27 January 2026

Emp Rudolf, Prague: arts, science, palace

Rudolf II (1552-1612) was born in Vienna to Maximilian II and Maria of Austria, grandson of Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I. Part of the Habsburg dynasty, they ruled a union of Austria, Germany, Hungary, Croatia & Czech Republic (1483-1806). At 11 Rudolf was separated from his big family and sent to his uncle Philip II’s Spanish court, where he lived a lonely 8 years with stern tutors. He returned from Madrid as a lonely young man.

Old Royal Palace within Prague Castle, started C12th 
additions by Rudolf II
Living Prague

The eldest surviving son of Emperor Maximilian II and Maria, who was herself the daughter of the Emperor Charles V, Rudolf was crowned King of Hungary in 1572 and of Bohemia in 1575 as Rudolf II. He succeeded his father as Emperor in 1576.

The new Holy Roman Emperor moved the Habsburg capital from Vienna to Prague in 1583, settling in the centre of his mighty Empire. The Habsburgs had traditionally favoured Vienna, but the Ottoman Empire had invaded Hungary decades before; thus the Habsburgs had fought lengthy land wars on their border since. Prague Castle put Rudolf safely distant from Turkish army’s advance.

Prague was a key centre in continental Europe, a land-locked city with Baltic Sea 500 km north and Adriatic Sea 600 km south. It was a busy urban centre comparable in size & culture to Amsterdam and located at the cross-roads linking Vienna, Krakow, Nuremberg, Augsburg and Munich.

The court-centred city flourished, split into 4 administrative areas: Old Town, New Town, Lesser Town and Castle. Between Old Town and the river to the north was the gated Jewish town, with its inhabitants locked in each night. Accounts of Prague burghers & merchants revealed that wealthy families owned items that extended to distant lands. Luxury items flowed.

Collecting was a Habsburg family passion. Rudolf’s grandfather liked Roman coins and dad Maximilian loved antique statues. So the imperial seat became a lavish court where Rudolf became a very royal collector. Lions, parrots, Turkish armour and exotic stones from Sth America and the Far East poured into Rudolf’s collections. His court attracted diplomats, artists, artisans and scientists seeking the Emperor’s patronage contributed to Prague’s dynamic cultural richness for 30+ years.

Rudolf devoted his life to accumulating the greatest collection of the arts in all of Renaissance Europe. He owned works by Leonardo da Vinci, Paolo Veronese, Pieter Brughel Elder, Titian and Hieronymus Bosch, as well as sculptures by Adriaen de VriesAnd he amassed vast treasures as patron of Mannerists, e.g., Hans von Aachen, Bartholomeus Spranger, and Giuseppe Arcimboldo.

Durer, Feast of the Rosary, 1506, 162 x 192 cm,
National Gallery Prague
Wiki

All these works seduced Rudolf who was helpless under their spell. German artist Albrecht Dürer had produced The Feast of the Rosary (1506), an image of the Virgin and Child surrounded by high-status believers including a pope and some kings. In early C17th this was a Venice altarpiece of the German Church. For a century, the city’s transient German merchants had prayed before it, hoping for prosperity at Venice’s many marketplaces. Rudolf had a huge appetite for art and his frantic notes commanded a European network of ambassadors and dealers who serviced his obsession, buying treasures on his behalf. Now Rudolf pestered the German community ceaselessly, sending his men to meet the church’s clergy for haggling. The congregation wouldn’t part with it but in 1606 they relented. In the building’s dim medieval interior, the painting was extricated and wrapped in carpets. He paid 9 times the original price for The Rosary, a fantastic sum! Flemish artist Bartholomeus Spranger accompanied The Rosary on its trip; the strongmen who were ordered to carry The Rosary from Venice to Prague had to haul it over the Alps by hand, working in a relay to carry it over. Mud and snow made the journey gruelling, so when the Rosary finally arrived in Prague, Rudolf sent everyone out to relish it alone.

