"A Certain Fantastical Verisimilitude." The

 

Life and Art of the Elusive Stefan Eggeler 

 

by Fiona Piccolo

 

 

Introduction.

    This essay was originally published in the Side Real Press edition of Kokain (Side Real Press 2022) which was in itself a collection of translations (by Joe Bandel) of the original rare 1925 magazine for which Eggeler was the art editor. It has been slightly tweaked to enhance its appearance online, a few corrections made to the text and extra illustrations added.

    Please note this essay it is strictly the © of Fiona Piccolo.

    Although there is some overlap, for those seeking a biography of the artist, the essay 'The Shadowy World Of Stefan Eggeler' by John Hirschhorn-Smith (also from the Side Real Press Kokain volume) is HERE.

 


"A Certain Fantastical Verisimilitude." The

 

Life and Art of the Elusive Stefan Eggeler

 

by Fiona Piccolo

 


 
Self Portait 1919 (© Fitzbauer Archive)

    Stefan Eggeler: not Dr. Stephan Eggeler (sic)”. Opening one of his notebooks with this evocative sentence, Eggeler explicitly drew a line between his parallel artistic and legal careers. The artist was born in 1894, and raised in Vienna where, except for a few years in Upper Austria, he would pursue his entire education and spend most of his life. He was trained both as a painter and an engraver at the Viennese Academy of Fine Arts and other major art schools, while simultaneously following a law curriculum at the University of Vienna. He concluded both his courses in 1917 now bearing two names: Stefan Eggeler, artist, and Stephan Eggeler, Doctor of Law. Like him, many artists of the period had a secondary professional occupation which, being generally more practical, ensured some form of financial security in the increasingly difficult Austrian interwar economic context. In the contemporary art world, however, the question of legitimacy in relation to the artist’s status was often at the centre of debates differentiating between a professional, academically trained type and what was considered its amateur or dilettante counterpart. Whilst many many so-called professional artists often had an occupation parallel to their practice that was deemed acceptable such as art teacher or restorer, other artists were relegated to the category of the Auch-Künstler or “also-artist”, as coined by the contemporary German critic Curt Glaser. Eggeler’s case is particular in the sense that, although his parallel legal career had no connection to art, he was still an academically trained artist and would therefore enjoy a certain amount of recognition. Nevertheless, Eggeler’s need to reaffirm, in a notebook already exclusively dedicated to documenting his artistic production, the distinction between his practical and creative occupations tends to indicate that he was himself intent on asserting his legitimacy as an artist.

    Alongside such considerations, what these notebooks and other archival documents show is the creation by Eggeler of his own artistic persona. In an undated autobiographical piece entitled “chronological overview” the artist recorded moments of his life between 1894, the date of his birth, and 1922. In the first few entries, Eggeler describes a solitary childhood spent in imperial palaces, due to his father’s position as a court official, surrounded by Biedermeier furniture in enormous rooms with metre-thick walls, walking along alleyways lined with age old trees and roaming among ruins of mythical statues and ancient monuments. Such Gothic accents help set the stage and establish a close correspondence with the dark thematic and stylistic vein that was meant, we are to understand, to develop in his art. Indeed, Eggeler’s works most often correspond to the phantastisch or fantastic genre, with incursions into the comedic and romantic register, yet always darkened by a grotesque, absurd streak and elements of horror. Thus, later, when he wrote the first part of his unpublished autobiography entitled Die Geschichte meines Lebens (The Story of my Life), Eggeler used similar atmospheric literary devices to merge life and art. The opening chapter recounts his arrival in Gmünd in  1918, described as a dark, muddy, medieval-like ancient town, where, on his way to his new job, he passes by a funeral parlour and other such gloomy scenes and meets with sombrely grotesque characters. He even makes overt references to popular tales and stories like that of Die Schildbürger (The Citizens of Schilda) which he illustrated in a cycle in 1919. Hence, Eggeler becomes a character of sorts in his creations, incarnating a persona of the dark, strange and estranged artist type. This is a recurring process in his printed oeuvre, where recurring characters like the musician or Pierrot represent artistic emanations of Eggeler himself. 

