A Lecture on Eurythmy
Given at Penmaenmawr on
26th August, 1923
by
RUDOLF STEINER
EURYTHMY
has grown up out of the soil of the Anthroposophical
Movement, and the history of its origin makes it almost
appear to be a gift of the forces of destiny. In the year
1912 the Anthroposophical Society lost one of its members,
the father of a family, and as a result it was necessary for
his daughter to choose a profession, a profession, however,
which could be found within the field of Anthroposophical
activity. After much thought it seemed possible to make this
the opportunity for the inauguration of a new art of
movement in space, different from anything which had arisen
up to that time.
And
thus, out of the teaching given to this young girl, there
arose the very first principles and movements of Eurythmy.
Eurythmy
must be accounted one of the many activities arising out of
the Anthroposophical Movement, which have grown up in such a
way that their first beginnings must be looked upon as the
result of the workings of destiny. I spoke some days ago
about the forms of the pillars of the Goetheanum, and
mentioned how I had stood before these pillars, and realised
that through artistic activity they had gained a life of
their own, and had developed quite different qualities from
those with which they had originally been endowed. The same
may be said about the art of Eurythmy.
This is
always the case when one draws upon the creative forces of
nature, either in one's work as an artist or in any other
form of human activity. Just as the creative forces of
nature draw upon the inexhaustible source of the infinite,
so that it is always possible to perceive in something which
has come to fruition much more than was originally implanted
in it, so is it also when artistic impulses unite themselves
with the mighty creative forces of nature. In such a case
the artist is not merely developing some more or less
limited impulse, but he reaches the point when he makes of
himself an instrument for the creative powers of the
universe, so that very much more grows out of his activity
than he could originally have intended or foreseen.
At the
time of which I speak, Eurythmy was studied only by a very
few people. At the beginning of the war, (the first world
war) Frau Dr. Steiner undertook their further training, and
from that time on Eurythmy became more and more widely
known, and its artistic possibilities very much enriched.
The art of Eurythmy, as we know it today, has developed out
of the first principles which were given in the year 1912.
The work since then has been carried on without
interruption; but Eurythmy is still only in its first
beginnings, and we are working unceasingly towards its
further development and perfection.
I am,
however, convinced that Eurythmy bears within it infinite
possibilities, and that, in the future, when those who were
responsible for its inauguration must long have left their
work in other hands, Eurythmy will develop further until it
is able to take its place as a younger art by the side of
those other arts having an older tradition.
No art
has ever risen out of human intention intellectually
conceived, neither can the principle of imitating nature
ever produce an art. On the contrary, true art has always
been born out of human hearts able to open themselves to the
impulses coming from the spiritual world, human hearts which
felt compelled to realise these impulses and to embody them
in some way in external matter.
It can
be seen how, in the case of each separate art
architecture, for example, sculpture, painting or music
certain spiritual impulses were poured into humanity from
higher worlds. These impulses were taken up by certain
individuals specially fitted to receive them, and in this
way, through human activity, pictures of the higher worlds
were reflected in the physical world; and the various arts
came into being.
It is
true that the arts, in the course of their further
development, have for the most part become naturalistic, and
have lost their connection with the impulses which
originally inspired them, a mere imitation of external
nature taking their place. Such imitation, however, could
never be the source of any true art.
To-day,
when a sculptor or painter wishes to represent the human
figure, he does so by studying and working from a model. It
can, however, easily be shown that the art of sculpture,
which reached its zenith during the civilisation of ancient
Greece, did not arise through the artist working from a
model, and in his way more or less imitating the external
impressions of the senses, but at that time, when the
plastic art of Greece was in full bloom, man was still to
some extent aware of the etheric body which contains
within it the formative forces and the forces of growth. At
the height of Greek civilisation man knew how to make use of
the etheric body when bringing an arm or hand, for instance,
into a certain attitude, and the position and arrangement of
the muscles were an actual experience to him. He had an
inner understanding of the possibilities of movement in the
arm and hand, of the possibilities of muscular expansion and
contraction. And he was able to bring this inner experience
to physical expression, making use of physical materials.
Thus the
Greek sculptor incorporated into matter a real, inward
experience, not merely the external impression of the eye.
He did not say to himself: the lines go in this or that
direction, and then proceed to embody in plastic form the
perceptions of his physical senses; but for him it was
indeed an actual inward experience which he re-created out
of the creative forces of nature, and entrusted to external
physical matter.
This is
true of every form of art. There have always been, and will
always be, in the course of human evolution on the earth,
epochs during which art is at its height, during which
influences from the spiritual worlds penetrate more easily
into the souls of men than at other times, urging them to
turn their gaze towards the spiritual worlds and to carry
down from thence living spiritual impulses. This is how
every true art is brought to birth.
