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zooey says...

i am watching (again) the best film ever, Recherchen auf dem Anthroposophenhügel.

That's the first part (ends pretty abruptly). It is an absolutely wonderful film from the 1970s. The footage, the music, all of it. There are beautiful interviews with people who met Steiner, they talk about how he spoke, for example (one lady imitates him greeting his audience -- it's great stuff!). The older man sitting at the Steiner desk -- he's intense.

Then comes part two (I must go to bed, and leave re-watching the following parts for tomorrow):

Part three:

Part four:

Part five (this is the spooky part, visiting Steiner's atelier, the death mask, the music and the thunder and lightning... well, yes, it is spooky):

 

die einwohner sind nicht ganz von unser welt

(from the first part on youtube)

 

Filed under: Goetheanum

zooey says...

this is an excerpt from Cults of Today, published in 1943, in the The Expository Times! On Steiner:

... he brought, to the elucidation and the championship of its doctrines, mental powers at once versatile and penetrating, with a philosophical acumen more virile than that of Mrs. Besant and a large acquaintance both with European literature and with the results of wide scientific studies. ... Such was his influence over German theosophists that when, in 1913, he broke with Theosophy and proclaimed himself the herald of a new movement, Anthroposophy, most of the theosophical societies in Germany followed him. There was in him something of-the prophet, with his mass of black hair, his clean-cut ascetic features, his flashing eyes ...

These were striking qualities. But he was not without his share of their defects. ~It is seldom that a mind so intent on synthesis will be either critical or (to use a word that was then finding its way into the jargon of philosophy) dialectic. To sum up all things into one is a task too great for any individual, however richly equipped ; and the attempt to reconcile into one all-embracing system the world’s divergent hopes and faiths runs the risk of ending in reconciling opposites (as was said of a greater than Steiner, though more appropriately to Steiner himself than to Hegel) by the apotheosis of a negation. But Steiner was not formed to work with others. ... He looked for disciples, not for colleagues. Nor did he look in vain. ...

Relying on his mystical sources, the Akasha Claronicles, details of which have never been given to the world, and which I suspect are now, eighteen years after Steiner’s death, irrecoverably lost, he joined to the foregoing a third doctrine, called by the picturesque name of the seven lotus flowers.

The account makes quite a nice summary of the Christ--Sun thing and ends:

If you should ask how the sun, being lower down on the heptarchal ladder, can thus, like Mithras, shedding the blood of the bull, rejuvenate the earth, I can only refer you to the Akashic sources once more.

On the Goetheanum:

Its architecture, bizarre and even uncouth to non-anthroposophical eyes, embodied all its founder’s principles of rhythm, harmony and illumination. Its critics pointed out that it had no straight lines and no windows.

Interesting article, simply because it's from another era, but it also includes stuff about waldorf and biodynamic agriculture. Slightly christian tinge, at times, but still worth reading.

Filed under: Goetheanum

zooey says...

"Es ist, als ob die trutzigen Mauern alle Stürme draussen hielten. Die
einzige Verbindung zur Aussenwelt sind Fenster, die den Betonwall
sporadisch durchbrechen. Und das hereinfallende Licht ist erstaunlich
hell, wirkt erstaunlich warm."

I just love the concrete and the stairwells. I can't help it. It's a beauty.

The article in Basler Zeitung* also deals with "accusations" about
racism, intra-anthroposophical conflict, and the infamous "Schwarzbuch
Waldorf".

Quite good. But too short.

* http://bazonline.ch/basel/gemeinden/Eine-stille-Gesellschaft-sucht-die-ffnung/story/21948482

Filed under: Goetheanum

zooey says...

new building plans would reduce the view of the Goetheanum by 90%. But the problem is that the Goetheanum is an architecturally important building:

Das Goetheanum stelle nämlich architekturgeschichtlich betrachtet einen Meilenstein dar und stehe unter kantonalem Denkmalschutz. Seit Jahrzehnten figuriere es in Lexika wie dem Brockhaus und in internationalen Kunstführern. Es gelte deshalb, «den grossartigen Ausblick grosszügig für die Zukunft zu erhalten».

Also, lots about the conflicts re the building and the ownership of the land, et c, in Basler Zeitung Sicht aufs Goetheanum wird betrübt.

Filed under: Goetheanum

zooey says...

is rarely seen, in all its magnificence, on photos. But for some
reason, this tv-team introduces their topic while making sure they get
as much as they possibly can of the highway on film. (Couldn't they
have found a lawn to stand on?) Nice photos of the surroundings. Bland
content, but not bad overall. TV-report from ORF, 2007:

Filed under: Goetheanum

zooey says...

first, a picture of the Goetheanum in winter. Then a photo of another
building designed by Rudolf Steiner. Also in winter. I so long for the
snow! I want snow! The kind of snow to stays on the tree branches and
make the forest all white and lovely.

   

Filed under: Goetheanum