Showing posts with label Nuremberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nuremberg. Show all posts

Friday, 22 January 2016

Austerlitz Part 3

Austerlitz, having had a nervous breakdown, is now in a state of mind where he can begin to remember his life before he came to Wales. Prior to this time he had gone to some lengths to keep away from contemporary history, to remain ignorant of it.

He becomes endearingly obsessed with a longing to see an image of his mother.

Austerlitz himself is almost the embodiment of post-Holocaust trauma.  So affected is he by the fate of his parents and family that he lives an isolated life, unable to turn from his acquired memories – for his parents fate has become his own.  His alienation from other people is now so complete that he is unable to form relationships with other people.  
The Common Reader blog


It seems that Sebald may be saying that we must not deliberately forget something that happened, not long ago, in Europe, and if we do, it will give us a collective nervous breakdown like that which  Austerlitz suffers in this novel. Is this something he aims particularly at the German nation, or at everyone? In Nuremberg, Austerlitz says: "I was troubled to realize I could not see a crooked line anywhere, not at the corners of the houses or on the gables, the window frames of the sills, not was there any other trace of past history."!! In the Germans' defence this town was bombed to rubble in the war and they could hardly put destroyed medieval timbers back again, and also, there is a massive memorial and museum just a bus ride away.

The account of the Theresienstadt Ghetto/camp we are given, in one long sentence, contains no adjectives as the facts speak for themselves. The evil of the intent and the thoroughness put into ensuring its enactment are bewildering.

At the end of the book Austerlitz is in Paris looking for evidence that his father was there. At one time he decides to do some research in the Biblioteque nationale de France.

This is it. All four of those towers form the Grande Biblioteque.
Inside the box framed by the four towers are fully-grown trees.
Austerlitz describes how difficult it is to get in to this building and how unfit for purpose it seems. Once again, the grand scheme defeats and humiliates the individual and doesn't respond to his/ her needs. We seem to have learned nothing.

"The new library building, which in both its entire layout and its near ludicrous internal regulation seeks to exclude the reader as a potential enemy, might be described, so Lemoine thought, said Austerlitz, as the official manifestation of the increasingly importunate urge to break with everything which still has some living connection to the past."

And there commences an account of the theft of all the belongings of the Parisian Jews who were interned prior to their transport to the east - and on the site of the warehouses used to store all their stolen cutlery and clothes - stands this biblioteque.

Monday, 1 September 2014

Nuremberg: Germanisches National Museum: Amazing

Before I put my holiday away entirely I recommend this museum. It is a fabulous glass and steel building which shows off all the exhibits - some priceless - in good light, and inside there is a Carthusian church and cloister, and a cloister courtyard, all part of the museum and a fantastic setting to show off the Christian art and statutory.

One of the amazing exhibits is a tall gold "hat" dating from 10th-9th century BCE.

To me, this is clearly part of sun worship - it indicates a very sophisticated level of craftmanship.

You are allowed to take photos in the museum without a flash. This is one of the statues in the church that I particularly liked for its grace.
St Christopher with the weight of the world on his shoulders
There are many beautiful carvings, statues and paintings, also toys, musical instruments, scientific instruments, household goods and even whole rooms. We went to see all the starred items as a quick way of going around the museum.

One of our fellow tourists, from the far East, conscientiously took photos of absolutely everything. He focused, he shot, he moved on to the next item. He took photos of everything and he looked at nothing.

The National Gallery has now allowed photography so I suppose this sort of experience will be commonplace soon. Sarah Crompton in the Telegraph of Aug. 16th deplored this.
By allowing photography, galleries are betraying those who want to reflect rather than glance. Surrounded by the snappers, they may come to think that this is the acceptable way to consume art: constantly grazing, without any real meal.
For centuries art has been a way of making us slow down and take a moment to examine something in detail. This is not a plea for silent of empty galleries, but for more thoughtful ones. 
I do agree - it's so sad that people don't give themselves time to look and consider - even imagine the lives of those who made or used the object.