    Although largely devoted to his research in preparation for print cycles, Eggeler’s notebook also reveals a self-awareness and engagement with matters related to his public image. On the first few pages he recorded the occurrencies of his name in the contemporary press, the text of which he generally simply copied by hand or sometimes kept as newspaper clippings. Other pages contain short texts describing his practice, indicating what Kunstrichtung or artistic current he associated with, what his Darstellungsform or formal style was, what his Stoffe or favoured subjects and themes were and finally, which printing techniques he used. Parts of this were then incorporated into what seems to be the handwritten draft for either an advertisement, a feature in the press or perhaps an exhibition catalogue. Regardless, it shows Eggeler’s involvement in the contemporary discourse divulging information about himself as an artist and his art in general.

    It seems it took Eggeler a few years to fully commit to the artistic medium of the print. Since he received a substantial academic training as a painter, he had developed a network of commissioners and experimented with various formats such as canvas, ivory and wood and genres such as landscape, portraiture or scenes of everyday life, he could have chosen to pursue a career in this medium. Nevertheless, it is the art of the print that Eggeler elected as his main means of expression. In view of the contemporary artistic context, this was not merely a choice dictated by personal preferences, but one which aligned with current artistic trends. Eggeler decided in 1920 that he would abandon his painting and pastel commissions to focus solely on the composition of prints. In German-speaking countries the 1920s mark the peak of a momentum experienced by that medium since the turn of the century. While it had long been associated with the “lesser” arts and simple reproduction processes, the artistic quality of the print was somewhat rediscovered at the end of the nineteenth century. By then, the difference was made between the “original” print, created and signed by an artist, and the reproductive print as used in newspapers and other mass media. It thus gradually gained approval in artistic circles to the point of being re-elevated to the rank of fine art and becoming a very popular means of expression. In parallel, the Buchkunst, or art of the book which focused on design, typography and overall aesthetic matters including illustration, was going through its own revival period. The original print was thus pushed forward in the centre of artistic creation and critical debate.

    In this, Austria was an early representative, if not exactly a precursor, of innovation and experimentation within the graphic arts leading to their re-emergence. Founded in 1871, the Gesellschaft für vervielfältigende Kunst (Society for Reproducible Art) was looking to foster the development and survival of graphic arts such as engraving, etching or woodcut which were then considered to be threatened by relatively new mechanical technologies like photography. The society published and distributed portfolios containing prints in various techniques and by various artists to its members, alongside a newsletter itself featuring some critical commentary on the similar works by contemporary art historians. Those portfolios would notably inspire the creation and ethos of famous periodicals such as Pan and Jugend in Germany, and of course Ver Sacrum, the official magazine of the Viennese Secession, in Austria. 

A selection of issues of Ver Sacrum

    Starting in 1892 in Munich and quickly followed by other larger European cities, artists who wished to break away from convention and the restrictive influence of the academy organised into groups where new, modern practices and views on art could flourish. These groups called themselves “Secessions” in order to claim and symbolise their independence from the old and somewhat authoritarian academic model. Of the many burgeoning secessionist art groups in the early twentieth century, the Vienna Secession was known for the particular emphasis it put on graphic arts. Similarly, as Eggeler’s artistic education shows, many institutions in Austria and more particularly Vienna provided training in the graphic arts, as well as platforms for its exhibition and circulation. From the independent and innovative such as the Wiener Werkstätte (Vienna Workshops), to the more conventional and traditional like the Academy, their interest in the print medium demonstrated the importance of its artistic status.

    Eggeler was never part of what has come to be called the “avant-garde”. From the beginning of the twentieth century onwards, a myriad of avant-gardist groups arose in the wake of Secessionist movements, subscribing to the martial symbolism of their predecessors. However, whereas Secessionist groups can be described rather as reformists, since their independence did not require a complete dissociation from of tradition, the avant-garde was a clearly radical artistic current looking to overthrow the conventional academic rule, thus making way for new, innovative, cutting-edge art. Neither a secessionist or an avant-gardist, Eggeler can rather be thought of as “modern”, in the sense of his being of his own time – neither a traditionalist, nor a forward-looking innovator. His printed work indeed demonstrates an interesting stylistic combination of a somewhat nostalgic, belated fin-de-siècle aesthetic and a more modern streak inspired by current artistic trends such as the unavoidable “Expressionism”.  