Such
periods of civilisation are always followed by others of a
more naturalistic tendency, in which certain arts often
attain to a greater external perfection than they had
possessed at an earlier stage; but this perfection bears
within it traces of decadence, whereas in their beginnings,
these arts were permeated with a more vital, a more powerful
and enthusiastic spiritual impulse. At that earlier stage
they had not yet lost their true reality; their technique
was the outcome of man's whole being. It was not a merely
external, traditional technique, but was based on the body,
soul, and spirit of man.
The
realisation of this fact of human evolution might well give
one courage to develop ever further and further this art of
Eurythmy, which has been borne on the wings of fate into the
Anthroposophical Movement. For it is the task of the
Anthroposophical Movement to reveal to our present age that
spiritual impulse which is suited to it.
I speak
in all humility when I say that within the Anthroposophical
Movement there is a firm conviction that a spiritual impulse
of this kind must now, at the present time, enter once more
into human evolution. And this spiritual impulse must
perforce, among its other means of expression, embody itself
in a new form of art. It will increasingly be realised that
this particular form of art has been given to the world in
Eurythmy.
It is
the task of Anthroposophy to bring a greater depth, a wider
vision and a more living spirit into the other forms of art.
But the art of Eurythmy could only grow up out of the soul
of Anthroposophy; could only receive its inspiration through
a purely Anthroposophical conception.
It is
through speech that man is able to reveal his inner being
outwardly to his fellow-men. Through speech he can most
easily disclose his inmost nature.
At all
periods of civilisation, in a form suited to the particular
epoch, side by side with those arts which need for their
expression either the external element of space or the
external element of time, accompanying and completing these,
we find that art which manifests itself through speech the
art of poetry.
The art
of speech I purposely use the expression `the art of
speech,' to describe poetry, and the justification for doing
so will appear later is more comprehensive and universal
than the other arts, for it can embody other forms of art
within its own form. It can be said that the art of poetry
is an art of speech which in the case of one poet works more
plastically, and in the case of another more musically.
Indeed one can go so far as to say that painting itself can
enter into the art of poetry.
Speech
is a universal means of expression for the human soul. And
one who is able to gaze with unprejudiced vision into the
earliest times of human evolution on the earth, can see that
in certain primeval languages a really fundamental artistic
element entered into human evolution. Such primeval
languages were, however, to a far greater degree than is the
case with modern languages, drawn out of the whole human
organisation.
When one
investigates without prejudice the course of the evolution
of man, one discovers certain ancient languages which might
almost be likened to song. Such singing was, however,
enhanced by accompanying movements of the legs and arms, so
that a kind of dancing was added. Especially was this the
case when a dignified form of expression was sought, the
form of some ritual or cult.
In those
primeval times of human evolution the accompanying of the
word which issued forth from the larynx with gesture and
movement was felt to be something absolutely natural. It is
only possible to gain a true understanding of what lies
behind these things, when one realises that what otherwise
appears only as gesture accompanying speech can gain for
itself independent life. It will then become apparent that
movements which are carried out by the arms and hands, from
the artistic point of view can be not merely equally
expressive, but much more expressive than speech itself.
It must
be admitted that such an unprejudiced attitude with regard
to these things is not always to be found. One often
observes a certain antipathy towards the accompanying of
speech by gesture. Indeed, I myself have noticed that
certain people even go so far as to consider it not in very
good taste when a speaker accompanies his discourse with
pronounced gesture. As a result of this the habit has grown
up, and is by no means unusual at the present day, of
putting one's hands in one's pockets when making a speech. I
must say that I have always found this attitude most
unsympathetic.
It is a
fact that the inmost nature of the human being can be
revealed most wonderfully through movements of the arms and
hands. My fingers often itch to take up my pen and write an
essay on the philosopher, Franz Brentano, a dear friend of
mine who died some years ago. I have already written a good
deal about him, but I should much like to write yet another
essay, based on what I shall now relate.
When
Franz Brentano mounted the platform and took his place at
the lecturer's desk he was himself the embodiment of his
entire philosophy, the spiritual content of which called
forth such deep admiration when clothed in philosophical
terms and concepts.
Brentano's philosophy, in itself, was far more beautiful
than his own description of it. All that he could say in
words was revealed through the way in which he moved his
arms and hands while speaking, through the way in which he
held out the piece of paper containing the notes of his
lecture. It was a very remarkable type of movement, and its
most striking characteristic was, that by means of this
piece of paper, and, indeed, by his whole attitude, he gave
the impression of imparting something of great significance,
while at the same time preserving an appearance of
unconcern. So that in the course of one of his lectures one
could see his entire philosophy expressed in these gestures,
which were of the most manifold variety.
