHMENT AND RELIEF:
Ibid., p. 168.

12
“IS IT WE WHO ARE STUPID”:
Pirchan,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 24.

13
“PUT THEIR FATE”:
Gustav Klimt, letter to Mizzi Zimmermann. Courtesy of Gustav Zimmermann.

ARRANGED MARRIAGE

  
1
“AS IF THEY WERE SLIGHTLY TIPSY”:
Zweig,
World of Yesterday,
p. 69.

  
2
“LACED INTO A WASP'S SHAPE”:
Ibid., p. 64.

  
3
THE BAUERS LIVED IN AN APARTMENT:
Sophie Lillie and Georg Gaugusch,
Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer
(New York: Neue Galerie Museum for German and Austrian Art, 2007), p. 20.

  
4
OWNED BY HERMINE WITTGENSTEIN:
Allan Janik and Stephen Toulmin,
Wittgenstein's Vienna
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1973), p. 172.

  
5
“YOU DON'T HAVE TO BECOME AN ART EXPERT”:
Adele Bloch-Bauer, letter to her nephew Robert for his eighteenth birthday, ca. Aug. 1921.

  
6
“YOU HAVE TO DEVELOP”:
Adele Bloch-Bauer, letter, ca. Aug. 1921.

  
7
“TODAY, I TRIED TO REACH YOU”:
Moritz Bauer letter, July 1901, Historical Association of Deutsche Bank,
Bank and History Historical Review,
Mar. 2007, no. 13, p. 1.

  
8
JEWISH MODERNIZERS:
Austrian National Library,
Hof- und Staats-handbuch der össterreichisch-ungarischen Monarche;
also Vienna State Archive, List of Orders.

  
9
GUSTAV BLOCH, AN ATTORNEY:
Gustav Rinesch, 191-page unpublished memoir, written after World War II. Courtesy of Alexander Rinesch, private archive.

10
“IN ORDER TO PROTECT YOUNG GIRLS”:
Zweig,
World of Yesterday,
p. 68.

11
“AND WHEN IT IS TIME”:
Brigitte Hamann,
The Reluctant Empress
(New York: Knopf, 1986), p. 370.

12
“HOW CAN YOU KILL”:
Ibid.

13
“HAND-IN-HAND TO THE ALTAR”:
Family poem, probably by Julius Bauer, Auersperg Family Archive.

THE SECESSION

  
1
“ART OF THE SOUL”:
Christian Brandstätter, ed.,
Vienna 1900: Art, Life and Culture
(New York: Vendome Press, 2006), p. 91.

  
2
“DICTATORSHIP OF EXHIBITIONS”:
Koja,
Gustav Klimt: Landscapes,
p. 145.

  
3
“PAINTINGS THAT GO WITH THE FURNITURE”:
Siegfried Matt and Werner Michael Schwarz,
Felix Salten: Schriftsteller—Journalist—Exilant
(Vienna: Holzhausen Verlag, 2006), p. 82.

  
4
“BUSINESS OR ART”:
Koja,
Gustav Klimt: Landscapes,
p. 147.

  
5
“LET THE ARTIST SHOW HIS WORLD”:
Brandstätter,
Vienna 1900,
p. 111.

  
6
AS THE NOTORIETY GREW:
Koja,
Gustav Klimt: Landscapes,
p. 149.

  
7
“HOW SURPRISED THE GENERAL PUBLIC WAS”:
Whitford,
Klimt,
p. 19.

  
8
“IF YOU CANNOT PLEASE ALL”:
Maria Constantino,
Gustav Klimt
(London: PRC Publishing, 2001), p. 10.

  
9
“TRUTH IS FIRE”:
Koja,
Gustav Klimt: Landscapes,
p. 148.

KLIMT THE SEDUCER

  
1
“HIDEOUS FIANCÉ”:
Natter and Frodl,
Klimt's Women,
p. 116.

  
2
“AT LEAST THREE AFFAIRS”:
Anthony Beaumont, ed.,
Alma Mahler Werfel Diaries
(London: Faber & Faber, 2005), p. 120.

  
3
“SHEER PHYSICAL EXCITEMENT”:
Ibid., p. 124.

  
4
“HE WOULD HAVE LOST CONTROL”:
Ibid., p. 141.

  
5
“MY HEART MISSED A BEAT”:
Ibid., p. 144.

  
6
“AND BEFORE I REALIZED IT”:
Ibid., p. 124.

