List of sculptures of Ludwig van Beethoven

The German composer Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827) is among the most admired composers in the history of Western music,[1] and has been the subject of many private and public sculptures, including busts, reliefs, statues and others. The first, a bust by Franz Klein, was commissioned by Johann Andreas Streicher and created in 1812, while the composer was still alive.[2] After Beethoven's death in 1827, his hometown, Bonn, immediately began planning a monument for the following year,[3] though a cholera outbreak delayed this.[4] A design competition was eventually held, in which a submission by Ernst Julius Hähnel beat ones from Friedrich von Amerling, Gustav Blaeser and Friedrich Drake. In 1845, Hähnel's monument was erected, due to finances given by Robert Schumann, Charles Hallé, George Thomas Smart and especially Franz Liszt.[3][5] While the monument's height and simplicity were criticized, the reliefs surrounding the base were met with public approval.[5] The statue's representation of a figure standing on a decorated base with its legs slightly apart was popular at the time, and later inspired Theodore Baur's statue of c. 1895 in the Library of Congress.[6]

Bust of Beethoven by Hugo Hagen, 1892, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

The Beethoven monuments that followed Hähnel's, while retaining a high pedestal,[7] began to portray the composer in a less simplistic and increasingly heroic light.[8] The most significant representative of this, and the most famous Beethoven monument from the second half of the 19th century, was Kaspar von Zumbusch's 1880 monument in Beethovenplatz [de], Vienna.[9] The city had intended to erect a monument for Beethoven since his death,[3] but serious action to do so began only in the 1870s, when a competition for a design was held and Zumbusch's winning design was created with financial support from Liszt and Brahms.[10]

In the early 20th century, the glorified portrayals of Beethoven reached their peak, with god-like representations such as Max Klinger's monument (1902), unveiled at the Vienna Secession[11] (now in the Museum der bildenden Künste),[12] and Fidus's unexecuted design for a 'Beethoven temple' (1903).[13] The 20th century also saw a brief return to the simplistic style of the 19th century, such as Robert Weigl's statue at the Heiligenstädter Park [de] in Vienna (1910) and Hugo Uher's [cs] statue in Karlsbad (1929).[14] Also at this time, Antoine Bourdelle and Naoum Aronson, both students of Auguste Rodin, began creating busts of the composer; Bourdelle was especially prolific.[15] As the century progressed, ideas on depicting Beethoven became largely ununified, and were often especially allegorical, such as Theodor von Gosen's monument in Alameda Central, Mexico City (1921).[16] In 1926, Berlin hosted a monument competition in preparation for the composer's 100th anniversary the following year; the entire competition was controversial and was eventually canceled due to criticism from the press and the committee's inability to form a consensus.[17] There had been submissions from famous sculptors including Ernst Barlach, Peter Breuer and Georg Kolbe, although Breuer and Kolbe eventually had their designs constructed in 1938 and 1948 respectively.[17] After World War II, experimentation in portraying Beethoven increased even further, exemplified by Klaus Kammerichs's [de] three-dimensonal reproduction (1986) of Joseph Karl Stieler's painted portrait and Markus Lüpertz's controversial abstract portrayal (2014).[18][19]

There is a large collection of busts in the Beethoven House, a museum and cultural institution based in Bonn that studies Beethoven's life and legacy, including ones by an unknown artist based on a sculpture by Josef Danhauser (c. 1890);[20] Fernando Cian (first quarter of the 20th century);[21] Pierre Félix Masseau (1902);[22] Aronson (1905);[15] a mask supposedly by Wilhelm Hüsgen [de] (1920–1927);[23] Eduard Merz (1945/46);[24] Lewon Konstantinowitsch Lasarew [de] (1981);[25] and Cantemir Riscutia (1998).[26]