Inventories from 1600 showed exquisite items eg seashells mounted in silver. Crammed into cabinets were trinkets made out of mother-of-pearl and coral, engraved brass plates, clocks, headpieces, helmets, maths instruments and the skins of thoroughbred Indian horses. Other key objects included a phial of the earth from which God created Adam; nails from Noah’s ark; and stuffed exotic animals. 

Jost Bürgi, mathematician, astronomer and clockmaker,
had his own clock workshop at Prague Castle.
World of the Habsburgs

Rudolf started major Renaissance additions to Prague Castle, new palace wings and the Mathematical Tower for his treasures. Each acquisition needed space so Rudolf modified his castle to make room for his growing number of objects. He built halls for his pictures and sculptures, and smaller rooms for jewels, books & animals. The Kunstkammer-cabinet of curiosities sat in a corridor. And next to his bedchamber were his favourite objects. Rudolf believed his religious possessions shielded him from harm, using his treasures for protective rituals. When Rudolf felt under threat from his enemies, he collected his Holy Grail (an agate bowl that collected Christ’s blood whilst on the cross)!

Cellini Salt Cellar
Reddit

Commissioned by French Francis I, the Cellini Salt Cellar was gifted in 1570 to Rudolf II's uncle Archduke Ferdinand of Tyrol. Then it featured in Rudolf II’s Kunstkammer. The salt cellar was an enamelled gold table sculpture by Benvenuto Cellini,  portraying Land, Tellus and Sea, Neptune. It was to promote conversation among intellectuals on the object's meaning. Today it is kept at Kunsthistor-isches Museum in Vienna, one of the world's most famous works of gold-smithing. Mounted on an ebony base, it features the mythological figures of Neptune and Demeter, flanked by a small temple and a shell to hold pepper and salt. Worth $US55-$65 million now.

His ambitious collection would be encyclopaedic! The Kunstkammer was organised into themes: Naturalia: natural history, zoology, botany, mineralogy; Scientifica: clocks, watches, globes; Artificialia: coins & prints. Knowledge was constantly evolving; scholarship was never complete.

Rudolf’s accumulation of objects did not isolate him. He allowed trusted scholars, scientists and alchemists into his flats to admire his objects. By studying his range of curiosities unmatched in size, diversity and variety, some of Rudolf’s circle made key discoveries. See his loved court astronomers; Tycho Brahe used Rudolf’s mathematical instruments to track Mars’ orbit. Later Johannes Kepler used these results for his laws of planetary motion, proving planets move in elliptical orbits around the Sun.

Rudolf may well have suffered from schizophrenia; his young brother Archduke Matthias and his army prepared to take over in 1611 and did, once Rudolf died in 1612. Some of the court’s wealth was transferred back to Vienna, which quickly became the settled Habsburg seat of power. The religious, dynastic and territorial issues that Rudolf left unaddressed during his reign led to the outbreak of 30 Years’ War (1618).

Prague Castle Art Gallery
Living Prague

Rudolf II changed Prague into a vibrant Renaissance hub in 1583-1612, but then Europe fell into one of the most destructive conflicts ever. When a Swedish army invaded Prague in 1648, soldiers pillaged 69 bronze statues, 470 paintings, 179 ivory objects and 600 agate & crystal goblets, and substantial war booty. Many precious items from Rudolf’s collections are still in Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. But many items stayed in Prague Castle. Some were pillaged by the Swedish Army stationed in Prague after 30 Years’ War ended in 1648, and ended up in Swedish collections.

Imperial crown made in Prague by Jan Vermeyen for Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, 1602
Hofburg Palace in Vienna
Wiki




24 January 2026

Elmer Bernstein: #1 film music composer?

Elmer Bernstein (1922-2004) was born in New York, son of a Jewish dad who was a high-school music teacher in the Austrian Empire and mum was Jewish Ukrainian. He was educated at the Walden School NY and at New York Uni. He then went to Juilliard School of Music due to America's C20th great composer, Aaron Copland, wanting his protege Bernstein to go there. Elmer was no relative of Leonard Bernstein (1918-90), but they were friends & colleagues.

