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THE NAZARENES, A BRIEF HISTORY (1809–1850)




                                                        CORDULA GREWE







            The Nazarene Resurrection:                             Dürer and, above all, Jesus Christ and dressed up in the old German
            The Birth of Romanticism in a Time of War and Crisis   cloak as a sign of their patriotism. Who would have guessed in those
                                                                   months, seeing the six pale teens roam the academy’s hallways, that
            Europe was in flames. Napoleon had set his mind on conquering the   within merely two decades this Romantic avant-garde would blossom
            world, and nothing and nobody seemed able to stop him. In 1806,   into a momentous movement with international reach: The Nazarenes.
            Berlin had fallen, in 1809 Vienna, and in the decades to come French
            painters would commemorate the victorious general and self-crowned
            emperor riding, like a modern messiah, into the conquered cities
            on a gleaming white stallion. Yet like all propaganda, those images
            lied. Napoleon’s arrival had unleashed not jubilant excitement but
            apocalyptic anxieties, not least among the young, who found themselves
            haunted by a profound sense of a spiritual malaise. It certainly affected
            Wilhelm Schadow (1788–1862), then but a burgeoning art student
            recently enrolled at the Berlin Academy. In his memoirs, the famous
            painter would look back at these years as a period of crisis and shudder
            at “the hollow conception of life, the restless addiction to pleasure”
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            that had ruled the Berlin of his youth.  What had been even worse,
            he remembered, had been the defamation of any kind of faith as
            superstition, and Schadow went so far to see the devastation brought
            upon Germany by the French as divine punishment for its Babylonian
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            decadence.  Art, the young art student became convinced, was a crucial
            weapon in the necessary fight against such cultural decay; but for that
            to happen art itself had to rise anew from the era’s amoral morass, like
            a phoenix from the ashes. He was not the only one who felt that way.
            Unbeknownst to the Berlin painter, a group of art students in Vienna
            had also heard the divine calling to be the Vorkämpfer, the vanguard,
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            of artistic rebirth and cultural regeneration.  Like all youth culture
            they dreamed big. In 1808, unperturbed by their lack of training and
            outsider status, the small coterie began to meet three times every
            fortnight, eager to leave behind the academic prison on their path to   Fig. 1
            a new art. Soon their appearance reflected their rebellious attitude,
            they adopted a provocative hairdo modelled after Raphael, Albrecht


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