What is
especially interesting about Franz Brentano is the fact that
he founded a psychology in which he departs from the
theories of all other psychologists, Spencer, Stuart Mill
and others, by refusing to include the will among the
psychological categories. I am acquainted with all that
Franz Brentano brought forward to substantiate this theory
of his, but I found nothing so convincing as the way in
which he held his piece of paper. The instant he began to
make gestures with his hands and arms, all trace of will
disappeared from his whole bearing as a philosopher, while
feeling and idea revealed themselves in the most remarkable
manner. This preponderance of idea and feeling, and the
disappearance of will, underlay every movement which he made
with his hands. So that one day I shall really find myself
compelled to write an essay: The Philosophy of Franz
Brentano, as revealed through his Gesture and Bearing. For
it seems to me that much more was expressed in these
gestures than in any philosophical discourse on the subject.
Those
who enter deeply and without prejudice into this matter will
gradually realise that the breath which we expel from our
lungs, our organs of speech and song, when vocalised and
given form by means of the lips, teeth and palate, is really
nothing else than gesture in the air. Only in this case
these air-gestures are projected into space in such a way
that they conjure up sounds which can be heard by the ear.
If one
succeeds, with true sensible-supersensible vision, in
penetrating into the nature of these air gestures, into all
that the human being actually does when he utters a vowel or
consonant sound, when he forms sentences, uses rhyme and
rhythm, the Iambic, for instance, or the Trochee when one
penetrates into these gestures of the air, the thought
arises; alas, the languages of modern civilisation have
indeed made terrible concessions to convention. They have
become simply a means of expression for scientific
knowledge, a means of communicating the things of everyday
life. They have lost their primeval spirituality.
Civilised language bears out what has been so beautifully
expressed by the poet: Spricht die Seele, so spricht ach
schon die Seele nicht mehr. (Alas, when the soul speaks,
in reality it speaks no more.)
Now all
that can be perceived by supersensible vision, all that can
thus be learned about the nature of these forms and gestures
of the air, can be carried into movements of the arms and
hands, into movements of the whole human being. There then
arises in visible form the actual counterpart of speech. One
can use the entire human body in such a way that it really
carries out those movements which are otherwise carried out
by the organs connected with speech and music. Thus there
arises visible speech, visible music in other words, the
art of Eurythmy.
When one
brings artistic feeling to the study of the nature of
speech, one finds that the individual sounds form
themselves, as it were, into imaginative pictures. It is
necessary, however, entirely to free oneself from the
abstract character which language has taken during the
so-called advanced civilisation of the present day. For it
is an undeniable fact that modern man, when speaking, in no
way brings his whole human being into activity.
True
speech, however, is born from the whole human being. Let us
take any one of the vowels. A vowel sound is always the
expression of some aspect of the feeling life of the soul.
The human being wishes to express what lives in his soul as
wonder Ah. Or the holding himself upright against
opposition A; or the assertion of self, the consciousness
of ego-existence in the world E. Or again he wishes to
express wonder, but now with a more intimate, caressing
shade of feeling I.
The
character of the sounds is of course slightly different in
the different languages, because each individual language
proceeds from a differently constituted soul-life. But every
vowel sound does in its essence express some shade of the
feeling-life of the soul; and this feeling only has to unite
itself with thought, with the head system, in order to pass
over into speech.
What I
have said about the vowel sounds of speech can be applied
equally to the tones of music. The various sounds of speech,
the use of idiom, the construction of phrases and sentences
all these things are the expression of the feeling-life of
the soul.
In
singing also the soul life expresses itself through tone.
Let us
now consider the consonants. The consonants are the
imitation of what we find around us in external nature. The
vowel is born out of man's inmost being; it is the channel
through which this inner content of the soul streams
outwards. The consonant is born out of the comprehension of
external nature; the way in which we seize upon external
things, even the way in which we perceive them with the
eyes, all this is built into the form of the consonants. The
consonant represents, paints, as it were, the things of the
external world. In earlier times the consonants did actually
contain within themselves a kind of imaginative, painting of
what exists in external nature.
Such
things are, certainly, dealt with by many students of the
science of language, but always in a one-sided manner. For
instance, there exist two well-known theories with regard to
the origin of language the Ding-Dong theory and the
Bow-Wow theory which have been set forth by investigators
who are, as a matter of fact, absolutely lacking in any real
understanding of their subject, but belong to that type of
person who is constantly originating all sorts of scientific
theories. The Ding-Dong theory is based upon the assumption
that, as in the case of the bell to take an extreme
example so within every external object there lies some
sort of a sound, which is then imitated by the human being.
Everything is included in this theory of imitation; and it
has been named the Ding-Dong theory after the sound made by
the bell, which is perhaps its most striking example. The
idea is, that when one says the word wave, one is
imitating the actual movement of the waves which is,
indeed, perfectly true in this instance.