Elmer Bernstein Collection, 2010,
Amazon

Yet it was as a dancer that Bernstein began his working life, doubling as a concert pianist when the opportunities arose. At the same time he tried to earn a living as a painter and was also a small-time actor.

In WW2 he served in the U.S Army Air Force with Major Glenn Miller, arranging for Miller's famous Army Air Force Band and composing scores for military radio broadcasts. Luckily this led to the first serious compositions of his career.

In 1950 he began writing film music, and in 1952, he was demonstrating the drama and originality that later marked his works. These early works had included scores for new, growing United Nations radio programmes, tv and industrial documentaries. In Hollywood his first film was Saturday's Hero (1951), a university football film. After completing his film assignments, the composer became another in a long list of liberal professionals who Senator Joseph McCarthy saw a threat to the American way of life due to alleged Communist leanings. It was the time of the Red Scare and Bernstein's important thinking threatened his career activities in the mid 1950s. His scores then were for largely unremarkable films, and only one tv series was famous: Gunsmoke (1955)!

But he re-established his reputation with the very jazzy score for The Man with the Golden Arm (1955). The Frank Sinatra movie came that year as the rather less notable The View From Pompey's Head (1955), yet that film was just as significant in Elmer’s career. And he proved his versatility with his stir-ring music for The Ten Commandments (1956), one of the films where the music was more thrilling than the action. The album was an outstanding success, and his favourite project ever. Bernstein’s other notable scores included those for the Tony Curtis classic Sweet Smell of Success (1957) with Burt Lancaster, Some Came Running (1958) and Walk on the Wild Side (1962). The 1962-3 period was particularly notable and appropriately, in 1963-9 Bernstein worked as vice president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences.

The composer created these scores during a career that produced some of Hollywood’s most memorable film music. His original scores for films ranged over a wide variety of styles, with jazz, light musical comedies and especially westerns. He had such skill for the Western genre that over 15 years he wrote 6 scores starring John Wayne eg True Grit (1969) and The Shootist (1976).

violinist Isaac Stern, conductor Henri Temianka, composer Johnny Green 
with Elmer Bernstein, 1980

Bernstein adapted the style of his music to mirror the action of each particular film, and his scores were often seen as more notable than the films themselves. His works were viewed by many critics as great examples of contemporary music which was why Hollywood nominated him for an Oscar 14 times!! Yet he won only one Oscar for the sound-track score of Julie Andrews film Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967). Nominations included the scores for Sinatra’s film The Man With The Golden Arm (1955), Summer and Smoke (1961), the film of Harper Lee's novel To Kill A Mockingbird (1966), Hawaii (1966) and Return of the Seven (1966). That the 12 months included not just To Kill a Mockingbird, but also Hud (1963) starring Paul Newman, the film that consolidated Steve McQueen's stardom.

The Chosen (1981), which could have become as a concert work, blended into the music style of the Hassidic tradition, presumably for Bernstein’s Brooklyn audience’s sake. Elmer's score was matched by great performances by Robby Benson, Barry Miller, Maximillian Schell and Rod Steiger.

I didn’t know the scores Bernstein wrote for two Broadway musicals, How Now, Dow Jones 1967 and Merlin (1983). Nor did I know his later films including Cape Fear (1991), The Grifters (1990) and Devil in a Blue Dress (1995). Readers should be able to check these out, if interested.

Bernstein was married twice, first to Pearl Glusman 1965, then to Eve Adamson; there were 4 children and 5 grandchildren. Elmer's son Peter Bernstein wrote Elmer Bernstein, Film Composer, revealing dad’s life from an intimate, behind-the-scenes perspective. Elmer had the drive needed to succeed in the very competitive Hollywood industry. In a busy career in 54 years, his many landmark scores were recognisable and loved everywhere.

He composed works for symphony orchestras, scores for tv programmes and the documentary The Making of the President 1960 won an Emmy Award. In 1974 he published Elmer Bernstein Film Music Collection, Animal House in 1978, Airplane! in 1980, box-office smash Ghostbusters 1984 and My Left Foot 1989.

