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Beethoven (Mähler)

There are at least two surviving portraits created by German painter Joseph Willibrord Mähler in oils of the composer Ludwig van Beethoven.

Mähler's portrait of 1804–05

One, painted in approximately 1804 or 1805, is the first of up to four untitled portraits the painter made of the composer. Today it hangs in the Beethoven Museum in Probusgasse, Vienna, part of the Vienna Museum.

A copy of this painting, once owned by Beethoven's biographer Alexander Wheelock Thayer, is now owned by the New York Public Library.

Mähler's 1814 portrait of Beethoven exists in two versions, and is part of a series of portraits he made of Viennese composers at this time.

The portrait of 1804–1805 edit

Background edit

Joseph Willibrord Mähler was introduced to Beethoven by the writer Stephan von Breuning (1774–1827). Though eventually a court secretary, Mähler was interested in music, was a good singer and did some composing. Beethoven took him to one rehearsal of Leonore in 1805.[1]

What is known about the painting stems from Alexander Wheelock Thayer's biography. He first came across the original Mähler painting during a research visit (for his Beethoven biography) to Caroline Barbara van Beethoven (born Naske), the widow of Karl van Beethoven, the composer's nephew. Because Thayer owned a copy (see below), he was particularly interested in learning about the circumstances under which it was painted. He considered this painting the most interesting and engaging of the portraits he had encountered.[2] He later interviewed Mähler on 24 May 1860.[3][2] Thayer characterized the friendship between Beethoven and Mähler as one where composer's kindness was returned by Mähler with warm affection and admiration for composer's genius.[3] In offering recollections of Beethoven, Mähler spoke of his 1804 portrait and wondered where it was. To his question, Thayer responded that it belonged to Karl van Beethoven's widow. Mähler then revealed that he had a copy of it.[4]

Mähler painted four portraits of Beethoven. Only the first image, dated by Thayer at 1804–05, contains a nearly full view of the composer. Beethoven apparently liked this portrait very much and owned it until his death.[5]

There are only three references to this portrait in contemporary Beethoven sources:

  1. In the papers left by Beethoven there was an undated note to Mähler: "I beg of you to return my portrait to me as soon as you have made sufficient use of it—if you need it longer I beg of you at least to make haste—I have promised the portrait to a stranger, a lady who saw it here, that she may hang it in her room during her stay of several weeks. Who can withstand such charming importunities, as a matter of course a portion of the lovely favors which I shall thus garner will also fall to you";[4]
  2. A brief reference in Anton Schindler's biography, noting its "insignificance";[6]
  3. In his Aus dem Schwarzspanierhause,[7] Gerhard von Breuning (son of Stephan), provided a description of Beethoven's apartment. The portrait of Beethoven’s grandfather was prominently displayed in the entry hall, while the Mähler portrait was on the back wall of a storage room where visitors were never admitted.[8]

The portrait presently hangs in the Beethoven Museum in Probusgasse, Heiligenstadt, Vienna, a division of the Vienna Museum.[9]

Symbolism edit

The historian Owen Jander discusses the symbolism embedded within Beethoven's fifth symphony and the portrait, hypothesizing that both works were a "ritualized confrontation" – a public yet veiled declaration of the composer's growing deafness, as a means of learning to accept it.[10] Jander proposes that much of 18th to 19th century portrait painting can be considered self-portraits, commissioned at significant times in a person's life in which the details of the portrait were laid out by the subject.[11] Elements such as the subject's pose, facial expression, clothing, accompanying objects and gestures are all part of the conventions of portraiture. Similarly, if any of these elements is depicted in such a way that diverges from typical depictions, that strengthens the message they intend to communicate by drawing in the viewer's attention.[12] Contrasting gestures between right and left arm are typical and serve to sensitize the viewer to summon interpretation,[13] or in the words of critic Philip Conisbee, a "narrative portrait with a didactic purpose."[14]