 
An illustration from Die Herzen der Könige

    Such illustration cycles as he created for Hanns Heinz Ewers’ (1871-1943) short story ‘Die Herzen der Könige’ (The Hearts of Kings, 1922) or Arthur Schnitzler’s (1862-1931) ‘Der Schleier der Pierrette (The Veil of Pierrette, 1922) are great examples of this. In it, Eggeler makes clear stylistic references to the late nineteenth century’s dark and so-called “decadent” phase of Jugendstil, or Art Nouveau, with his sinuous figures and intricate, quasi ornamental detailed drawing. Yet to the distinctive swirling, hypnotic arabesques of clear-cut, continuous lines in Jugendstil, Eggeler opposes the typically expressionist jagged line, organised in a teeming weave of countless scratches. Similarly, rather than using the representative highly contrasted, solid blocks of black and white that may be found in such archetypal works such as those by Aubrey Beardsley (1872-1898), he rather builds volumes and masses with densely crafted cross-hatching. In this Eggeler is to be related to contemporary artistic figures such as the fellow Austrian Alfred Kubin (1877-1959) or the German Hugo Steiner-Prag (1880-1945), whose oeuvres both notably share the same focus on macabre, grotesque and fantastical themes.

 
Alfred Kubin - The Emperor of China (c 1910) (Source MOMA)

     In this respect, the subjects chosen by Eggeler also reveal an ambivalent relation to past and present, folklore and modernity. Such print cycles as Walpurgisnacht (Walpurgis Night, 1922) and Der Spielmann und der Teufel im Verwunschenen Schloss (The Musician and the Devil in the Enchanted Castle, 1920) are clearly referencing a specifically Germanic folkloric tradition. This interest for old tales and legendary motifs was very popular among artistic circles at the turn of the century, who sought, through re-appropriation and reinterpretation of their cultural heritage, to create a new and specifically “German” kind of art. Expressionist groups such as Die Brücke and Der Blaue Reiter are most famous examples of this trend. It is concomitant with the print revival previously mentioned, when typically medieval techniques such as woodcut were rediscovered and massively popularised, to the point where it became a symbol of Expressionist graphic art. In this sense, it is no surprise that Eggeler chose this specific method for his interpretation of The Story of the Youth Who Went Forth to Learn What Fear Was (to which he gave the title Der Spielmann und der Teufel, which translates as The Musician And The Devil In The Enchanted Castle), originally published in the first volume of the Grimm brothers’ Children’s and Household Tales collection. This way, folklore and tradition are not only referenced to in the direct citation of old tales but also in the use of an “ancient” printing technique. It is accordingly no coincidence that this particular cycle is one of the few of Eggeler’s works where he seems to have adopted more fully the Expressionist stylistic vocabulary.  

   

Illustration by Hugo Steiner-Prag from Gustav Meyrink’s Der Golem (1915) 

     The print is an artistic form very often associated with the written word. First because of its also being a work on paper and thus a suitable accompaniment, but more importantly because its reproducibility makes it a most practical method of illustration. Regardless of the function and status accorded to illustrations, be it mere decorative ancillary, explanatory complement, or enlightening supplement, they are never simple mirror-like visual translations of what is said in the text. Rather, illustrations are first the result of a selective process, the illustrator choosing which elements of the text are to be depicted or not, and second a materialisation of his own interpretative process. An illustration is thus a reflection of the artist’s individual, personal understanding of the text and in this sense, the illustrator is first and foremost a reader. Eggeler was evidently an avid reader himself and, at least in part, more particularly of works in the fantastic, macabre and grotesque vein. In a short autobiographical handwritten document, as he recorded his move to a different area in Vienna, Eggeler added a note explaining that his new place was adjacent to the (Jewish) ghetto which he found very similar to the environment described in Gustav Meyrink’s (1868-1932) novel The Golem (1915). This anecdote shows the impact and influence not only of literature, but of this particular literary genre even within the artist’s personal life. In a professional context, when Eggeler discusses illustration projects with authors, he occasionally does so by positioning himself as the reader for whom his images are intended. In a letter to Ewers for example, Eggeler voices concerns about illustrating the author’s novel Vampir (1921), since in his opinion, the illustrations might in this particular case disrupt and spoil the elusiveness and strangeness of the vampire motif, ra
ther than enhance it. Here the artist has the reading experience in mind.