Later in life, Elmer gained cult status among British football fans when his familiar old theme for The Great Escape (1963) was adopted by them and shared at matches. It became a symbol of unity and defiance, for me as well as for the soccer fans. Having written the scores for 200+ films, Elmer Bernstein was one of Hollywood's most prolific composers. He was also one of the small group of outstanding musicians who devoted their careers to the cinema. His roster included some of the most memorable film themes ever written, particularly scores for The Magnificent Seven (1960) and The Great Escape. Both have been reworked into concert suites. He passed in 2004 at 82.

Some movie scores that Bernstein wrote
hamlette

The American Film Industry ranked Elmer Bernstein's score for The Magnificent Seven (1960) as the 8th greatest US film score and To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) as the 17th greatest US score for all time.





20 January 2026

Boyd art dynasty of women - Shoalhaven

The Boyd art dynasty began with the marriage of Emma Minnie à Beckett & Arthur Merric Boyd in 1886. Both were already noted painters before their marriage. Their son Merric Boyd married artist Doris Gough in 1915 and their 5 children became artists: Lucy, Arthur, Guy, David, Mary

Arthur Boyd, Sleeping Bride, 1957
Queensland Art Gallery

Bundanon, the historic, handsome stone homestead 1866 on the Shoalhaven River is near Nowra on NSW’s south coast. It was sold by the Mackenzies to art dealer Frank McDonald. In 1971 McDonald invited Arthur & Yvonne Boyd to visit Bundanon where the couple fell in love with the area. Arthur and Yvonne Boyd’s deep connection to Bundanon shaped its legacy as a place of artistic inspiration. They purchased the property, making it home. Arthur’s studio offered a look at his artistic process, surrounded by the Shoalhaven landscape that clearly influenced his work. Their generosity ensured Bundanon would continue to inspire future generations, showcasing the Boyd family’s life and art, an Australia cultural landmark.

Bundanon, Shoalhaven

Arthur Boyd (1920–99) was dominant in Australian art history. He painted religious figures in the Australian landscape and white gums on the Shoalhaven River. While he was clearly one of Australia's most famous artists, his legacy runs beyond his work. In 1993, Arthur and Yvonne gave their 1000 hectares of bush and parkland to the public. They formed the Bundanon Trust in 1993 and Arthur's precious $43m collection was housed in new gallery.

Today it hosts his historic homestead, studio and art gallery including a collection of 1,200+ works by Arthur, his family and other artists, including Sidney Nolan and Brett Whiteley. The new exhibition tells Arthur’s story, the women in his family who encouraged him to become an artist and were artists themselves, as well as the generations of Boyd women artists. This survey of five generations of women artists is The Hidden Line: Art of the Boyd Women, open now at Bundanon Art Museum until mid Feb 2026.

A jug by Doris Boyd née Gough, Arthur's mother, was the first she ever made in 1915, at the Melbourne studio workshop shared with her husband, William Merric Boyd. See her painting style really translated from painting to ceramic, gesturing to watercolour and oil works by Doris that hang on the gallery wall. Often Doris worked with Merric on related pots: Merric made them from clay while she painted them, and then the couple took them to sell. To distinguish between ceramics painted by Merric or Doris, look for a Boyd blue or a Merric crazy handle. It drew attention to how Doris influenced and cultivated her son Arthur as a painter. She really helped him to be an artist; he thanked mum for her mentoring, care and financial support.

Emma Minnie Boyd née a' Beckett, Arthur's grandmother, was an artist who often painted watercolour landscapes. Supported by her mother, she also painted narrative and religious paintings, in watercolour and oil, and exhibited in London's Royal Academy. But the thrills from this c1914 watercolour demonstrated the experimentation and forward-thinking of the Boyd women. It had what she described as delicacy of colour and was packed with tiny details, like an abstract. This would be her working out something, almost privately. It was a study of how to look and see; to use watercolour and look at the landscape painted en plein air.

