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Caspar David Friedrich, The Abbey in the Oakwood, 1808-10

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    We're in the Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin
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    and we're looking at a Caspar David Friedrich's
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    The Abbey in the Oakwood.
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    It's a large painting, and it was one of a pair
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    that included "The Monk by the Sea."
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    This is a very somber image and it really is
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    a perfect example of the way Friedrich used landscape
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    in order to represent issues of human life and
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    of the Divine.
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    That's right, and in this painting we see
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    the ruins of an abbey, an old abbey
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    and a procession of figures entering this ruined abbey,
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    carrying a coffin.
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    And so immediately we have a sense of the passage of time,
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    of the transience of human existence...
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    We're also looking at, it seems, the dead of winter,
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    and perhaps it's sunset.
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    If you look at the remnant of architecture that's left
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    you have this, first of all, this very forlorn sense
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    from the ruins themselves.
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    You see this old lancet window that's fallen into disrepair.
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    No glass remains.
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    And you have a real sense of the grandeur of
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    the original space, but now what's left is just
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    the futility of human experience, the futility of human effort.
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    And what we see is that nature is eternal, but what man
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    creates is transient.
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    You have the monks themselves going through their
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    ancient ritual of burial.
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    But you see the cemetery that surrounds them in the snow
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    is not well tended, it's haphazard, and it seems to be, itself,
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    falling into disrepair.
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    The abbey refers back to the Medieval tradition, but that's
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    now fallen away.
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    Older than that, are the oak trees,
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    which might have represented, for Friedrich,
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    the Druidic traditions, the pre-Christian traditions,
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    these truly ancient oaks, gnarled, and terrifying
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    in their silhouettes, but that speak of a tradition,
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    as witnesses, that are even older than Christianity.
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    And then beyond that, the crescent moon, and the sky,
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    when you were speaking, that's the nature that I was
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    looking at that is permanent,
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    that is trans-historical, that moves beyond even
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    the growth and death of the trees.
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    Certainly of the architecture of Man's efforts.
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    The moon having no sense of the cosmos, even beyond
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    the seasons of the Earth.
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    That's right, and so you have this sense of human time,
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    you have this sense of nature's time,
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    and then you have this sense of the time of God's space.
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    And in fact, if there's any optimism in this image,
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    it is that moon.
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    It is the faintest crescent, and it might wane even more
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    and become a New Moon, but then it will regenerate
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    and there is this possibility for rebirth.
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    You mentioned that it's the dead of winter,
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    but spring will come.
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    And so even if it seems quite distant now, in this sort of
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    bleak twilight, there is this sense that there will be renewal.
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    So we may have a suggestion of resurrection
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    in the cycles of the moon, we have the crosses that are
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    a part of the cemetery, we have the cross that forms part of
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    the ruin of the abbey, and that suggestion of resurrection.
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    I think what's so interesting about Friedrich is that
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    he's imbuing a landscape with this very,
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    very serious meaning, almost the way that, in the past,
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    people have looked to the iconography of
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    Christian paintings, Friedrich is looking for modern language
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    with which to express these trans-historical human feelings,
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    contemplating our role in the universe, and trying to make
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    sense of all those layers of time that you referred to before.
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    That's exactly right. Friedrich is finding a new way of
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    representing these eternal issues, and it makes sense that
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    he would have to, because this is now the beginning of the
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    19th century. Friedrich is now living in a rational culture,
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    and the idea of using the iconography of the Renaissance,
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    or even of the Baroque, would feel implausible.
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    It wouldn't make sense.
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    And so Friedrich, this artist who was trained in Copenhagen,
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    who grew up in Greifswald, which was then part of Sweden,
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    on the Southern coast of the Baltic,
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    is looking towards the very extreme, cold
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    Northern lanscape, as a way of expressing
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    these ideas of the eternal.
Title:
Caspar David Friedrich, The Abbey in the Oakwood, 1808-10
Description:

Caspar David Friedrich, The Abbey in the Oakdwood, 1808-1810, oil on canvas, 110.4 x 171 cm. (Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin)

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
04:22
Chloi Rad added a translation

English subtitles

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