Illustration from an unissued portfolio of Ten Drawings to Hanns Heinz Ewers’ Vampir (1921) held at the Heinrich Heine Institute, Düsseldorf. (Image courtesy Heinrich Heine Institute, Düsseldorf).

    Another sign of the importance and influence of literature in Eggeler’s work is to be found in what is left today of his correspondence, where most letters are written to or received from contemporary authors. It is thus to a contemporary literary world, rather than to artistic circles, that the artist seems to have been connected. Moreover, even outside the field of illustration proper, when he published print cycles outside the book format and independently of the text, Eggeler’s works often referenced authors of various genres. In Musikalische Miniaturen (Musical Miniatures, 1921) for example, the titles of each print in the series like Pierrot, Lied von der Liebe und vom Tode (Song of Love and Death), Kriegslied (War Song) or Trinkslied (Drinking Song) are most likely direct references to Friedrich Nietzsche’s Thus Spake Zarathoustra (1885) with parts entitled “The Drunken Song”, “The Dance Song” or “The Grave Song”. The writings of Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900), like those of Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860), were extremely popular among artistic circles in the early 20th century, an influence to which Eggeler was certainly no stranger.   

     Similarly, Eggeler’s seeming obsession with puppet theatre and Commedia dell’arte characters, who keep reappearing throughout his oeuvre, is one he shared with a great numbers of contemporary Austrian artists like Egon Schiele (1890-1918), Rudolf Wacker (1893-1939) or Franz Sedlacek (1891-1945), but also writers like Arthur Schnitzler and Gustav Meyrink, as well as composers like Arnold Schönberg (1874-1951). The inclusion in his print cycle Amine, eine Liebesgeschichte (Amine, a Love Story, 1920) of the Kaffeehaus or Coffee House motif, which was the idiosyncratic Viennese meeting place of both literary and artistic circles, seems like an apt reference to the contemporary intellectual milieu in which Eggeler evolved.

    Eggeler may thus be characterised as a “literary” artist, not only with regards to his personal interests and professional relations, but more importantly because of his continuous artistic exploration of the image’s narrative possibilities. Indeed, even his passionate interest in classical music corresponds to forms of storytelling which in turn fed into his graphic compositions. For example, one of Eggeler’s favourite composers was Robert Schumann (1810-1856), who was himself greatly inspired by and often referenced the fantastic tales of E. T. A. Hoffmann (1776-1822). Following the famous example of Max Klinger (1857-1920) who, from the 1880s onwards, produced print cycles bearing titles such as Opus, Intermezzi or Brahms Fantasy, many graphic artists used music as a way to enhance the narrative properties of their works. Print cycles were thus put in parallel with musical partitions, implying their similar status as readable objects, regardless of their non-textual identity. Eggeler himself experimented with this relation between the musical and the visual in his cycle Der Spielmann und der Teufel. In it, as he explains in his notes, line and colour are meant to express various musical intensities and atmospheres referenced in terms such as “majestoso”, “pomposo” and “furioso”. The artist was not only a great connoisseur of music but also a multi-talented player of instruments like the organ, the accordion and the harmonium, amongst others. As such, he perfectly understood the expressive qualities of the musical medium which he then tried to infuse in his graphic compositions.

