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Sylvia von Harden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sylvia von Harden
Otto Dix's Portrait of the Journalist Sylvia von Harden (1926)
Born
Sylvia von Halle

(1894-03-28)March 28, 1894
DiedJune 4, 1963(1963-06-04) (aged 69)
NationalityGerman
Other namesSylvia von Halle
Children1

Sylvia von Harden (March 28, 1894 – June 4, 1963), also called Sylvia von Halle, was a German journalist and poet. During her career as a journalist, she wrote for many newspapers in Germany and England. She is perhaps best known as the subject of a painting by Otto Dix.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Dix, Portrait of the Journalist Sylvia von Harden
  • Otto Dix, Sylvia von Harden and the New Woman
  • Dix, "Gazeteci Sylvia von Harden'in Portresi" (Sanat Tarihi / Dışavurumculuktan Pop-Art'a)

Transcription

(jazzy music) Voiceover: We are looking at Otto Dix's painting "Portrait of Sylvia von Harden" and it's from 1926. Voiceover: Who was Sylvia von Harden? Voiceover: Sylvia von Harden was a fantastic, fabulous figure who was not actually a journalist even though the title says that she's a journalist. She was less of a journalist but actually a poet and a short story writer who worked in Germany. This shows her in the Romanisches Cafe in Berlin, which was huge hangout for all of the cool avant-garde artists and writers and poets of the 1920s. Sylvia von Harden is pictured here in this little corner where she would have hung out at a little cafe table. She was an avant-garde neue frau. She was friendly with various artists and poets and writers of the era. Voiceover: So neue frau is the new woman in Germany in the early 20th century. We're in between the Great War and World War II here. The new woman, is that the woman in the public sphere who goes out and works? She has close-cropped hair, I see, which makes her rather androgynous. Her hands are very large. Do these things have to do with representing the new woman in a work of art, perhaps? Voiceover: It does. It has to do with the new woman in general, but it also has to do with Otto Dix's style of portraiture. One thing that Otto Dix was famed for was making his sitters quite ugly and quite unattractive. Sylvia von Harden does look like this in real life but not to quite the extent that Dix shows her. Things like her hair; she did have a close-cropped haircut. In Germany this cut had a very funny specific name, called the Bubikopf, which was in style all throughout the '20s. She did have a sort of androgynous appearance. This dress is based on a dress that she actually wore. It does have a lot of basis in reality. But things like her hands, he elongates and sort of creates these immense hands. I think that has a lot to do with deflection and placement as it draws your attention to things like the area where her breasts should be, which, because she's such an androgynous figure, she doesn't really have any. She's wearing this very geometric patterned dress that hides any kind of feminine figure that she might have. She's covered up. It even has a turtleneck so we don't even get to see her neck. Then you see the other hand kind of draped across her lap, covering it up. There are other elements that you might be able to see that signal different things. Voiceover: In the body? Voiceover: If you look actually at this great detail. The sagging stocking you can kind of see. That's a really great moment of realism that Dix captures. You don't want to have your stockings be shown as sagging. It sort of implies a kind of messiness. She doesn't seem to have a very polished air about her. On the other hand, it kind of gives her this sort of subversive quality. She's sitting there and she's looking out. She has a monocle even. She has these particular features, all these little accessories that pinpoint her as a particular kind of woman; the sagging stocking, the large hands, the monocle which highlights the kind of sight and gaze that a new woman might have. Then she has cigarettes. She's smoking in a public place. That's all kind of building a particular sort of identity for this character, and Dix was really talented at doing that in his painting. Voiceover: The patterned dress seems to really emphasize a sense of surface and flatness instead of her body. Her neck seems very cylindrical and almost mechanical rather than a human organic form as well. Voiceover: I think one of the things that I like about this painting, too, is the way that Dix uses these kind of geometric areas and shapes and throws it into contrast with, if you see behind her, she's sitting on this really ornately patterned chair. Those kind of curves are more feminine than her body is, which I think is a great kind of a comment to make. Then there's the circle of her monocle; there's the circle of the marble table; the circle of the glass, which has a very particular kind of cocktail in it that was popular at the time. So those things, and then things that are longer and flatter, like her body, which really should be the least flat if you're thinking about what bodies look like. Are bodies round and sort of curvaceous and sensual things or are they desexualized, androgynized forms which Dix does here? Voiceover: We should probably contextualize this in terms of the new objectivity, or neue Sachlichkeit. Voiceover: Yeah, Sachlichkeit. Voiceover: Which was occurring at this time, a movement in between the wars, which went back to a bit more of a figural style, a bit more naturalism; relatively more naturalistic than what one might be familiar with in terms of Kirchner or German expressionism or Kandinsky of course; other artists who were working in Germany at the time. Why going back to this style, which is a bit more naturalistic? Voiceover: I think that the realism is, there are many things that are important about it at this time, but this is 1926. There's this sort of general sense in Germany, this is going on in other countries in Europe as well, kind of a return to order; kind of looking back at tradition, a kind of sense that they wanted to create something new, but they wanted it to have a particular kind of meaning and a rootedness in something that was very German. So Otto Dix is really looking back to traditions of portraiture in Germany. He looks back to Holbein who creates incredibly important portraits and sort of bringing out that German quality. Voiceover: Holbein's hyper-naturalistic, isn't he? Voiceover: Yes, he is hyper-naturalistic. What he does is he takes naturalism and realism and he sort of lifts it to another level where it almost is caricature. So it kind of falls between that. A lot of neue Sachlichkeit painters did that; a kind of photographic realism, almost, but also taken to an extreme. Voiceover: That's interesting that it's characterized as a kind of call to order or a return to order, while we're representing someone who is apparently overturning some very longstanding gender hierarchies and ordered ways of thinking about men and women as very separate. The new woman, particularly as it's embodied here by Sylvia, seems to be confounding those categories rather than reveling in how neat and ordered they are. Voiceover: She's definitely about overturning things. Even her name is actually made up. It's a pseudonym. She changed her name when she started her writing career. She's not a huge, very popular writer, but she's one of many poets and writers who are working on different pieces that are published in small journals that very small audiences have read. She's definitely overturning different kinds of cultural stereotypes and gender stereotypes, and kind of in that space of subversion in the cafe culture of Germany at the time. Voiceover: What did Dix's sitters think about the fact that he liked to make people ugly? Did that bother them? Voiceover: Sometimes it did. A lot of times it was almost like a privilege to be painted by Dix and portrayed in this particularly ugly kind of way. One or two sitters did have a problem with it. He was commissioned by sitters because he was so well known, and at this point, in '26, he's very well known for his painting style. Earlier than that, some of his more wealthy business clients did not particularly like the way that they were painted. Sylvia von Harden, as far as I know, loved the way that this painting worked. She even sat with it. It's at the Pompidou Center now. In the '60s she even sat and had a photograph taken of herself in front of the portrait. You can see even at that point that she still sort of looks a little bit like the figure in it. I just think it's a great portrait. Voiceover: Me too. (jazzy music)

