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History
by David W. Cline, M.D.
1. Wagnerian Influences in the
Upper Midwest
A. A New-World Bayreuth?
Avid interest in the music dramas and philosophy of Richard Wagner in
the upper midwest goes back to the 1870s. During that period, several
St. Paul, Minnesota businessmen corresponded with Wagner, inviting him
to come to the midwest and promising to raise a million dollars to build
a Festspielhaus to his specifications on the banks of the Mississippi
River and to support him financially thereafter. The deal was brokered
through Newell Fill Jenkins, an American dentist practicing in Dresden,
who treated Wagner in Basle and Bayreuth on several occasions and was
entrusted with the negotiations involved in Wagner's proposed immigration
to American in 1880.
Wagner's interests in coming to Minnesota appear to be financial, philosophical
and sociological. He needed considerable amounts of money to build the
Festspielhaus in Bayreuth and mount the first production of "Der
Ring des Nibelungen," all of which finally occurred in August 1876.
Even though the festival was a success -- Frederic Spotts says, "Every
one who attended agreed...the festival was just not the cultural event
of the century, it was one of the great moments in cultural history,"
-- it was not a financial success. Although King Ludwig II of Bavaria
supported the enterprise, Wagner hoped that Bismarck, Chancellor of the
newly formed German nation in 1971, would give financial support and adapt
the festival as a symbol of German art, an "artistic sister of German
unification, "with Bayreuth to be "a sort of Art-Washington
D.C." However, no financial support was forthcoming. The Iron Chancellor
Bismarck, who could not abide Wagner, was not enticed by the offer and
made sure that Wagner's project received no financial support from the
Reich nor did he attend the first festival. Wagner thus realized he had
failed to make the Bayreuth festival a theatrical symbol of the national
consciousness and ascendant military power of the new Germany.
Wagner responded to this affront with a growing disillusionment with
the Fatherland and contemplated immigrating to Minnesota, whose German-American
citizens had offered to subsidize a new world Festspielhaus. He delighted
in the idea of founding a "new society" in the new world with
a theater, school and home in Minnesota where, in Wagner's opinion, the
best Germans had immigrated - preserving purity in racial stock - while
the Old Germany and the rest of Europe, sank into decay. Wagner even set
about educating his son, Siegfried, for a future as an American. Dr. Jenkins
attempted to cool this ardor, persuading Wagner that the United States
would certainly welcome the great composer, but the religious attitude
toward Wagner's music dramas that Wagner demanded, which had not developed
in Germany, was even less likely to take hold in the United States. So,
this idea treasured by Wagner in his later years, came and went. David
Large, in the Wagner compendium, edited by Barry Millington says, "It
is a shame he did not make this move: A new world Bayreuth in the American
middle west would certainly have had a more wholesome influence on the
evolution of Wagner's legacy."
B. Owatonna, Minnesota
A Wagner legacy of a different sort did appear in Minnesota. It took
the form of architectural design of a bank in southern Minnesota build
in 1906. The National Farmer's Bank of Owatonna was designed by Lewis
Sullivan, an architect from Chicago. Sullivan was swept away by hearing
Wagner's concerts in Chicago "revealing anew, refreshing as dawn,
the enormous power of man to build, as a mirage, the fabric of his dreams."
John Root, another older Chicago architect, gave theoretical shape to
this vision in his treatise, "The Art of Pure Color" in 1883.
Root added an emotionally effective and symbolic function for color that
was explicitly derived from an analogy with Wagner's music. Lewis Sullivan
in his architectural masterpiece in Owatonna used abstract color and architectural
ornament to create a "color tone poem" or "a color symphony,"
as he called it, designed to evoke emotion and the appearance of the natural
world in this Prairie School large cubical with skylight and stained glass
windows. Larry Millet describes the color phenomena as follows:

"The ultimate mediator of color in the banking room is the natural
light that pours through the huge semicircular windows and the skylight
above. Filtered by these great expanses of stained glass, the light as
it enters the banking room has peculiar and strikingly beautiful quality
likening it to 'sunlight passing through sea water.' The quiet blue-green
glow created by this interaction of sunlight and colored glass gives the
room an ethereal aura not usually associated with the down-to-earth business
of banking which is so dominant that colors in the bank are never quite
what they seem. Thus, ornament on the upper wall that appears green turns
out to be blue when viewed in more neutral light. The light also changes
with the movement of the sun across the sky, with weather conditions,
and with the time of year. As a result, the ornament that fills the bank
goes through subtle shifts in color from hour to hour, day to day, and
season to season. By bringing indoors and outdoors together in the banking
room through the manipulation of light, Sullivan was thus able to compose
his 'color symphony'-- a symphony conducted by the sun itself."