  
7
“WE WERE BOTH TERRIBLY AGITATED”:
Ibid., p. 125.

  
8
“WITH SUCH FORCE”:
Ibid., p. 139.

  
9
“ANIMAL LUST”:
Ibid., p. 140.

10
HER STEPFATHER WAS A STERN, LOW-PAID OFFICER:
Gustav Zimmermann, interviews, Vienna, Nov. 1, 2006.

11
KLIMT OPENED THE GARDEN DOOR:
Weidinger,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 213.

12
A WEALTHY KLIMT PATRON:
Natter and Frodl,
Klimt's Women,
p. 88.

13
KLIMT ASKED HER TO MODEL NUDE:
Weidinger,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 213.

14
KLIMT WANGLED MIZZI A ROLE:
Gustav Zimmermann, interviews.

15
“THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PAINTING”:
Christian Nebehay,
Gustav Klimt: From Drawing to Painting
(New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1994), pp. 46–47.

16
“IS IT POSSIBLE”:
Gustav Klimt, letter to Mizzi Zimmermann, undated. Courtesy Gustav Zimmermann.

17
MIZZI TOOK KLIMT'S ADVICE:
Gustav Zimmermann, interview, Vienna, May 2007.

AN INNOCENT ABROAD

  
1
FREUD DONNED LEDERHOSEN:
Beller,
Vienna and the Jews,
p. 179.

  
2
“THE MELANCHOLY OF THE SYNAGOGUE”:
Ibid.

  
3
THE VIENNESE
FIAKERLIED:
Ibid., p. 180.

  
4
“THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE BRAIN”:
Carl Dolmetsch,
Our Famous Guest: Mark Twain in Vienna
(Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1992), p. 164.

  
5
THE VIENNA LITERATI INVITED TWAIN:
Ibid., p. 43.

  
6
THEN TWAIN STOOD UP:
Ibid., p. 44.

  
7
“THWARTED MY DESIRE”:
Ibid., p. 315.

  
8
“SO THAT WHEN YOU NEED IT FOR PRAYER”:
Ibid.

  
9
TWAIN BEGAN HIS VIENNA SOJOURN:
Ibid., p. 170.

10
“THE UNAVOIDABLE MARK TWAIN”:
Ibid., p. 174.

11
“THE JEW IS NOT A BURDEN”:
Mark Twain, “Concerning the Jews,” written Jul. 1898, published in
Harper's Monthly
Sept. 1899.

12
“OUR OLD FRIEND MARK TWAIN”:
Jerome Loving,
Mark Twain: The Adventures of Samuel L. Clemens
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010), p. 385.

13
FREUD CONFESSED TO SKIPPING:
Dolmetsch,
Our Famous Guest,
p. 136.

14
HISTORIANS BELIEVE FREUD WAS ALSO INFLUENCED:
Ibid., p. 161.

15
“THE JEWS HAVE THUS EVER BEEN”:
Twain, “Concerning the Jews.”

16
“WILL IT EVER COME”:
Ibid.

17
“LONG LIVE LUEGER
!
”:
Dolmetsch,
Our Famous Guest,
p. 65.

18
“TALLOW-CHANDLER”:
Mark Twain,
Vienna Notebook,
Nov. 3, 1897, p. 44. Courtesy the Mark Twain Project, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.

19
“INVENTED A NEW NAME TONIGHT”:
Ibid., p. 47. This notebook is filled with humorous jibes at anti-Semites.

20
“UGLY AS A RUSSIAN JEW”:
Alma Mahler and E. B. Ashton,
And the Bridge Is Love
(London: Hutchinson, 1959), p. 38.

21
“INNOCENT WILD AMERICANS”:
Twain,
Vienna Notebook,
no. 40, Feb. 14, 1898, p. 10.

22
“THE JEW MARK TWAIN”:
Dolmetsch,
Our Famous Guest,
p. 166.

23
“IT WAS PAST MIDNIGHT”:
Ibid., p. 28.

24
IT TOOK SIX WEEKS:
Alessandra Comini,
Gustav Klimt
(New York: George Braziller, 1975), p. 13.

25
“ISOLATION CELL”:
Ibid.


I WANT TO GET OUT

  
1
“PETIT-BOURGEOIS”:
Elisabeth Bachofen-Echt,
Memoir,
dated April 1939. Courtesy of Marianne Kirstein-Jacobs and Daniela Skrein.