    Eggeler was also a collector of rare and ancient books and in conjunction with his aforementioned literary connections, it comes as no surprise that the ex libris was another print format that he experimented. Placed on the inside of a book’s front cover, these small prints serve to indicate to whom it belongs and correspond in their own way to a form of narrative. They generally mention the name of the owner and sometimes their profession. The most elaborate ones, such as those created by Eggeler, can be described as small interpretative portraits. These “portraits” are not necessarily figurative and do not always represent the person themselves, but can refer to them by way of symbolic associations: the scale of justice for a judge, for example, or a particular building, animal, object, etc., which helps reveal the person’s identity. As a parallel to the practice of illustrating, the person to be portrayed can be viewed here as the text to be illustrated; Eggeler first “read” his commissioners, in a sense, to be able to represent them. In the short text of an advert Eggeler explains that the ex libris “should relate most intimately to the owner of the book; it is, as it were, the emblem of their mind”. Accordingly, although a single, individual image, the ex libris contains and tells the story of the owner. The narrative strategy here is based on a metaphorical combination of ideas whereby the object or subject represented carries multiple meanings. 

 
Two ex libris by Stefan Eggeler. Left: Kurt Donin and Right: Eggeler's own.

    There are two sides to Eggeler’s activity as a print artist: that which relates to the medium of the book with his practice of illustration and production of ex libris, and the other associated with the portfolio containing independent cycle compositions. As the first side was previously related to his position of creator as “reader”, so the second may be here assimilated to that of the artist as “writer”. As an artistic form, the portfolio lies in between the book and the album, containing stories told not by way of a written text, but by that of an image series. Although a portfolio may also contain some text, like the book, it is most often limited to a short piece such as a preface, a foreword or a dedication. In Eggeler’s oeuvre where portfolios feature prominently, they generally follow this formal pattern. As he describes them himself in a notebook, his “Zyklen” or cycles which he published in portfolios were “etched short stories, dramas, pantomimes, poems”. Eggeler significantly uses literary terms to qualify his artistic compositions thus attributing to himself the role and capacity of a writer, telling stories in images rather than words. Indeed, while most of his cycles can be described as “etched short stories”, it seems that other literary forms are also recognisable. In Die Drei Freier (The Three Suitors) for example, where three suitors take turns in wooing a young bourgeoise, the visual narrative seems to emulate the structure of a counting rhyme. Similarly in Musikalische Miniaturen, Eggeler’s only cycle which isn’t overtly narrative, the structure is rather reminiscent of a poem, where the images of the series would  as it were, correspond to stanzas, each developing on a given theme.

    Although there is a part of invention in the illustration process previously described, here, the artist is a true inventor not only of the images’ contents and the interpretation they carry, but first and foremost of the content and form of the story itself. Whereas the ex libris told a story by way of the single image, the series relies on its intrinsic multiplicity and thus uses sequence as its main narrative strategy. The term “cycle” specially chosen by Eggeler to designate his serial works already suggests a time-pattern based on succession, with a circumscribed beginning and end. Numbering each print of his series similarly allowed him to make clear their primordial function as narrative works, rather than as an assemblage, selection or even collection of a few individual pieces.

    Most of Eggeler’s printed oeuvre was published in luxurious and limited bibliophilic editions of illustrated books and print portfolios. His targeted audience was therefore one of means, and more importantly, one representative of “high” culture in relation to such categories as “fine” arts, as opposed to “low” or “popular” culture associated with mass media and large scale distribution. In 1925, however, after approximately ten years of publishing and distributing his art via such elitist editorial circuits, Eggeler elected the magazine as the platform for his new creative experiments. In association with a certain Fritz Bauer, he thus became co-editor and illustrator of the literary and artistic magazine Kokain. Eine moderne Revue. On the covers and pages of Kokain, Eggeler adopts a decisively expressionistic stylistic vocabulary with garish colours and thick, black jagged lines. However, by the mid-twenties when Kokain came out “Expressionism” had long since left the ranks of the avant-garde to join those of widely popular, democratised artistic trends. The two early and major representative groups of the movement, Die Brücke and Der Blaue Reiter, had already dissolved before World War I. Expressionism continued to develop during the war nevertheless and reached its peak right after it when legions of artistic groups emerged in cities throughout Germany resulting in the creation of ever rising numbers of magazines defending and promoting such credo, those publications helping to foster and increase their public visibility and acceptance. Following the fall of the monarchy in 1918, Expressionism was largely politicised and defended revolutionary ideals. The Expressionist aesthetic thus flooded the urban landscape through the diffusion of prints, posters and manifestos directed at the masses, the interests of which the movement wished to defend. Nevertheless, in parallel with such radical political engagements, Expressionism, which had already been adopted by the bourgeois collector, was now being gradually institutionalised. Museums were buying, collecting and exhibiting works such as those by the once considered radical artists of Die Brücke and Expressionism's stylistic properties became an integral part of the German-speaking world’s larger visual culture.