Jander theorizes that an inspiration for Mähler's portrait is Leopold Radoux's 1773 portrait of Beethoven's grandfather, also named Ludwig van Beethoven (1712–1773), which the composer had prominently displayed in his apartment.[15] Notably, one of the features of this portrait (painted the same year as the subject's death) was a cape falling off the back of the subject. To Jander, this represents the overcoming of grief that befell Beethoven's grandfather upon the death of his wife from alcoholism while maintaining a family life (his son Johann—the younger Ludwig van Beethoven's father—also suffered and eventually died from alcoholism). To understand the possible effect upon the composer, Jander cites 18th century mathematician and art theorist Johann Georg Sulzer who in his Allgemeine Theorie der schönen Künste provided an understanding on how an ancestor's portrait can have a healing effect on descendants. "The bonds of admiration and love between us and our ancestors are maintained and thus have a healing influence on the spirit, as though occasionally the deceased were still sitting among us….a portrait can make almost as powerful an impression upon us humans as can the person himself."[15]

The plant edit

Jander notes that plant studies were part of the curriculum of the Dresden Art Academy where Mähler attended, so it is natural to expect plants in his graphic work. The plant at the bottom left of the portrait Jander identified as Polygonum bistorta, commonly known as knotweed.[16] The nature of this plant is of inflorescence (a cluster of flowers on a branch). In the portrait there are groups of knotweed shown in various stages, from initial blossoming with pink to mature florets with the color receded. (Jander charactizes Beethoven as "nature-loving" and recalls the Heiligenstadt Testament where the composer wrote "as the leaves of autumn fall and are withered…," an allusion very similar to the one depicted in the portrait.)[16] Jander proposes that the fading color of the plant is a metaphor to the composer's loss of hearing.[17]

The lyre-guitar edit

Though Mähler described the instrument as a lyre,[4] Jander identified it specifically as a lyre-guitar, an instrument popular in the early 19th century.[18] The interpretation is that, with his hand holding the instrument, Beethoven draws forth music. But lyre-guitars normally have six strings, while the one Beethoven is holding has only five. With the pegs of the strings arranged in two rows, Jander identified the missing string as being one of the higher-pitched strings, suggesting a visual metaphor for Beethoven's inability to hear high frequencies.[19]

The cape edit

 
Leopold Radoux, Lodewijk van Beethoven, 1773 – Beethoven's grandfather. This portrait hung in the main room of the composer's apartment.
 
Mähler's 1814/15 portrait

Jander quotes Sulzer who described the arrangement of clothing in graphic art could depict "a soul agitated through passion."[19] Below Beethoven's back there is a dark blue cape which has fallen from his shoulders. Most of the cape lies in a heap in the lower right hand corner of the picture, which "intensifies the message of divestment."[19] In part this is a reference to the painting of the composer's grandfather, whose falling cape represented the overcoming of grief.[19]

The right hand edit

Sulzer (as quoted by Jander) said that gestures should never cause so much attention as to distract the viewer away from the face.[20] The enigmatic nature of the depiction of Beethoven's right hand appears to have puzzled both Thayer and Jander. Thayer recalled Mähler offering a description: "...the right hand is extended, as if, in a moment of musical enthusiasm, he was beating time..."[4] Thayer provided his own thoughts:[21]

The extended right hand—though, like the rest of the picture, not very artistically executed—was evidently painted with care. It is rather broad for the length, is muscular and nervous, as the hand of a great pianist necessarily grows through much practice; but, on the whole, is neatly formed and well proportioned. Anatomically, it corresponds so perfectly with all the authentic description of Beethoven's person, that this alone proves it to have been copied from nature and not drawn after the painter's fancy. Whoever saw a long delicate hand with fingers exquisitely tapering, like Mendelssohn's, joined to the short stout muscular figure of a Beethoven or a Schubert?