The
other theory, the Bow-Wow theory, which could equally well
be called the Moo-Moo theory, is one which assumes that
speech in the first place arose from the transformation and
development of the sounds of animals. And because one of the
most striking of these sounds is Bow-Wow, this theory has
been called the Bow-Wow theory.
Now all
these theories do actually contain a certain element of
truth. Scientific theories are never without some
foundation. What is remarkable about them is that they do
always contain say, a quarter, or an eighth, or a sixteenth,
or a hundredth part of the truth; and it is this fraction of
the truth, put forward as it is in a very clever and
suggestive manner which deceives people. The real truth is
that the vowel arises from the soul-life, and the consonant
out of the perception and imitation of the external object.
The human being imitates the external object through the way
in which he holds back the stream of the breath with his
lips, or gives it shape and form by means of the teeth,
tongue and palate. While the consonants are formed in this
way, by the fashioning of gestures in the air, the vowel
sounds are the channel through which the inner soul-life of
the human being streams outwards.
The
consonants give plastic form to what is to be expressed.
And in
the same way as the single sounds are formed, the single
letters, so are sentences also formed, and poetic language
becomes actual gesture in the air. Modern poetry, however,
shows very clearly how the poet has to struggle against the
abstract element in language.
As I
have already said, our soul-life does not in any way flow
into the words which we speak; we do not enter into the
sounds of speech with our inner being. How few of us really
experience wonder, amazement, perplexity, or the feeling of
self-defence simply in the vowel sounds themselves. How few
of us experience the soft, rounded surface of certain
objects, the thrusting hammering nature of others, their
angular or undulating, their velvety or prickly qualities,
as these are expressed by the different consonants. And yet
all these things are contained in speech.
If we
follow the successive sounds as they occur in a single word,
entering into the real nature of this word as it originally
arose out of the whole being of man, then we can experience
all possible shades of feeling, the ecstasy of joy, the
depths of despair; we can experience the ascending and
descending of the whole scale of the human emotions, the
whole scale of the perception of external things.
All that
I have been describing can be conjured up in imaginations,
in the same way as speech itself once came forth from the
world of imagination. One who has this imaginative vision
perceives how the E sound (as in me). always calls up in the
soul a certain picture, a picture which expresses the
assertion of self and shows how this self-assertion must be
expressed through the stretching of the muscles, in the arm
for example. Should anyone be able to use his nose in a
skilful manner, he could also make an E with his nose! An E
can also be shown by the direction of the glance of the eye;
but because the arms and hands are the most expressive part
of the human body, it is more natural to make an E with the
arms and it has a more beautiful effect. But the essential
thing is that the stretched, penetrating feeling should
really come to expression in E.
If we
utter the sound A, (as in mate) and take this
out-going stream of the breath as the prototype for the
Eurythmic movement, we find that this breath stream reveals
itself to our imagination as flowing in two crossed
currents. This is how the Eurythmic movement for A is
derived. All these movements are just as little arbitrary in
their nature as are the sounds of speech, or the tones of
music.
There
are many people who are inclined to say that they have no
wish for anything so hard and fast, that there should be
more ways than one of expressing any particular sound in
movement. They feel that the movements should arise quite
spontaneously out of the human being. If, however, one
desires such absolute spontaneity, one should carry this
desire into the realm of speech itself, and declare that
there should be no German, French, or English language to
interfere with the freedom of the human being, but that each
individual should feel himself at liberty to express himself
by means of other sounds if he should so choose. It would be
just as rational to say that the freedom of the human being
is hindered through the fact that he must perforce speak
English, or some other language.
But the
existence of the different languages in no way interferes
with human freedom. On the contrary, man could not express
beauty in language, if language were not already there to be
used by him as an instrument, and in the same way beauty can
only be expressed in the movements of Eurythmy through the
fact that Eurythmy actually exists. Eurythmy in no way
infringes upon human freedom. Such objections really arise
from lack of insight.
Thus
Eurythmy has come into being as a visible language, using as
its instrument the arms and hands, which are undeniably the
most expressive part of the whole human organism.
To-day
it would really be possible to come to an understanding of
these things by purely scientific means. Science, however,
although on the right path with regard to much of the
knowledge it has acquired, knows about as much of this
matter as someone with a veal cutlet on his plate knows
about a calf namely, the most insignificant fraction!
Scientists know that the centre of speech lies in the left
region of the brain, and that this is connected with what
the child acquires for himself by means of movement of the
right arm. In the case of left-handed people the centre of
speech is situated in the right side of the brain.
One
might almost say that the scientist has no knowledge of the
calf in its entirety, but is only acquainted with the veal
cutlet! Thus he is aware only of the merest fraction of the
whole connection between the life-processes in one or other
arm and the origin of speech.