  
2
“IF ONLY PEOPLE WOULD ANALYZE LESS”:
Ibid.

  
3
ONE OF THE OLDEST UNIVERSITIES:
The University of Prague, opened in 1348, was the first in central Europe.

  
4
“LIKED IT THIS WAY”:
Bachofen-Echt,
Memoir.

  
5
THE SUICIDE, IN JANUARY 1899, OF CROWN PRINCE RUDOLF:
Wheatcroft,
The Habsburgs,
p. 283.

  
6
“A DULL, SPINELESS MASS”:
Koja,
Klimt: Landscapes,
p. 151.

  
7
“PORTRAYED IN A PUZZLING PAINTING”:
Weidinger,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 215.

  
8
“WHO IS REALLY INTERESTED”:
Karl Kraus,
Die Fackel,
no. 36 (Mar. 1900), quoted in Nebehay,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 69.

  
9
“HE MUST ALLEGORIZE HER”:
Ibid.

10
“NOT ONLY PROVOKED A FIERCE DEBATE”:
Bachofen-Echt,
Memoir.

11
“YOU MUST NOT BECOME”:
Ibid.

12
“WHILE THE WAR OF THE PENS”:
Ibid.

13
“HERR KLIMT INITIATES FRAU LEDERER”:
Agatha Schwartz,
Gender and Modernity in Central Europe: The Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and Its Legacy
(Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 2010), p. 132.

14
“THIS RAPPORT BETWEEN MODERN ART AND IDLE-RICH JEWRY”:
Ibid.

15
“I WOULD PREFER TO BYPASS”:
Nebehay,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 70.

16
“HIDEOUS
!
”:
Ibid., p. 106.

17
“HIS EYES WERE SHINING”:
Ibid.

18
“FEELING OF A TEMPLE”:
Koja,
Klimt: Landscapes,
p. 150.

19
KLIMT'S
KISS TO THE WHOLE WORLD:
Carl E. Schorske,
Fin de Siècle Vienna
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1981), p. 258.

20
“INTO THE IDEAL REALM”:
Ibid.

21
“SLIM AND LOVELY”:
Berta Szeps,
My Life and History
(New York: Knopf, 1939), p. 181.

22
“I HAVE NEVER BEFORE EXPERIENCED”:
Ibid.

23
“ORGIES OF THE NUDE,” “OBSCENE ART,” “PAINTED PORNOGRAPHY,” “PATHOLOGICAL FANTASIES”:
Pirchan,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 57.

24
“AMONG THE MOST EXTREME EXAMPLES”:
Gerbert Frodl,
Secession, Gustav Klimt, Beethovenfries
(Vienna: Secession, 2002), pp. 14, 15.

25
“ALL POSSIBLE MEASURES”:
Ibid.

26
“THOSE OF US WHO ARE MODERN”:
Karl Kraus,
Die Fackel,
Nov. 21, 1903, quoted in Nebehay,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 75.

27
WHY SUCH “HATRED”?:
Weidinger,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 215.

28
AGAINST KLIMT:
Frodl,
Secession,
p. 14.

29
“ONE CAN TELL KLIMT IS A VIENNESE”:
Colin Bailey and John Collins,
Modernism in the Making
(New York: Harry N. Abrams in association with National Gallery of Canada, 2001), p. 42.

30
“FORGET THE CENSORSHIP”:
Schorske,
Fin de Siècle Vienna,
p. 266.

31
“GUSTAV IS FOLLOWING”:
Weidinger,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 208.

32
PEOPLE SAID THAT UNDERNEATH:
Whitford,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 19.

33
HE TOOK HOME
PHILOSOPHY:
Schorske,
Fin de Siècle Vienna,
p. 267.

34
“UNDOUBTEDLY ONLY OF AESTHETIC INTEREST”:
Rainer Metzger,
Gustav Klimt: Drawings and Watercolors
(London: Thames & Hudson, 2005), p. 46.

35
“A NASTY THING”:
Weidinger,
Gustav Klimt,
p. 206.

36
“A GUY CAN HIDE A BELLY”:
Bachofen-Echt,
Memoir.

BOOK: The Lady in Gold
7.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Necessary Evil by David Dun
Finley Ball by Nancy Finley
OnlyatTheCavern by Anna Alexander
Lady Scandal by Shannon Donnelly
Tell by Frances Itani
Viking Treasure by Griff Hosker
Ghost of Christmas Past by King, Rebecca
The Village King by Eddie McGarrity