Klimt, Mahler, Nietzche, and Anti-Semitism
Letter To a Friend In France
Compañero Henri:
An embrace of Strength and Solidarity! Our most excellent Austrian compañero Heinz shared with me the song by Gustave Mahler you recently posted. I love Mahler. I believe it was Richard Strauss who said that no other composer had so eleoquently expressed the human condition through music the way that Mahler did. Are you familiar with the Austrian artist Gustave Klimt? I adore Klimt with a mad passion! Klimt actually painted Mahler into one of his pieces—he is the “Knight” in Klimt’s Beethoven Frieze! There’s quite an interesting story behind this. As part of a Vienna Secession exhibition —the art movement Klimt was a part of—which included Max Klinger’s Monument To Beethoven, Klimt did his Beethoven Frieze. At the time Gustave Mahler was the director of the Vienna Opera and this was highly “controversial” because Mahler was Jewish and anti-Semitism permeated through the realm of the Austrian intelligentsia of the day like some putrid infectious disease. (I find anti-Semitism particulalrly abhorrent, by the way.)
Remember, at the time the intellectual elites of the German speaking world—and really Europe as a whole—were actually having quite obscene debates which cenetered around questions such as “Should Jews be allowed to teach at universities?” Can you imagine such a thing, Henri? Well, perhaps such sickness isn’t too hard to fathom—it wasn’t long ago that academica in the U.S. were debating such questions concerning black folks. And remember it was only about 10 years before the Secession exhibition when Neitzsche expressed his disgust with the rise of anti-Jewish sentiment amongst German “intellectuals.” I’m essentially in a war-zone Compañero and in such a situationmy battle-axes stay ever-ready and ever-sharp. I do indeed keep my sharpening implements within reaching distance—I have my Nietzsche on my desk and I can’t resist sharing with you something he wrote to his sister, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche, in1887 that is very relevant to this discussion:
You have committed one of the greatest stupidities—for yourself and for me! Your association with an anti-Semitic chief expresses a foreignness to my whole way of life which fills me again and again with ire or melancholy…It is a matter of honour with me to be absolutely clean and unequivocal in relation to anti-Semitism, namely, opposed to it, as I am in my writings. I have recently been persecuted with letters and Anti-Semitic Correspondence Sheets. My disgust with this party (which would like the benefit of my name only too well!) is as pronounced as possible, but the relation to Förster [Nietzsche’s sister’s husband], as well as the aftereffects of my former publisher, the anti-Semitic Schmeitzner, always brings the adherents of this disagreeable party back to the idea that I must belong to them after all. It arouses mistrust against my character, as if publicly I condemned something which I have favored secretly—and that I am unable to do anything against it, that the name of Zarathustra is used in every Anti-Semitic Correspondence Sheet, has almost made me sick several times…”