The
truth is that speech itself arises out of those movements of
the human limb system which are held back, and do not come
to full expression. There could be no such thing as speech
were it not for the fact that, during the natural course of
his early development, the child has inherent within him the
instinct to move his arms and hands. These movements are
held back and become concentrated in the organs of speech;
and these organs of speech are in themselves an image of
that which seeks outlet in movements of the arms and hands,
and in the accompanying movements of the other limbs.
The
etheric body I can, after what you have heard in the
morning lectures, (published as The Evolution of
Consciousness.) speak to you quite freely about the
etheric body the etheric body never uses the mouth as the
vehicle of speech, but invariably makes use of the
limb-system. And it is those movements made by the etheric
body during speech which are transferred into the physical
body. Of course you can, if you choose, speak quite without
gesture, even going so far as to stand rigidly still with
your hands in your pockets; but in that case your etheric
body will gesticulate all the more vigorously, sheerly out
of protest!
Thus you
can see how, in very truth, Eurythmy is drawn out of the
human organisation in just as natural a way as speech
itself.
The poet
has to fight against the conventionality of speech in order
to be able to draw from speech that element which could make
of it a way leading to the supersensible worlds. Thus the
poet if he is a true artist, which cannot be said of most
of those people whose business it is to manufacture poems
does not over-emphasise the importance of the prose content
of the words he uses. This prose content only provides him
with the opportunity for expressing in words his true
artistic impulse. Just as his material the clay or the
marble is not the chief concern of the sculptor, but
rather the inspiration which he is striving to embody in
form, so, the chief concern of the poet is the embodiment of
his poetic inspiration in sounds which are imaginative,
plastic and musical.
And it
is this artistic element which must be brought out in
recitation and declamation.
In our
somewhat inartistic age, it is customary in recitation and
declamation to lay the chief stress on the prose content of
a poem. Indeed, in these days, the mere fact of being able
to speak at all is looked upon as sufficient ground for
becoming a reciter. But the art of recitation and
declamation should rank as highly as the other arts; for in
recitation and declamation there is the possibility of
treating speech in such a way that the hidden Eurythmy lying
within it, the imaginative, plastic, coloured use of words,
their music, rhythm and melody, are all brought to
expression. When Goethe was rehearsing his rhythmic dramas,
he made use of a baton just as if he were the conductor of
an orchestra; for he was not so much concerned with the
merely prosaic content of the words, but with the bringing
out of all that lay, like a hidden Eurythmy, in their
construction and use.
Schiller, when writing his most famous poems, paid little
heed to the actual sense of the words. For instance he
wrote, Das Lied von der Glocke (The Song of the Bell),
but, as far as the prose content of the words is concerned,
he might just as well have written a completely different
poem. Schiller first experienced in his soul something which
might be described as a vague musical motif, a sort of
melody, and into this melody he wove his words, like
threaded pearls.
Language
is truly poetic only in so far as it is used musically,
plastically, or only in so far as it is filled with colour.
Frau Dr.
Steiner has given many years to the development of this
special side of the art of recitation and declamation. It is
her work which has made it possible to bind together into
one artistic whole, much in the same way as the various
instruments of an orchestra, the picture presented on the
stage by the visible speech of Eurythmy and with what is
expressed through a truly Eurythmic treatment of speech, a
truly Eurythmic recitation and declamation. So that, on the
one hand, we have the visible speech of Eurythmy, and, on
the other hand, that hidden Eurythmy which lies, not in
tone-production alone, but in the whole way in which speech
and language are treated. As far as the artistic element of
poetry is concerned, the point is not that we say: The bird
sings, but that, paying due regard to what has gone before
and to what is to come, we say with enthusiasm, for
instance: The bird sings, or, again, in a more subdued
tone of voice, at a quite different tempo: The bird
sings.* Everything depends on giving due form and shape to
the words and sentences. And it is just this which can be
carried over into Eurythmy, into our whole conception and
treatment of Eurythmy.
For this
reason we must put before ourselves as an ideal this
orchestral ensemble, this interplay between the visible art
of Eurythmy and the art of recitation and declamation.
Eurythmy
cannot be accompanied by the ordinary conventional
recitation, which is so well liked to-day. It would be
impossible to do Eurythmy to such an accompaniment, because
it is the soul-qualities of the human being which must be
given expression here, both audibly through speech, and
visibly through Eurythmy.
Eurythmy
can be accompanied, not only by recitation and declamation,
but also by instrumental music. But here it must always be
borne in mind that Eurythmy is music translated into
movement, and is not dancing in any sense of the word. There
is a fundamental difference between Eurythmy and dancing.