Like Thayer, Jander says the ambiguous meaning of the right hand is due to Mähler's deficiency as an artist.[20] Alessandra Comini observed that, in contradistinction to the portrait of his grandfather where his ancestor's hand is pointing at music already written, Beethoven's "hand rises, palm outward, in response to music heard and to be written down for the future."[22]

The action edit

In Jander's interpretation "the composer projects himself as turning his back (quite literally) to the darkness, turmoil, and half-dead tree that dominate the area to his left. Musical instrument in hand, he projects himself as beginning to move toward the calm, sun-drenched field [and temple to Apollo] to his right." Just as music had rescued his grandfather from overwhelming grief, so too does music provide life's direction for Beethoven and solace from deafness.[23]

The portrait of 1814–1815 edit

Around 1815, Mähler produced a series of portraits showing contemporary Viennese composers, including, apart from Beethoven, Johann Nepomuk Hummel, Antonio Salieri, Ignaz von Seyfried and Michael Umlauf.[24] Most of these portraits entered the collection of the Viennese music society, the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde. As written in the music journal Allgemeine Musikzeitung in August 1815, "all of them distinguish themselves in a most creditable way through the effectual brush stroke, the descriptive resemblance and the distinctive expression of their soul".[25] A half length portrait of Beethoven was part of the series. The painter created several versions of this portrait.

Thayer's copy of the 1804–1805 portrait edit

 
Thayer's copy of Mähler's 1804–05 portrait (c. 1808)

Estimated to have been painted around 1808, this painting is a copy by an unidentified painter of the portrait of Beethoven by Mähler. This copy was owned for many years by Alexander Wheelock Thayer, author of the first scholarly biography of the composer, who considered it one of his most prized possessions.[2] Today the painting belongs to the New York Public Library.[26]

Thayer estimated the copy of Mähler's portrait to have been painted approximately in 1808 by an unidentified artist (it is known that Mähler did not paint the copy himself).[27] The date derives from a listing in an 1890 exhibition catalog for a Beethoven festival held in Bonn.[28] Since Thayer was still living in 1890, musicologists Luigi Bellofatto and Owen Jander surmise that he must have personally lent the portrait for exhibition and most likely provided the date.[27]

The earliest known owner of the portrait was Ferdinand Luib, editor of the noted musical journal, the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung. Bellofatto and Jander hypothesize that Luib, having unsuccessfully compiled materials for a biography of Franz Schubert, recognized the same research drive in Thayer and presented him with the portrait as a gift.[27] When Thayer was appointed US Consul to Italy, the portrait hung the American Consulate in Trieste. (Thayer held the position from 1865 until 1882).[29] Upon Thayer's death in 1897, it was inherited by his niece Susan Elizabeth Fox. She donated it to the Beethoven Association, a New York-based group that came into existence for the purpose of translating Thayer's biography into English by producing chamber music concerts. (The translation by Henry Edward Krehbiel was first published by the Beethoven Association for its members in 1921).[30]

In 1940, the Beethoven Association disbanded and donated its holdings (including the painting) to the New York Public Library. At its opening in 1965, the painting hung in the Music Division's Special Collections reading room of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. Since the 2001 renovation, the painting has hung in the Special Collections Reading Room named for Katherine Cornell and Guthrie McClintic.[26]