    Thus, by appropriating a clearer Expressionist visual language in the more widely circulated format of the magazine, Eggeler made apparent his move towards popular imagery while maintaining ties to higher visual categories of modern fine art. In the particular context of the magazine accordingly, Pamphlet literature or Pamphlet-fiction, a straightforward product of popular culture, should not be overlooked as a visual source of inspiration. From the 1870s, pamphlet publishers were already using the shock-factor of bright multiple colours and daring illustrations to sell their small story-booklets, leading to the later development of pulp fiction. In one of his notebooks, Eggeler himself references one of these Volks broschüren (folk booklets) as a specific source of inspiration.

    This slight stylistic redirection was a means of assimilation into an entertainment culture to which Kokain was proudly subscribing, as demonstrated in the works published in its first issue. The deliberately provocative title of the magazine serves in this sense to indicate the particular boldness of Eggeler’s and Bauer’s vision. They did not hesitate to publish stories dealing with subjects such as lesbian love, which was then considered extremely scandalous. Kokain is of course also a direct reference to the contemporary “Goldenen Zwanziger” or Roaring Twenties, a fleeting moment of artistic and cultural flourishing and prosperity during the interwar years. On an artistic level, Eggeler thus clearly engaged himself in a new, to him, relationship with “popular culture”.

    From the early days of his career Eggeler had developed a strong network of relations to the contemporary literary world. Long before he came to the magazine format, his focus on the fantastic genre already demonstrated his affinities with the “popular” side of artistic tendencies. Indeed, when the fantastic short story sparked renewed interests in German-speaking countries at the beginning of the 20th century, it expanded beyond elite intellectual circles and spread to the masses making it a newly popular genre. Authors that Eggeler befriended like Meyrink, Ewers or Strobl were famous representatives of this new hybrid literary trend straddling both the “high” and “low” cultural spheres. In terms of the magazine, Eggeler’s relation to Karl Hans Strobl (1877-1946) may have been more particularly influential. As well as a renowned novelist and writer of short stories, Strobl was previously editor of the magazine Der Orchideengarten (The Orchid Garden) whose focus on fantastic, occult and erotic literature is occasionally reminiscent of the thematic direction in Kokain. In what remains of Eggeler’s correspondence, are two letters from Strobl dating from the 1920s; although neither mentions the magazine, they show that author and artist were in contact when Kokain was underway. Eggeler’s associate, Fritz Bauer, was himself rather well connected to the contemporary press since he was also the editor of a daily newspaper called Wiener Zeitung am Abend (Vienna’s Evening Paper).

 
Cover of Der Orchideengarten 13 (1919). (Artist unknown).

    Eggeler’s keen interest for so-called “entertainment” culture largely predates the co-creation of Kokain. This is particularly remarkable through his early association with Hanns Heinz Ewers whose literary oeuvre was often associated with the terms “Trivialliteratur” and “Hintertreppe Literatur” descriptions often used in relation to Ewers’ scandalously thrilling vein of fantastical horror. Both terms, which roughly translated mean “trivial literature” and “behind the staircase” literature, simultaneously denote the supposed lightness or frivolity of popular culture and its associated literature and the thrill of forbidden, taboo horror to be read hidden from others. Indeed Ewers himself made reference to such entertainment in his preface to Eggeler’s portfolio series Musikalische Miniaturen, where he describes readers of such magazines dreaming themselves away in imaginary worlds. Appropriately, the first issue of Kokain was dedicated to Ewers, clearly announcing its thematic and artistic dispositions and inclinations.  