Sculptures

Sculptures of Ludwig van Beethoven
ImageTypeLocationDate[a]SculptorRef(s)
BustKunsthistorisches Museum
Vienna, Austria
1812Franz Klein[2]
External image
Anton Dietrich's Bust, on the Google Arts & Culture website
BustLa Scala
Milan, Italy
First half of the 19th centuryAnton Dietrich[27]
StatueMünsterplatz [de]
Bonn, Germany
12 August 1845Ernst Julius Hähnel[3][5][28]
ReliefLiceu
Barcelona, Spain
March 1847Agapit Vallmitjana i Barbany[29]
External image
Dorcière's relief, on the Statues – Hither & Thither website
ReliefConservatoire de Musique de Genève
Geneva, Switzerland
1856–58Louis Dorcière[30]
BustBeethovengang, Heiligenstadt
Vienna, Austria
15/23 June 1863Anton Dominik Fernkorn[31]
BustWalhalla
Donaustauf, Germany
1866Arnold Hermann Lossow after Anton Dietrich[32]
External image
Schaller's bust, on the Royal Society of Musicians of Great Britain's website
BustRoyal Philharmonic Society
London, United Kingdom
1871Johann Nepomuk Schaller[33][34]
ReliefFrieze of Parnassus
Albert Memorial
London, United Kingdom
1872Henry Hugh Armstead[35]
StatueRoyal Museum of Fine Arts
Antwerp, Belgium
1874Jacques de Braekeleer [nl][36][37]
Other sculptureGalleria d'Arte Moderna
Milan, Italy
1874Giuseppe Grandi[38]
External image
Giuseppe Grandi's sculpture, on the Google Arts & Culture website
Other sculptureGalleria Civica d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea
Turin, Italy
1874Giuseppe Grandi[39]
External image
Bust by Bertheauld, on the Statues – Hither & Thither website
BustGrand Théâtre de Genève
Geneva, Switzerland
1879Bertheauld?[40]
StatueBeethovenplatz [de]
Vienna, Austria
1 May 1880Kaspar von Zumbusch[9]
External image
Relief on the Alte Oper, on the Statues – Hither & Thither website
ReliefAlte Oper
Frankfurt, Germany
1880Unknown[41]
BustCentral Park
New York, New York, US
22 July 1884Henry Baerer[42][43][44]
External image
Ferdinand Freiherr von Miller's bust, on the Tower Grove Park website
BustTower Grove Park
St. Louis, Missouri, US
1884Ferdinand Freiherr von Miller[45]
External image
Johannes French's bust, on the Statues – Hither & Thither website
BustConcertgebouw
Amsterdam, Netherlands
1888Johannes French[46]
BustBeethoven House
Bonn, Germany
c. 1890Unknown
(based on a sculpture by Josef Danhauser)
[20]
BustLibrary of Congress
Washington, D.C., US
1892Hugo Hagen[47]
BustProspect Park
New York, New York, US
20 October 1894Henry Baerer[48]
StatueNaples, Italy 1895Francesco Jerace[49]
StatueLibrary of Congress
Washington, D.C., US
c. 1895Theodore Baur[6]
Bust?[b]
Last seen in Lincoln Park
Chicago, Illinois, US
1897Johannes Gelert[50]
ReliefHelenental [de]
Baden bei Wien, Austria
1899Josef Valentin Kassin [de][51]
External image
Thomas Crawford's statue, on the Digital Commonwealth Massachusetts Collections Online
StatueNew England Conservatory of Music
Boston, Massachusetts, US
1900Thomas Crawford[52]
BustGarden of the Beethoven House
Bonn, Germany
First quarter of the 20th centuryFernando Cian[c][21]
BustGarden of the Beethoven House
Bonn, Germany
1902Pierre Félix Masseau[22]
StatueMuseum der bildenden Künste
Leipzig, Germany
1902Max Klinger[12][53][54]
External image
Sculpture by an unknown artist, on the Statues – Hither & Thither website
Relief (architectural)Burschenschaftsdenkmal [de]
Eisenach, Germany
1902Unknown[55]
Other sculptureMuseum of Fine Arts
Boston, Massachusetts, US
After 1902Max Klinger[56]
Other sculptureTiergarten
Berlin, Germany
1904Rudolf and Wolfgang Siemering[57]
BustGarden of the Beethoven House
Bonn, Germany
1905Naoum Aronson[15]
Other sculptureMuseum der bildenden Künste
Leipzig, Germany
1907Max Klinger[58]
StatueAston Webb Building, University of Birmingham
Birmingham, United Kingdom
1907Henry Alfred Pegram[59]
StatueHeiligenstädter Park [de]
Döbling, Vienna, Austria
1910Robert Weigl[14][60]
BustGolden Gate Park
San Francisco, California, US
6 August 1915Henry Baerer[61]
BustParque de la Independencia
Rosario, Argentina
1917Erminio Blotta[62]
MaskGarden of the Beethoven House
Bonn, Germany
1920–1927Wilhelm Hüsgen? [de][d][23]
StatueAlameda Central
Mexico City, Mexico
1921Theodor von Gosen[16]
ReliefUngargasse 5
Vienna, Austria
7 May 1924Anton Grath [de][63]
ReliefMalá Strana
Prague, Czech Republic
March 1927Otakar Španiel[64]
BustSauerhof [de]
Baden bei Wien, Austria
10 May 1927Hans Mauer [de][65]
BustMartonvásár, Hungary 1927Jànos Pàsztor[66]
StatueNuremberg, Germany 1927Konrad Roth[67]
StatueMonument to Ludwig van Beethoven [cs]
Karlovy Vary, Czech Republic
29 September 1929Hugo Uher [cs][68]
StatueBudapest, Hungary 1932János Horvay[69][70]
StatuePershing Square
Los Angeles, California, US
14 October 1932[e]Unknown[71]
ReliefRostock, Germany 1934Paul Wallat[72]
Statue [de]Alter Zoll [de]
Bonn, Germany
1938Peter Breuer[73]
Other sculpturePlaza Lavalle [es]
Buenos Aires, Argentina
15 November 1944José Fioravanti[74]
BustGarden of the Beethoven House
Bonn, Germany
1945/46Eduard Merz[24]
Statue(s)Frankfurt, Germany 1948Georg Kolbe[75]
BustRedoute, Bad Godesberg
Bonn, Germany
1955Franz Rotter[76]
Other sculptureDoblhoff Park
Baden bei Wien, Austria
1969Matija Vuković[77]
BustGraz Opera
Graz, Austria
1969Fred Pirker[78]
ReliefHegyvidék (District XII)
Budapest, Hungary
1970László Csontos[79]
Other sculptureHlohovec, Slovakia c. 1970Unknown[80]
StatueJan Kochanowski Park
Bydgoszcz, Poland
1970sWitold Marciniak[77]
StatueSiolim
Goa, India
1 May 1976Cypriano Fernandes[81]
BustParque de Berlín
Madrid, Spain
1981Unknown[82]
BustGarden of the Beethoven House
Bonn, Germany
1981Levon Lazarev [de][25]
Other sculptureBeethovenhalle
Bonn, Germany
1986Klaus Kammerichs [de]
after Joseph Karl Stieler
[18]
StatueNaruto, Tokushima, Japan 1997Peter Kuschel [de][83]
BustGarden of the Beethoven House
Bonn, Germany
1998Cantemir Riscutia[26]
StatueJesús de Monasterio Park
Santander, Spain
1999Ramón Ruiz Lloreda[84]
External image
Yuan Xikun's bust, on the Google Arts & Culture website
BustJintai Art Museum
Beijing, China
2004Yuan Xikun[85]
External image
Burkhard Mohr's bust, on the Statues – Hither & Thither website
BustBad Godesberg
Bonn, Germany
before 2008Burkhard Mohr [de][86]
Other sculptureStadtgarten [de]
Bonn, Germany
30 March 2014Markus Lüpertz[19][87]
Statue(s)Martonvásár, Hungary 31 December 2014Nagy János[88]