Life

Born Sylvia von Halle in Hamburg, von Harden (she chose the name as an aristocratic pseudonym)[1] wrote a literary column for the monthly Das junge Deutschland ("The young Germany") from 1918 to 1920, and wrote for Die Rote Erde ("The red Earth") from 1919 to 1923.[2] From 1919 to 1923, she lived with the writer Ferdinand Hardekopf, with whom she had a son.[2] During the 1920s she lived in Berlin, and published two volumes of poetry in 1920 and 1927.[2]

She was famously portrayed in Otto Dix's painting entitled "Bildnis der Journalistin Sylvia von Harden" (Portrait of the Journalist Sylvia von Harden, 1926). An ambivalent image of the New Woman, it depicts von Harden with bobbed hair and monocle, seated at a cafe table with a cigarette in her hand and a cocktail in front of her.[3] This painting is recreated in the opening and closing scenes of the 1972 film Cabaret.[4]

In 1959, von Harden wrote an article, "Erinnerungen an Otto Dix" ("Memories of Otto Dix"), in which she described the genesis of the portrait. Dix had met her on the street, and declared:

'I must paint you! I simply must! ... You are representative of an entire epoch!'
'So, you want to paint my lacklustre eyes, my ornate ears, my long nose, my thin lips; you want to paint my long hands, my short legs, my big feet—things which can only scare people off and delight no-one?'
'You have brilliantly characterized yourself, and all that will lead to a portrait representative of an epoch concerned not with the outward beauty of a woman but rather with her psychological condition.'[5]

The painting, an important example of the New Objectivity movement,[6] is now in the Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris.

In 1933, von Harden left Germany for self-exile in England, where she continued to write but with less success.[2] In an article she wrote for the refugee newspaper Die Zeitung in April 1943, she described "her shift work in a factory and, in the exalted tones that were common in wartime publications of the sort, claimed to have been made to feel part of the family there".[7] She died in Croxley Green, England, in 1963.

Works

  • (with Leo Scherpenbach): Die Bücherkiste: Monatsschrift für Literatur, Graphik und Buchbesprechung. Munich: Bachmair 1919-1921 (Reprinted: Nendeln/Liechtenstein: Kraus 1977)
  • Verworrene Städte (1920)
  • Robespierre: Eine Novelle. (ca. 1924)
  • Die italienische Gondel: Gedichte (1927)
  • Das Leuchtturmmädchen von Longstone. 1958 (Jugendbuchreihe Silberstern Nr. 74)

Notes

  1. ^ West 2000, p. 166.
  2. ^ a b c d Jimenez and Banham 2001, p. 262.
  3. ^ Ankum 1997, p. 191.
  4. ^ Coleman, Sally Whitman; PhD. "Otto Dix and Bob Fosse: Together at Last | The Art Minute". Retrieved 2018-12-07.
  5. ^ Michalski 1994, p. 56.
  6. ^ Jimenez and Banham 2001, p. 263.
  7. ^ Ritchie 2001, p. 9.

References

  • Ankum, K. v. (1997). Women in the metropolis: Gender and modernity in Weimar culture. Weimar and now, 11. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-20465-4
  • Jiminez, J. B., & Banham, J. (2001). Dictionary of artists' models. London: Fitzroy Dearborn. ISBN 1-57958-233-8
  • Michalski, Sergiusz (1994). New Objectivity. Cologne: Benedikt Taschen. ISBN 3-8228-9650-0
  • Ritchie, J. M. (2001). German-speaking exiles in Great Britain. Yearbook of the Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies, 3. Amsterdam: Rodopi. ISBN 90-420-1537-3
  • West, S. (2000). The visual arts in Germany 1890-1940: Utopia and despair. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-5278-5
This page was last edited on 26 February 2024, at 02:44
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