Thus, architecture becomes the best of the visual arts to realize Wagner's
concept of Gesamtkunstwerk--the total work of art.
C. Red Wing, Minnesota
Owatonna is not the only Minnesota community that pays homage to Wagner.
The Sheldon Theater in Red Wing was built in 1906. On the outside of the
building at the upper level, there are several coves wherein stone busts
of famous people of the theater can be placed. On one cove sits the bust
of William Shakespeare, at another the bust of Richard Wagner. Many coves
remain empty. It is remarkable that the people of Red Wing knew and admired
Wagner to the point of memorializing him in this way. Probably there are
other stories to tell in this same vein -- unheard but solicited by this
writer.
2. The Richard Wagner Society of the Upper Midwest
Since history has the greatest impact when it has personal meaning, we
who are interested in the music, musicology, and philosophy of Richard
Wagner, must ask ourselves: What has been our personal experience with
this work? How did we become interested and what fascinates us? What brings
forth passion? These time-honored questions have been the basis for the
newly revived Richard Wagner Society of the Upper Midwest, one of 120
such societies throughout the world. Upon entering this society, each
new member is asked, "How did you become interested in Wagner's music
dramas?"
My answer began when I was 19, in 1954, on a visit to New York City and
particularly Louchows German-American restaurant, where on the upper interior
walls were dramatic murals that caught my attention. Because I did not
understand them, I asked a waiter who briskly said, "What! You don't
know what stories they tell? They are from Wagner's operas!" Then
he glared at me and said, "Those operas started two world wars and
they will start a third!!" That music dramas could start world wars
was astounding to me, coming as it did shortly after World War II. I determined
that day to try to understand the veracity of his pronouncement; I am
still learning.
The Society as we know it today first met on July 22, 1998, at the Minneapolis
Club with four people in attendance. The conversation centered around
the questions listed above. We continued to meet about four times per
year and usually discussed recent experiences with Wagner's music dramas:
The Flag Staff Arizona "Ring" in June of 1998, "Lohengrin"
at the Metropolitan Opera, NYC October 1998, the San Francisco "Ring"
in June 1999, "Tristan" and the Wagner Symposium in Honolulu
in February 2000, the Metropolitan Opera "Ring" in spring of
2000, the Seattle "Ring" in August 2001, the Bayreuth Wagner
Festival August 1999, 2000, 2001 and the Wagner Festig in Berlin spring
of 2002.
On one occasion, November 11, 2000, we had an outside speaker. Penelope
Turing from London, who had attended all but one of the Bayreuth Festivals
since their resumption after World War II in 1951, spoke about her experience
and the changes she had noted: "Fifty years of Bayreuth Festivals
with Wolfgang Wagner."
Other meeting topics include "What Virginia Wolf had to say after
attending the Bayreuth Festival" and the concept of "Wahn"
in Wagner's music dramas. Elinor Watson Bell presented her experience
studying music and attending Wagner operas in Munich in the early 1930s,
complete with her scrapbook of program performances and performers.
Our general goal is captured in the motto of the Wagner Society of New
York: "To learn, to teach, to share appreciation of the musical works
of Richard Wagner." Those of like mind are invited to join.
References:
Bayreuth: A History of the Wagner Festival. Frederic Spotts, Yale University
Press, 1994, p.78
The Curves of the Arch: The Story of Lewis Sullivan's Owatonna Bank, Larry
Millett, MHS Press, p.88
Richard Wagner: The Man, his Mind, and his Music. Robert W. Gutman, Harcourt,
Brace and World, Inc. p.404-405
The Wagner Compendium, Barry Millington, General Editor, Thames and Hudson,
1992,p.390,401.
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