Bourdelle's sculptures

The French sculptor Antoine Bourdelle (1861–1929) greatly admired Beethoven, of whom he created at least 45 sculptures from 1893 to the end of his life.[89][90][f]

Sculptures by Antoine Bourdelle
ImageTypeLocationDateRef(s)
External image
Antoine Bourdelle's study, on the Smithsonian Institution website
Bust
(a study)
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Washington, D.C., US
1889[91]
BustCleveland Museum of Art
Cleveland, Ohio, US
1891[92]
BustMusée Ingres
Montauban, France
1891[93][94]
External image
Antoine Bourdelle's mask, on the List Visual Arts Center website
MaskList Visual Arts Center
Cambridge, Massachusetts, US
1901[95]
BustMusée Ingres
Montauban, France
1901–1902[96][97]
BustBeethovenhalle
Bonn, Germany
1902[98]
External image
Antoine Bourdelle's bust, on Google Arts & Culture
BustBeethoven House
Bonn, Germany
1902[99]
BustStrasbourg Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art
Strasbourg, France
1903[100]
BustMusée d'Orsay
Paris, France
1903[101]
External image
Antoine Bourdelle's statue, on the Courtauld Institute of Art's website
StatueMusée Bourdelle
Paris, France
1904–1908[102]
External image
Antoine Bourdelle's bust, on the Metropolitan Museum of Art's website
BustMetropolitan Museum of Art
New York, New York, US
c. 1926 [1902][103]
External image
Antoine Bourdelle's statue, on a website dedicated to Beethoven
BustMontevideo, Uruguay 25 December 1927[104]
Other sculptureMusée Ingres
Montauban, France
1927–1928[105]
External image
Antoine Bourdelle's statue, on the Princeton University Art Museum website
StatuePrinceton University Art Museum
Princeton, New Jersey, US
1929[106]
BustJardin du Luxembourg
Paris, France
1978 [1902][107]
External image
Antoine Bourdelle's bust, on the Ohara Museum of Art website
BustOhara Museum of Art
Kurashiki, Japan
Undated[108]

Unexecuted sculptures

Unexecuted sculptures
SketchDateSculptorRef(s)
c. 1840Gustav Blaeser[8]
1840sFriedrich von Amerling[3]
c. 1840–1845Friedrich Drake[7]
c. 1890Emil Eugen Sachse[8]
1903Fidus[13]
1926Ernst Barlach[17][109]

See also

Notes

References

General
  • Comini, Alessandra (2008). The Changing Image of Beethoven: A Study in Mythmaking. Santa Fe, New Mexico: Sunstone Press. ISBN 978-0-86534-661-1.
Specific

External links