Yet "female" Emma Boyd wasn't allowed to join the Box Hill artists, including Tom Roberts and Arthur Streeton, as they camped on outer Melbourne from the mid-1880s, painting rural landscapes. We think of en plein air painting as a European tradition, but it was the most obvious thing to do in Australia. The weather was good enough to sit outside, but also to show who Australians were. Exactly how the family all painted the works!

Melbourne Tram by Yvonne Boyd, 1944
Bundanon

Yvonne nee Lennie Boyd painted Melbourne Tram in 1944, the year before she married Arthur. They had met in drawing class 4 years earlier and later, Yvonne became Arthur's business manager and had their 3 children. In 1944 Yvonne was part of the tradition of Australian artists, including Albert Tucker, Sidney Nolan and Charles Blackman who used their art to illustrate the impact of the war. But rather than painting returned soldiers like Arthur did, Yvonne depicted the effect of the war on the people at home in Australia: immediate and domestic. 

Tessa Perceval (1947-), daughter of John Perceval & Mary Boyd, painted professionally since 1965 and was also included in the display. Celia Perceval (1949-) also developed her inspiration for art from her Perceval parents and their close artistic circle, including the Boyds and Nolans. In a lifestyle of en plein air painting, Celia focused upon the coastal bushlands of Australia. Heavily textured with exuberant colours, she showed harsh Australian wilderness with a dense, expressive brush.

Celia Perceval, River Gums, 1980
askART

The last descendant discussed here is Hermia née Lloyd-Jones (1931–2000), who married David Boyd in 1948, was an artist, writer and a Boyd dynasty member. Hermia was an Australian artist and writer worked together with David in Italy, England and France, before closing their last pottery workshop outside Melbourne in 1968. Then they focused instead on their individual practices: Hermia on etching and sculpture; David on painting.

Lucy Boyd Beck
Orpheus & Euridice, c1975
Bundanon Collection




17 January 2026

lyrical Russian artist: Isaac Levitan

Lithuanian Isaac Ilyich Levitan (1860-1900) was born in Kovensky Province, into a poor but well-educated Jewish family. His fat­her was a rabbi and foreign language teacher, but financ­ially struggled to support his wife and four children. Thank you to Tretyakov Gallery Magazine for a series of excellent essays.

 Tsar Al­exander III (reigned 1881–1894) strengthened the Pale of Settlement Laws and en­sured the removal of all Jewish people living in large cities in Russia, especially Moscow, St Peters­burg and Kiev. Clearly life for many Russian Jews in the late 1800s was miserable, including for the Levitans. So the family wanted to move to Moscow… but Moscow was not within the Pale!!

Autumn Day Sokolniki 1879
Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

Still, Isaac and his brother’s artistic interests were en­cour­ag­ed and both boys enrolled in Moscow’s School of Painting, Sculp­ture and Archit­ecture - Adolf in 1871 and Isaac in 1873. Sadly the children lost mum in 1875 and dad in 1877. Isaac was left penniless and homeless, sleeping either with relatives or in the Moscow Art School’s classrooms. Fortunately the School waived the rest of his tuit­ion fees.

His best teacher took him on as an apprent­ice, to provide monetary aid. Alexei Savrasov (1830–1897) was a patient teacher who headed the Landscape Dept at the Moscow School of Painting. He was also arguably the most expressive of the Russian landscape painters of the later C19th.

Another inspiration was Savrasov’s suc­cess­or Vasily Polen­ov (1844-1927), whose serene lyrical land­scapes rubbed off on the young Levitan. During his ten years at the Art School, Lev­itan was a regular visitor at Polenov’s country house. There he drew, painted and developed warm friendships.

Golden Autumn Slobodka, 1889
State Russian Museum, St Petersburg

Other key influences on Levitan’s style included the Rus­sian teacher Vasily Perov (1834–82), French painters of the Bar­b­­izon school of landscape painting, and poetic classical real­ist Camille Corot (1796-1875).  Examine eg Autumn Day Sokolniki 1879 where a woman was walking care­free in the country side near Moscow. Levitan’s attitude towards nature was akin to the works of Anton Chekhov, who had become his friend. Autumn Day Sokolniki, painted at 19, was bought by famous philanthropist-art coll­ector Pavel Tretyakov.