Friday, 15 August 2014

Germany: Nuremberg

We went to Nuremberg on an impulse but I immediately loved it. It is all pedestrianised, and if you arrived by car you would be looking for a car park first of all, so we had the best first impression because we came out of the station and immediately saw the towers of the city wall and walked along the main strasse and took in the fine traditional but tall and elegant buildings, each with its statue of a saint or angel, the interesting mixture of old and new architecture and the buzz of the city life. Our hotel was right in the centre of town. Guide book Steve gave the castle a good write-up and after a very steep climb we found the views were well worthwhile, I enjoyed the gardens - flowers of any colours all together in a tapestry - and the romantic towers and courtyards were exactly like illustrations in the story books.  Somewhere along the way we had seen that Nuremberg had been destroyed in the war so we were looking at a reconstruction and again, I felt that bombing the place to rubble had been such a terrible act of violence, seeking to eradicate people's history and identity as well as the people themselves.

I have to say here that I used to live in Plymouth and that City too was completely destroyed by German bombs; I cried over the old film of rubble stretching as far as you could see, and the young people still going out to dance to a band on the Hoe (the promenade) quite cheerfully because they were still alive - not that many people died because they fled to the hills. So I know perfectly well the bombing was all reciprocated but at this point it hardly makes any difference to anyone but the petty-minded who did what to whom.

Nuremberg is the birthplace of Albrecht Durer whose work is miraculous; sheer time travel. I love his studies of wildflowers, irises, squirrels, - the hare. And so we went around his house guided by a recording purporting to be of his wife who told us about the activity in the house, which was more than a home, it was a workshop of different craftsmen - engravers, painters and printers - and Durer was the boss. His self-portrait shows him with very pretty long hair. How did he wear it when he was working, I wonder? Push it under his hat?
Part of the city wall showing wooden walkway

That day was very hot; it rained in the night and hasn't been quite so hot since. That evening we went to a restaurant-cum-cocktail bar that was very popular and we couldn't get served so we went and had the local sausages and pretzels instead. There were buskers all along the street, some of them very good; like the standing up sitar player.

The next day we caught a tram to the outskirts of town to see the Nazi Documentation Centre (museum) and we felt quite bad about wanting to go; as though the Germans would think we weren't willing to let bygones be bygones, but we wanted to see the Nazi parade grounds and the museum is there too. The museum is sited in one of the Nazi monuments: a giant coliseum made of brick fronted by stone. The new steel entrance pierces the building at an angle like a knife stabbing at its heart. The atmosphere is thoroughly serious and unhappy. The story of the rise of the Nazi party, the cult of Hitler, the militarisation and the war is told in by pictures and audio commentary relieved by the occasional film. It seemed to take a very long time to get through it all. I found most memorable the first person accounts by two old boys who had worked as slave labourers in the quarry where the stone came for building the great stadium at Nuremberg. They were questioned about the work they had done and they both focused on the feeling that the stones were beautiful,  rather than the suffering but one went back to that place where they had worked like brutalised slaves day after day, and talked about starving on thin soup; their young lives were blighted by violence and imprisonment and that none of them had done nothing to deserve that.

Then there are a few pictures of terrible atrocities - like the pile of starved skeletons looking like so much old junk, or young naked girls lying dead after having dug their graves, and you look at the uniformed figure in the photo curiously and wonder why he thought, and continued to think, that all this cruelty was justified. But this is old news and you already know why; explaining it is the function of  the museum and it does this well.

There are films of Hitler's processions through Nuremberg City where the buildings behind the shouting, singing crowds are clearly in poor repair; a dirty remnant of its medieval heyday; and that fact is eloquent too. The old women who were young girls at the time just remembered all the excitement of having parades in their city and loving being involved and hanging out flags and best of all, seeing Hitler.

The specially-built parade grounds are being allowed to crumble away and can we be sorry about that? The seating provides a home for a yellow and pink flowering of wildflowers and butterflies, and there's a football pitch and a race track on the grounds. The columns became unsafe and were blown up. Really, I think it should all be blown up, but I suppose it serves as proof that it really happened, just here. We walked around the lakes and I picked up some fat green acorns. It was good to catch the bus back to lovely Nuremberg and roam around the streets once more.



OZYMANDIAS OF EGYPT

I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,
Half sunk, a shatter'd visage lies, whose frown
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamp'd on these lifeless things,
The hand that mock'd them and the heart that fed;
And on the pedestal these words appear:
'My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!'
Nothing else remains. Round the decay
of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away.

Percy Bysshe Shelley 1792-1822