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Blackboard Drawings 1919-1924

Rudolf Steiner, Johanna Collis
Barcode 9781855841529
Paperback

Original price £44.51 - Original price £44.51
Original price
£44.51
£44.51 - £44.51
Current price £44.51

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Release Date: 20/10/2023

Genre: Philosophy & Spirituality
Sub-Genre: Religion
Translator: Johanna Collis
Label: Rudolf Steiner Press
Contributors: Johanna Collis (Translated by)
Language: German
Publisher: Rudolf Steiner Press

The trustees of Steiner’s estate in Dornach, Switzerland, possess over 1,000 of the drawings, which visually document Steiner’s view of the world and his creative way of thinking. A selection of the drawings was first shown to a wider public in 1992. Since then, numerous exhibitions have generated great interest in Rudolf Steiner’s work.
‘Did Rudolf Steiner dream these things? Did he dream them as they once occurred, at the beginning of all time? They are, for sure, far more astonishing than the demiurges and serpents and bulls found in other cosmogonies.’ – Jorge Luis Borges.Rudolf Steiner, founder of anthroposophy, recorded his view of the world in many books, but also in over 5,000 lectures. Through the latter medium particularly, he explained his ideas on a wide range of subjects, including education, science, the social question, art, architecture, medicine and agriculture.Steiner spoke freely, using only minimal notes. But when explaining conceptually difficult subject matter, he frequently resorted to illustrating what he was saying with coloured chalks on a large blackboard. After the lecture the drawings were rubbed out and thus irretrievably lost – but not in every case. From the autumn of 1919, thick black paper was used to cover the blackboards, so that the drawings could be rolled up and stored.The trustees of Rudolf Steiner’s estate in Dornach, Switzerland, possess over 1,000 of these drawings, which visually document Steiner’s view of the world and his creative way of thinking. A selection of the drawings was first shown to a wider public in 1992. Since then, numerous exhibitions in Europe, America and Japan have generated great interest in Rudolf Steiner’s work.