People, however, often fail to make this distinction when
seeing Eurythmy on the stage, owing to the fact that
Eurythmy uses as its instrument the human body in motion. I
myself know of a journalist I am not personally acquainted
with him, but his articles have been brought to my notice
who, writing on Eurythmy, says: It cannot be denied that,
when one witnesses a demonstration of Eurythmy, the
performers on the stage are continually in motion. Eurythmy
must, therefore, be looked upon as dancing, and must be
judged accordingly. Now I think it will be admitted that
what we have seen here of Tone-Eurythmy, of this visible
singing, accompanied as it is by instrumental music, is
clearly to be distinguished from ordinary dancing.
Tone-Eurythmy is essentially not dancing, but is a singing
in movement, movement which can be carried out either by a
single performer, or by many together.
Although
the movements of the arms and hands may be accompanied and
amplified by movements of the other parts of the organism
the legs, for instance, or the head, the nose, ears, what
you will nevertheless these movements should only be used
to strengthen the movement of the hands and arms in much the
same way that we find means of emphasising and strengthening
the spoken word. If we wish to admonish a child we naturally
put our reproof into words, but at the same time we assume
an expression suitable to the occasion! To do this
electively, however, a certain amount of discretion is
required, or we run the risk of appearing ridiculous. It is
the same with regard to Eurythmy. Movements of a type
approaching dancing or mime, when they are added to the
essentially Eurythmic movements, are in danger of appearing
grotesque; and, if made use of in an exaggerated manner,
given an appearance of crudity, even of vulgarity. On the
other hand purely Eurythmic movements are the truest means
of giving outward and visible expression to all that is
contained in the human soul.
That is
the essential point that Eurythmy is visible speech,
visible music. One can go even further and maintain that the
movements of Eurythmy do actually proceed out of the inner
organisation of man. Anyone who says: As far as I am
concerned, speech and music are all-sufficient; there can
surely be no need to extend the sphere of art; I, for my
part, have not the slightest wish for Eurythmy; such a
man is, of course, perfectly right from his particular point
of view. There is always a certain justification for any
opinion, however conventional or pedantic. Why should one
not hold such opinions? There is certainly no reason why one
should not none at all; but it cannot be said that such a
standpoint shows any really deep artistic feeling and
understanding. A truly artistic nature welcomes everything
that could possibly serve to widen and enrich the whole
field of art.
The
materials used in sculpture the bronze, clay and marble
already exist in nature, and yield themselves up to the
sculptor as the medium of his artistic expression; this is
also true of colour in the case of the painter. When,
however, in addition to all this, the movements of Eurythmy,
drawn forth as they have been from the very fount of nature
and developed according to her laws when such movements
arise as a means of artistic expression, then enthusiasm
burns in the soul of the true artist at the prospect of the
whole sphere of art being thus widened and enriched.
From a
study of the Eurythmy models or wooden figures, very much
can be learned about the individual movements.** Here it is
only possible to give some indication of what underlies
these wooden figures, and of all that can be revealed by
them with regard to the nature and character of the various
movements. These models are
* The
reader must imagine the difference of tone which Rudolf
Steiner gave to these repetitions of Der Vogel vingt.
**
Rudolf Steiner here refers to a series of coloured wooden
figures illustrating the fundamental Eurythmy gestures.
intended
to represent the fundamental laws of Eurythmy which are
carried over into the actual movements themselves. Every
Eurythmic movement may be looked upon as being of a
threefold nature; and it is this threefold aspect which is
embodied in the models. In the first place there is the
movement as such; then there is the feeling which lies
within the movement; and lastly there is the character which
flows out of the soul-life, and streams into the movement.
It must,
however, be understood that these wooden models have been
designed in a quite unusual manner. They are in no way
intended to be plastic representations of the human form.
This comes more within the sphere of the sculptor and the
painter. The models are intended to portray the laws of
Eurythmy, as these are expressed through the human body. In
designing them the point was not in any way to reproduce the
human figure in beautiful, plastic form. And, in witnessing
a Eurythmy demonstration, anyone who would regard beauty of
face as an essential attribute of an Eurythmist, is
labouring under a delusion as to the nature of Eurythmy.
Whether the Eurythmist is beautiful or not beautiful, young
or old, is a matter of no consequence. The whole point is
whether the inmost nature of the Eurythmist is carried over
into, and expressed through, the plastic form of the
movements.
Now if
we look at the Eurythmy model for H, for instance, the
question might naturally arise: In what direction is the
face turned? Do the eyes look upwards or straight ahead?
But that is not the first thing to be considered. In the
first place we have, embodied in the model as a whole, the
movement as such, that is to say, the arm movements or the
movements of the legs. Secondly, in the draping of the veil,
in the way the veil is held, drawn close to the body, or
thrown into the air, or allowed to fall again or to fly out
in waves all this gives the opportunity for adding to the
more intellectual expression of the soul-life, as this is
shown through the movement, another quality of the
soul-life, that of feeling.