References edit

  1. ^ Jander 2000, p. 58.
  2. ^ a b c Bellofatto & Jander 2006, p. 13.
  3. ^ a b Thayer 1967, p. 336.
  4. ^ a b c d Thayer 1967, p. 337.
  5. ^ "Willibrord Joseph Mähler (1778–1860), Ludwig van Beethoven, 1804 – Fotografie von Rudolf Stepanek nach dem Gemälde von Willibrord Joseph Mähler" 9 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Digital Archives Beethoven House Bonn.
  6. ^ Jander 2000, p. 60–61.
  7. ^ von Breuning 1874.
  8. ^ Jander 2000, p. 61.
  9. ^ "Beethoven Museum", website of the Vienna Museum, accessed 20 September 2020.
  10. ^ Jander 2000, p. 44.
  11. ^ Jander 2000, p. 45.
  12. ^ Jander 2000, p. 46.
  13. ^ Jander 2000, p. 48.
  14. ^ Jander 2000, p. 49.
  15. ^ a b Jander 2000, p. 57.
  16. ^ a b Jander 2000, p. 63.
  17. ^ Jander 2000, p. 64.
  18. ^ Jander 2000, p. 65.
  19. ^ a b c d Jander 2000, p. 67.
  20. ^ a b Jander 2000, p. 68.
  21. ^ Thayer 1967, p. 337–338.
  22. ^ Comini 2008, p. 35.
  23. ^ Jander 2000, p. 69.
  24. ^ Friedensblätter. Eine Zeitschrift für Leben, Literatur und Kunst, Vienna, year 2, no. 63, 27. May 1815, p. 252 (digitised)
  25. ^ "Notizen" in Allgemeine Musikzeitung, 1815/34, 23 August 1815, p. 570
  26. ^ a b Bob Kosovsky, "Happy 240th, Beethoven! And thank you, Beethoven Association!", New York Public Library blog, 16 December 2010, accessed 20 September 2020
  27. ^ a b c Bellofatto & Jander 2006, p. 15.
  28. ^ Katalog der mit der Beethoven-Feier zu Bonn am 11.–15. Mai 1890 verbunden Ausstellung (Bonn: Verlag des Vereins Beethoven-Haus, 1890).
  29. ^ Claman & Bellofatto 2007.
  30. ^ Thayer 1921.

Bibliography edit

  • Bellofatto, Luigi; Jander, Owen (2006), "Thayer's Copy of the Mähler Portrait of Beethoven, ca. 1804", Beethoven Journal, 21 (2): 13–15
  • Claman, Henry D.; Bellofatto, Luigi D. (2007), "Alexander Wheelock Thayer: Brief life of Beethoven's biographer: 1817–1897", Harvard Magazine
  • Comini, Alessandra (2008), The Changing Image of Beethoven: a Study in Mythmaking (Revised with a new foreword by the author ed.), Santa Fe, New Mexico: Sunstone Press, ISBN 978-0-86534-661-1
  • Jander, Owen (2000), "'Let Your Deafness No Longer Be a Secret—Even in Art': Self-Portraiture and the Third Movement of the C-Minor Symphony", Beethoven Forum, 8 (1): 25–70
  • Thayer, Alexander Wheelock (1921), The Life of Ludwig van Beethoven, New York: Beethoven Association
  • Thayer, Alexander Wheelock (1967), Forbes, Elliot (ed.), Thayer's life of Beethoven, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-02702-9
  • von Breuning, Gerhard (1874), Aus dem Schwarzspanierhause: Erinnerungen an L. van Beethoven aus meiner Jugendzeit, Vienna: L. Rosner