Autumn Landscape with Church, 1890
State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg

One of Levitan’s pastels featured beautiful autumn yellows against a dull backdrop of greys and other weak colours. The Autumn Landscape, painted in 1890, showed the church in the background. It was bought by Pavel Tretyakov.

Of course Levitan’s passion for poetry and music were very important. Plus throughout his short life he was prone to depression. Out of these complex ex­periences, Levit­an’s "mood landscapes" took on a poetic and em­otional quality. 

Levitan first showed his work at an exhibition with Moscow’s Itinerant Wanderers, re­ceiving his first recognit­ion from the press. By 1884 the Wander­ers had offered Levitan full membership in their group, so he could exhibit regularly.

Even though Savrasov was fired as a lecturer due to his alcoh­ol­ism, Levitan continued to seek his advice. In 1883, Levitan was ready to graduate and expected to receive a first-class hon­our for one of his best landscape paintings. The diploma did not come but later Levitan began teaching landscape painting at the Moscow School of Painting.
 
Evening Church Bells 1892
Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

In the mid 1880s Levitan’s finances improved. One of the best landscape artists among the progressive Itinerant Wand­erers, his main contribution to Russian art was atmos­pheric landscape, mastering colour and shade. Although the depiction of light was crucial to his com­pos­itions, Levitan was a realist rather than an Impress­ion­ist. 

Pastoral landscapes, human-free, were ch­aracteristic of his work. Though his late work displayed Impress­ionist elements, his palette was generally muted and Savrasovian. For examples of his landscapes, see Secluded Monastery 1890. The Road to Vladimir 1892 was a rare example of social hist­or­ical landscape and see evocative works like Evening Church Bells 1892, Golden Autumn 1895, Spring Flood 1897 and the small painting Reindeer 1895. All were bought by Pavel Tretyakov and are in the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, a treasury of Russian fine art.

Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow, 
GW2RU

Levit­an was interested in the writings of the new intellectual lumin­ar­ies, writing to Sergei Diaghilev that he lay for days in a forest and read pessimistic German philosopher Schopen­hauer. So we might have expected a hushed, almost melanch­olic reverie. Above the Eternal Peace 1894 showed the artist’s meditations about the transience of human being. Levit­an painted the infamous road, along which convicts were marched to Siberia.

Above Eternal Peace 1894
Tret­yakov Gal­lery


Levitan was an active participant in artistic life; he taught at the Moscow School of Painting, where had trained, was actively involved the Moscow Club of Lit­er­ature and Art, and exhibited regularly with the Munich Secession (1892).

Isaac Levitan’s career lasted for c20 years only, but within this short time he created more than other Rus­sian landscape painters. Levitan’s most famous late 1890s paint­ings include Even­ing on Volga, Spring High Water and others. Levitan did not join modern art and remained true to realism. See his quiet twi­lights, moon lit nights and sleeping villages eg Haystacks Twilight 1899 and Sunny Day 1898.

If his earlier works were intimate and lyrical, his mature art became philosophical, expressing his med­it­ation about man and the world. His last works were increas­ingly filled with light, reflecting tranquillity and the eternal beauty of his beloved Russian Motherland. These pictures were loved by the intellectuals of the time, for they rep­resented the purest specimen of the Russian mood landscape.

Levitan was single, though many women liked him. In 1900 he died at 39 and was buried in Moscow's old Jewish cemetery. He left 40 unfin­ished paintings and 300 sketches.
 
Reindeer 1895
Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow


The Jewish population in Russia had grown to 5.6 million by the turn of the century, home of my own family. So I was always a Rus­s­ian tragic, now even more so. The work of Isaac Levitan belonged to the Golden Age of Russian culture, comparable with the works of such classics like Anton Chekhov, Pyotr Tchaik­ovsky and Kon­st­antin Stanislavsky. A Tel Aviv street was named after Isaac Lev­itan. Lots of his works, less known in Russia today, are now displayed in the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.

 
Isaac Levitan, photographed 1880s.