At the
back of the models there is always an indication of what the
different colours are intended to represent. In the case of
all the models certain places are marked with a third colour,
and this is intended to show where the Eurythmist, in
carrying out the particular movement, should feel a definite
tension of the muscles. This tension can be shown in any
part of the body. It may have to be felt in the forehead,
for instance, or in the nape of the neck, while in other
places the muscles should be left in a state of complete
relaxation. The Eurythmist experiences the movements quite
differently according to whether they are carried out with
relaxed muscles or with the muscles in a state of tension;
whether the arm is stretched out more or less passively, or
whether there is a conscious tension in the muscles of the
arm and hand; whether, when bending, the muscles which are
brought into play are stretched and tense, or whether the
bending movement leaves the muscles comparatively inactive.
Through this consciously experienced tension of the muscles,
character is brought into the movement.
In other
words: there lies in the whole way in which the movement, as
such, is formed, something which might be described as being
the expression of the human soul, as manifested through
visible speech. The actual spoken words, however, also have
nuances of their own, their own special shades of feeling;
for instance, fear may be expressed in a sentence, or joy,
or delight; all these things can be shown by the Eurythmist
in the way in which he or she carries out the movements. The
manipulation of the veil the way in which it floats, the
way in which it is allowed to fall all this provides a
means whereby these feelings can be brought to expression in
Eurythmy. So we see how the movement, when accompanied by
the use of the veil, becomes permeated with feeling, and
how, when there is added a conscious tension of the muscles,
the movement acquires character as well as feeling. If the
Eurythmist is able to experience this tension or relaxation
of the muscles in the right way, a corresponding experience
will be transmitted to the onlooker, who will himself feel
all that lies in the visible speech of Eurythmy as
character, feeling and movement.
The
whole artistic conception of these models, both as regards
their carving and their colouring, is based on the idea of
separating the purely Eurythmic element in the human being
from those elements which are not so definitely connected
with Eurythmy. The moment a Eurythmist becomes conscious of
possessing a charming face, in that moment something is
introduced into Eurythmy which is completely foreign to its
nature; on the other hand, the knowledge of how to make
conscious use of the muscles of the face does form an
essential part of Eurythmy. For this reason, the fact that
many people prefer to see a beautiful Eurythmist on the
stage, rather than one who is less beautiful, shows a lack
of true artistic judgment. The outward appearance of a human
being when not engaged in Eurythmy should not in any way be
taken into consideration.
These
models, then, have been designed in such a way that they
portray the human being only in so far as he reveals himself
through the movements of Eurythmy.
It would
indeed be well if, in the whole development of art, this
principle were to be more generally adopted I mean the
principle of putting on one side everything which does not
definitely belong to the sphere of the art in question,
everything which cannot be expressed through the medium of
this art and which does not strictly come within the range
of its possibilities. A distinction should always be made,
particularly when dealing with an art such as Eurythmy,
which reveals so directly, so truly and so sincerely, the
life of the human being in its threefold aspect of body,
soul and spirit a distinction should always be made
between what can legitimately be revealed through the medium
of any particular art and what does not lie within its true
scope.
Whenever
I have been asked: Up to what age can one do Eurythmy?
my answer has always been: There is no age limit. Eurythmy
can be started at the age of three and can be continued up
to the age of ninety. The personality can find expression
through Eurythmy at each and every period of life, and
through Eurythmy the beauty of both youth and age can be
revealed.
All that
I have said up to this point has reference to Eurythmy
purely as an art, and, indeed, it was along purely artistic
lines that Eurythmy was developed in the first instance.
When Eurythmy was inaugurated in 1912 there was no thought
of its developing along any but artistic lines, no thought
of bringing it before the world in any other form.
But some
little time after the founding of the Waldorf School, it was
discovered that Eurythmy can serve as a very important means
of education; and we are now in a position to recognise the
full significance of Eurythmy from the educational point of
view. In the Waldorf School, (The original Waldorf School in
Stuttgart of which Steiner was educational director.)
Eurythmy has been made a compulsory subject both for boys
and girls, right through the school, from the lowest to the
highest class; and it has become apparent that what is thus
brought to the children as visible speech and music is
accepted and absorbed by them in just as natural a way as
they absorb spoken language or song in their very early
years. The child feels his way quite naturally into the
movements of Eurythmy. And, indeed, in comparison with
Eurythmy, the other forms of gymnastics have shown
themselves to be of a somewhat one-sided nature. For these
other kinds of gymnastics bear within them to some extent
the materialistic attitude of mind so prevalent in our day.