beethoven, mähler, there, least, surviving, portraits, created, german, painter, joseph, willibrord, mähler, oils, composer, ludwig, beethoven, mähler, portrait, 1804, painted, approximately, 1804, 1805, first, four, untitled, portraits, painter, made, compose. There are at least two surviving portraits created by German painter Joseph Willibrord Mahler in oils of the composer Ludwig van Beethoven Mahler s portrait of 1804 05 One painted in approximately 1804 or 1805 is the first of up to four untitled portraits the painter made of the composer Today it hangs in the Beethoven Museum in Probusgasse Vienna part of the Vienna Museum A copy of this painting once owned by Beethoven s biographer Alexander Wheelock Thayer is now owned by the New York Public Library Mahler s 1814 portrait of Beethoven exists in two versions and is part of a series of portraits he made of Viennese composers at this time Contents 1 The portrait of 1804 1805 1 1 Background 1 2 Symbolism 1 2 1 The plant 1 2 2 The lyre guitar 1 2 3 The cape 1 2 4 The right hand 1 2 5 The action 2 The portrait of 1814 1815 3 Thayer s copy of the 1804 1805 portrait 4 References 5 BibliographyThe portrait of 1804 1805 editBackground edit Joseph Willibrord Mahler was introduced to Beethoven by the writer Stephan von Breuning 1774 1827 Though eventually a court secretary Mahler was interested in music was a good singer and did some composing Beethoven took him to one rehearsal of Leonore in 1805 1 What is known about the painting stems from Alexander Wheelock Thayer s biography He first came across the original Mahler painting during a research visit for his Beethoven biography to Caroline Barbara van Beethoven born Naske the widow of Karl van Beethoven the composer s nephew Because Thayer owned a copy see below he was particularly interested in learning about the circumstances under which it was painted He considered this painting the most interesting and engaging of the portraits he had encountered 2 He later interviewed Mahler on 24 May 1860 3 2 Thayer characterized the friendship between Beethoven and Mahler as one where composer s kindness was returned by Mahler with warm affection and admiration for composer s genius 3 In offering recollections of Beethoven Mahler spoke of his 1804 portrait and wondered where it was To his question Thayer responded that it belonged to Karl van Beethoven s widow Mahler then revealed that he had a copy of it 4 Mahler painted four portraits of Beethoven Only the first image dated by Thayer at 1804 05 contains a nearly full view of the composer Beethoven apparently liked this portrait very much and owned it until his death 5 There are only three references to this portrait in contemporary Beethoven sources In the papers left by Beethoven there was an undated note to Mahler I beg of you to return my portrait to me as soon as you have made sufficient use of it if you need it longer I beg of you at least to make haste I have promised the portrait to a stranger a lady who saw it here that she may hang it in her room during her stay of several weeks Who can withstand such charming importunities as a matter of course a portion of the lovely favors which I shall thus garner will also fall to you 4 A brief reference in Anton Schindler s biography noting its insignificance 6 In his Aus dem Schwarzspanierhause 7 Gerhard von Breuning son of Stephan provided a description of Beethoven s apartment The portrait of Beethoven s grandfather was prominently displayed in the entry hall while the Mahler portrait was on the back wall of a storage room where visitors were never admitted 8 The portrait presently hangs in the Beethoven Museum in Probusgasse Heiligenstadt Vienna a division of the Vienna Museum 9 Symbolism edit The historian Owen Jander discusses the symbolism embedded within Beethoven s fifth symphony and the portrait hypothesizing that both works were a ritualized confrontation a public yet veiled declaration of the composer s growing deafness as a means of learning to accept it 10 Jander proposes that much of 18th to 19th century portrait painting can be considered self portraits commissioned at significant times in a person s life in which the details of the portrait were laid out by the subject 11 Elements such as the subject s pose facial expression clothing accompanying objects and gestures are all part of the conventions of portraiture Similarly if any of these elements is depicted in such a way that diverges from typical depictions that strengthens the message they intend to communicate by drawing in the viewer s attention 12 Contrasting gestures between right and left arm are typical and serve to sensitize the viewer to summon interpretation 13 or in the words of critic Philip Conisbee a narrative portrait with a didactic purpose 14 Jander theorizes that an inspiration for Mahler s portrait is Leopold Radoux s 1773 portrait of Beethoven s grandfather also named Ludwig van Beethoven 1712 1773 which the composer had prominently displayed in his apartment 15 Notably one of the features of this portrait painted the same year as the subject s death was a cape