Page 30 - Gallery 19C Nazarenes Catalogues
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Folded into his assertion of Art’s heteronymous nature as the   even those projects would often be widely noted. Take for example,
            handmaiden of Religion, is a remarkable tribute to Romanticism’s   his Seven Sacraments (Fig. 20), which occupied him roughly between
            exalted vision of the artist, who here supersedes theologians    1846 and 1862. An impressive testimony to Overbeck’s theological
            and philosophers as the guide to the realms beyond human    knowledge, the cycle stands out, as I have shown elsewhere, for its
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            understanding.   Completed in 1840, The Triumph of Religion in    unusual iconography and allegorical combinations.   The idea had been
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            the Arts was a bold manifesto.                         to create a series of monumental tapestries in the fashion of Raphael’s
                                                                   cartoons for Pope Leo X; but in the end, the project never progressed
            Not everybody was pleased. Most of Frankfurt’s Protestant citizens   beyond a set of large-scale cartoons, a much smaller version in oil
            were scandalized by the works’ combative Catholicism. Many simply   tempera, and several editions in print. Nonetheless, the Sacraments
            rejected its authoritative posture and narrow definition of the canon   developed a remarkable afterlife, multiplied in devotional and
            suitable for a new generation of art students, not least the Städel’s   theological treatises, and in 1878, long after the painter’s death would
            own, while others objected plainly to its subject and use of allegory.   inspire a major piece of sacred music by Franz Liszt (1811–1886).
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            “What this painting offers us is a recapitulation of the history of art,   The Hungarian composer and virtuoso pianist was deeply touched
            a lecture on its past, which, at the same time, contains a moral lesson   by Overbeck’s highly individualized treatment of this core doctrine
            for art’s future,” the Left Hegelian novelist and art critic Friedrich   of the Roman Catholic faith, a treatment that went bravely against
            Theodor Vischer (1807–1887) concluded and huffed: “Here, art turns   the rigid neo-Thomism the Church had adopted by then. Over half a
            back upon itself and makes itself into its own object. It is an act of   century after the foundation of the Lukasbund, Overbeck’s pursued
            reflection, and … this alone suffices to show that it is a thoroughly   his work with the same heartfelt commitment to authentic self-
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            modern product.”   Vischer could rant as much as he wanted.   expression and inner truth that marked his youth. As such, his Seven
                                    th
            Today a staple of any survey of 19 -century art, the painting was still   Sacraments are a grand testimony to an unwavering Romanticism.
            admired by fin-de-siècle audiences as one of the greatest artworks
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            of all time.   “Vischer’s essay is written with the verve of a man who
            stakes his ego in order to destroy a view that appears false to him,”
            architect-cum-art historian Cornelius Gurlitt (1850–1938) noted
            with a heavy heart in 1899. “But it didn’t damage Overbeck.”  50

            For much of the 20 -century, art history has struggled to come to terms
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            with the Nazarenes whose global success and long-lasting influence
            did not fit into the triumphant narrative of modernism’s unstoppable
            march toward ever-increasing secularization and painterliness.
            In recent decades, this narrative has come under attack and made space
            for a more inclusive view of the period that has space for alternative
            modern masters, for a Gérôme or a William-Adolphe Bouguereau
            (1825–1905), and Overbeck & Co. have also celebrated a brazen
            come-back, and not only art historians but curators and collectors are
            paying attention. Scholarship on the late Overbeck is nonetheless,   Fig. 20
            with the exception of Michael Thimann’s magisterial 2013 book on
            the painter, rare. This is the more regrettable as this crusader for
            a religious cause remained productive and popular until the day of
            his death. Admittedly, not all of his ideas came to fruition. This was
            largely due to his unwavering Romantic idealism that a project must
            be designed for its intrinsic value rather than a patron’s purse. Yet




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