And for this reason they take as their starting point the
physical body. Eurythmy takes the physical body into
consideration also; but, in the case of Eurythmy, body, soul
and spirit work harmoniously together, so that here one has
to do with an ensouled and spiritualised form of gymnastics.
The child feels this. He feels that each movement that he
makes does not arise merely in response to a physical
necessity, but that every one of his movements is permeated
with a soul and spiritual element, which streams through the
arms, and, indeed, through the whole body. The child absorbs
Eurythmy into the very depths of his being. The Waldorf
School has already been in existence for some years, and the
experience lying behind us justified us in saying that in
this school unusual attention is paid to the cultivation of
initiative, of will qualities sorely needed by humanity in
the present day. This initiative of the will is developed
quite remarkably through Eurythmy, when, as in the Waldorf
School, it is used as a means of education. One thing,
however, must be made perfectly clear, and that is, that the
greatest possible misunderstanding would arise, if for one
moment it were to be imagined that Eurythmy could be taught
in the schools and looked upon as a valuable asset in
education, if, at the same time, as an art it were to be
neglected and underestimated. Eurythmy must in the first
place be looked upon as an art, and in this it differs in no
respect from the other arts. And in the same way that the
other arts are taught in the schools, but have an
independent artistic existence of their own in the world, so
Eurythmy also can only be taught in the schools when it is
fully recognised as an art and given its proper place within
our modern civilisation.
Shortly
after the founding of the Waldorf School, a number of
doctors having found their way into the Anthroposophical
Movement, there arose the practice of medicine from the
Anthroposophical point of view. These doctors expressed the
urgent wish that the movements of Eurythmy, drawn as they
are out of the healthy nature of the human being, and
offering to the human being a means of expression suited to
his whole organisation that these movements should be
adapted where necessary, and placed at the service of the
art of healing. Eurythmy, from its very nature, is ever
seeking for outlet through the human being. Anyone who
understands the hand, for example, must be aware that it was
not formed merely to lie still and be looked upon. The
fingers are quite meaningless when they are inactive. They
only acquire significance when they seize at things, grasp
them, when their passivity is transformed into movement.
Their very form reveals the movement inherent within them.
The same may be said of the human being as a whole. What we
know under the name of Eurythmy is nothing else than the
means whereby the human organism can find healthy outlet
through movement. So that certain of the movements of
Eurythmy, though naturally differing somewhat from the
movements which we use in Eurythmy as an art, and having
undergone a certain metamorphosis, can be made use of and
developed into a Curative Eurythmy. This Curative Eurythmy
can be of extreme value in the treatment of illness, and can
be applied in those cases where one knows the way in which a
certain movement will react upon a certain organ with
beneficial results.
In this
domain also we have had good results among the children of
the Waldorf School. But it is of course necessary that one
should possess a true insight into the nature of the child.
For instance, a child may have certain weaknesses and be
generally in a delicate state of health. Such a child is
then given those particular movements likely to assist in
the re-establishment of his health. And along these lines we
have indeed had the most brilliant results. But this, as
also the educational side of Eurythmy, is entirely dependent
on the successful development of Eurythmy as an art.
It must
frankly be admitted that Eurythmy is still at a very early
stage of its development; a beginning, however, has
certainly been made, and we are striving to make it ever
more and more perfect. There was a time, for instance, when
we had not as yet introduced the silent, unaccompanied
movement of the Eurythmist at the beginning and end of a
poem. Such movement is intended to convey in the first
instance an introductory impression, and, in the second, an
impression reminiscent of the content of the poem. At that
time also there were no effects of light. The lighting in
varied tones and colours has not been introduced with a view
to illustrating or intensifying any particular situation,
but is in itself actually of a Eurythmic nature. The point
is not that certain effects of light should correspond with
what is taking place on the stage at a given moment, but the
whole system of lighting, as this has been developed in
Eurythmy, consists of the interplay between one lighting
effect and another. Thus there arises a complete system of
Eurythmic lighting which bears within it the same character
and the same shades of feeling as are being simultaneously
expressed on the stage in another way through the movements
of the Eurythmists, or the Eurythmist, as the case may be.
And so,
as Eurythmy develops and attains to ever greater perfection,
very much more will have to be added to the whole picture of
Eurythmy as this is presented on the stage, very much will
have to be added to all that we can now see when witnessing
a Eurythmy demonstration.
I could
indeed speak about Eurythmy the whole night through,
carrying on this lecture without a break into the lecture of
to-morrow morning. I am afraid, however, that my audience
would hardly benefit by such a proceeding, and the same
certainly applies to any Eurythmists who may be present! The
great thing is that all I have said to-day in this
introductory lecture will be practically realised for you
to-morrow, when you witness the performance; for a practical
demonstration is, after all, where art is concerned, of more
value than any lecture.
|
|