falling off the back of the subject To Jander this represents the overcoming of grief that befell Beethoven s grandfather upon the death of his wife from alcoholism while maintaining a family life his son Johann the younger Ludwig van Beethoven s father also suffered and eventually died from alcoholism To understand the possible effect upon the composer Jander cites 18th century mathematician and art theorist Johann Georg Sulzer who in his Allgemeine Theorie der schonen Kunste provided an understanding on how an ancestor s portrait can have a healing effect on descendants The bonds of admiration and love between us and our ancestors are maintained and thus have a healing influence on the spirit as though occasionally the deceased were still sitting among us a portrait can make almost as powerful an impression upon us humans as can the person himself 15 The plant edit Jander notes that plant studies were part of the curriculum of the Dresden Art Academy where Mahler attended so it is natural to expect plants in his graphic work The plant at the bottom left of the portrait Jander identified as Polygonum bistorta commonly known as knotweed 16 The nature of this plant is of inflorescence a cluster of flowers on a branch In the portrait there are groups of knotweed shown in various stages from initial blossoming with pink to mature florets with the color receded Jander charactizes Beethoven as nature loving and recalls the Heiligenstadt Testament where the composer wrote as the leaves of autumn fall and are withered an allusion very similar to the one depicted in the portrait 16 Jander proposes that the fading color of the plant is a metaphor to the composer s loss of hearing 17 The lyre guitar edit Though Mahler described the instrument as a lyre 4 Jander identified it specifically as a lyre guitar an instrument popular in the early 19th century 18 The interpretation is that with his hand holding the instrument Beethoven draws forth music But lyre guitars normally have six strings while the one Beethoven is holding has only five With the pegs of the strings arranged in two rows Jander identified the missing string as being one of the higher pitched strings suggesting a visual metaphor for Beethoven s inability to hear high frequencies 19 The cape edit nbsp Leopold Radoux Lodewijk van Beethoven 1773 Beethoven s grandfather This portrait hung in the main room of the composer s apartment nbsp Mahler s 1814 15 portrait Jander quotes Sulzer who described the arrangement of clothing in graphic art could depict a soul agitated through passion 19 Below Beethoven s back there is a dark blue cape which has fallen from his shoulders Most of the cape lies in a heap in the lower right hand corner of the picture which intensifies the message of divestment 19 In part this is a reference to the painting of the composer s grandfather whose falling cape represented the overcoming of grief 19 The right hand edit Sulzer as quoted by Jander said that gestures should never cause so much attention as to distract the viewer away from the face 20 The enigmatic nature of the depiction of Beethoven s right hand appears to have puzzled both Thayer and Jander Thayer recalled Mahler offering a description the right hand is extended as if in a moment of musical enthusiasm he was beating time 4 Thayer provided his own thoughts 21 The extended right hand though like the rest of the picture not very artistically executed was evidently painted with care It is rather broad for the length is muscular and nervous as the hand of a great pianist necessarily grows through much practice but on the whole is neatly formed and well proportioned Anatomically it corresponds so perfectly with all the authentic description of Beethoven s person that this alone proves it to have been copied from nature and not drawn after the painter s fancy Whoever saw a long delicate hand with fingers exquisitely tapering like Mendelssohn s joined to the short stout muscular figure of a Beethoven or a Schubert Like Thayer Jander says the ambiguous meaning of the right hand is due to Mahler s deficiency as an artist 20 Alessandra Comini observed that in contradistinction to the portrait of his grandfather where his ancestor s hand is pointing at music already written Beethoven s hand rises palm outward in response to music heard and to be written down for the future 22 The action edit In Jander s interpretation the composer projects himself as turning his back quite literally to the darkness turmoil and half dead tree that dominate the area to his left Musical instrument in hand he projects himself as beginning to move toward the calm sun drenched field and temple to Apollo to his right Just as music had rescued his grandfather from overwhelming grief so too does music provide life s direction for Beethoven and solace from deafness 23 The portrait of 1814 1815 editAround 1815 Mahler produced a series of portraits showing contemporary Viennese composers including apart from Beethoven Johann Nepomuk Hummel Antonio Salieri Ignaz von Seyfried and Michael Umlauf 24 Most of these portraits entered the collection of the Viennese music society the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde As written in the music journal Allgemeine Musikzeitung in August 1815 all of them distinguish themselves in a most creditable way through the effectual brush stroke the descriptive resemblance and the distinctive expression of their soul 25 A half length portrait of Beethoven was part of the series The painter created several versions of this portrait Thayer s copy of the 1804 1805 portrait edit nbsp Thayer s copy of Mahler s 1804 05 portrait c 1808 Estimated to have been painted around 1808 this painting is a copy by an unidentified painter of the portrait of Beethoven by Mahler This copy was owned for many years by Alexander Wheelock Thayer author of the first scholarly biography of the composer who considered it one of his most prized possessions 2 Today the painting belongs to the New York Public Library 26 Thayer estimated the copy of Mahler s portrait to have been painted approximately in 1808 by an unidentified artist it is known that Mahler did not paint the copy himself 27 The date derives from a listing in an 1890 exhibition catalog for a Beethoven festival held in Bonn 28 Since Thayer was still living in 1890 musicologists Luigi Bellofatto and Owen Jander surmise that he must have personally lent the portrait for exhibition and most likely provided the date 27 The earliest known owner of the portrait was Ferdinand Luib editor of the noted musical journal the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung Bellofatto and Jander hypothesize that Luib having unsuccessfully compiled materials for a biography of Franz Schubert recognized the same research drive in Thayer and presented him with the portrait as a gift 27 When Thayer was appointed US Consul to Italy the portrait hung the American Consulate in Trieste Thayer held the position from 1865 until 1882 29 Upon Thayer s death in 1897 it was inherited by his niece Susan Elizabeth Fox She donated it to the Beethoven Association a New York based group that came into existence for the purpose of translating Thayer s biography into English by producing chamber music concerts The translation by Henry Edward Krehbiel was first published by the Beethoven Association for its members in 1921 30 In 1940 the Beethoven Association disbanded and donated its holdings including the painting to the New York Public Library At its opening in 1965 the painting hung in the Music Division s Special Collections reading room of the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Since the 2001 renovation the painting has hung in the Special Collections Reading Room named for Katherine Cornell and Guthrie McClintic 26 References edit Jander 2000 p 58 a b c Bellofatto amp Jander 2006 p 13 a b Thayer 1967 p 336 a b c d Thayer 1967 p 337 Willibrord Joseph Mahler 1778 1860 Ludwig van Beethoven 1804 Fotografie von Rudolf Stepanek nach dem Gemalde von Willibrord Joseph Mahler Archived 9 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine Digital Archives Beethoven House Bonn Jander 2000 p 60 61 von Breuning 1874 Jander 2000 p 61 Beethoven Museum website of the Vienna Museum accessed 20 September 2020 Jander 2000 p 44 Jander 2000 p 45 Jander 2000 p 46 Jander 2000 p 48 Jander 2000 p 49 a b Jander 2000 p 57 a b Jander 2000 p 63 Jander 2000 p 64 Jander 2000 p 65 a b c d Jander 2000 p 67 a b Jander 2000 p 68 Thayer 1967 p 337 338 Comini 2008 p 35 Jander 2000 p 69 Friedensblatter Eine Zeitschrift fur Leben Literatur und Kunst Vienna year 2 no 63 27 May 1815 p 252 digitised Notizen in Allgemeine Musikzeitung 1815 34 23 August 1815 p 570 a b Bob Kosovsky Happy 240th Beethoven And thank you Beethoven Association New York Public Library blog 16 December 2010 accessed 20 September 2020 a b c Bellofatto amp Jander 2006 p 15 Katalog der mit der Beethoven Feier zu Bonn am 11 15 Mai 1890 verbunden Ausstellung Bonn Verlag des Vereins Beethoven Haus 1890 Claman amp Bellofatto 2007 Thayer 1921 Bibliography editBellofatto Luigi Jander Owen 2006 Thayer s Copy of the Mahler Portrait of Beethoven ca 1804 Beethoven Journal 21 2 13 15 Claman Henry D Bellofatto Luigi D 2007 Alexander Wheelock Thayer Brief life of Beethoven s biographer 1817 1897 Harvard Magazine Comini Alessandra 2008 The Changing Image of Beethoven a Study in Mythmaking Revised with a new foreword by the author ed Santa Fe New Mexico Sunstone Press ISBN 978 0 86534 661 1 Jander Owen 2000 Let Your Deafness No Longer Be a Secret Even in Art Self Portraiture and the Third Movement of the C Minor Symphony Beethoven Forum 8 1 25 70 Thayer Alexander Wheelock 1921 The Life of Ludwig van Beethoven New York Beethoven Association Thayer Alexander Wheelock 1967 Forbes Elliot ed Thayer s life of Beethoven Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02702 9 von Breuning Gerhard 1874 Aus dem Schwarzspanierhause Erinnerungen an L van Beethoven aus meiner Jugendzeit Vienna L Rosner Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beethoven Mahler amp oldid 1179355159, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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