    Besides his purely illustrative work, which was created specifically to accompany the stories in the magazine, Eggeler also republished some of his print cycles that had previously been distributed in limited bibliophilic book and portfolio editions. His selection thematically revolves around the (in)famous figure of the femme fatale, a favourite subject of art in German-speaking countries from fin-de-siècle decadent aestheticism, through Expressionism, to later currents like New Objectivity. In Amine, she is a beautiful woman with whom the naïve Pierrot falls instantly in love and who soon breaks his heart when he discovers she is not the innocent Eve-like being he imagined in his reveries. In his interpretation of Schnitzler’s Der Schleier der Pierrette (The Veil of Pierrette), another credulous Pierrot is betrayed by the eponymous heroine, who, breaking the promises they just made to each other, does not drink the poison she and Pierrot decided to ingest in order to preserve their love, thus letting him die alone. In the cycle Die Serenade (The Serenade) lastly, yet another deceitful Pierrette cheats on Pantalon as she lets Pierrot, this time cunning rather than naïve, court and seduce her. 

 
Pierrot discovers his girlfriend is unfaithful to him. Amine (1920).

    During the 19th century, the traditionally comical nature of characters from the Commedia dell’arte shifted towards a more sombre and violent identity. It is particularly evident in interpretations of Pierrot such as Paul Margueritte’s pantomime Pierrot - Assassin De Sa Femme (Pierrot - Murderer of his Wife, 1888), Richard Beer-Hoffmann’s Pierrot Hypnotiseur (Pierrot Hypnotiser, 1892) or Jean-Léon Gérôme’s painting Suites d’un bal Masqué  (The Duel after the Masquerade, 1857), tendencies which endure into the 20th century in works like Arnold Schönberg Pierrot Lunaire (Moonstruck Pierrot, 1912) or Max Beckmann’s Karneval (Carnival, 1942-43) triptych. This specifically dark and uncanny side of Pierrot and his companions is particularly well suited to the macabre romanticism and eroticism of Eggeler’s oeuvre. Accordingly, the artist’s selection of carnivalesque series for Kokain relevantly reflects the magazine’s ethos, with its professed aim to entertain readers with wide-ranging themes delving into “the confused states of human existence”.  

    In terms of formal presentation, Eggeler retained the display system of his portfolios with one image per page. This simultaneously ensured a greater readability of each image and allowed that reader to clearly differentiate the independent narrative cycles from the illustrations meant to accompany texts. Whereas in the portfolio the titles appeared as legends, just under the print, here Eggeler accentuates the distinction between text and image by relocating the titles further down on the page. This way, the artist reaffirmed the functional autonomy of the purely visual narrative. This is particularly evident in the arrangement of the cycle The Veil of Pierrette in the fifth issue. Originally this series of prints was published in a book to accompany Schnitzler’s pantomime, the prints dispersed within the text. In Kokain, Schnitzler’s text is replaced by a short summary written by Fritz Bauer and placed before the cycle, as a sort of preface. Doing so allowed Eggeler to present his print in a newly uninterrupted series, thus creating a purely autonomous and coherent visual narrative.

    Remarkably, this re-edition of his work was an opportunity for the artist to somewhat reinterpret them through the medium of colour. If colour is an obvious major component of the visual universe of Kokain, it was very seldom encountered in Eggeler’s printed oeuvre until then. From what is known of his production, only his cycle The Musician and the Devil was created and published in colour, which testifies to the importance of its later addition here. First, it seems that colour allowed him to reveal more explicitly the latent narrative stages of his visual stories – in the cycle The Veil of Pierrette in the fifth issue for example, moments of strong emotional intensity such as the poison-drinking scene and that featuring the death of Pierrot are accentuated through the addition of a dark red colour. Similarly, the cycle Serenade (in the third and fourth issues) is printed in green, a yellowish brown and blue. It seems colour was used here to delimit spheres of actions, such as private and public, interior and exterior, and to indicate variations in atmosphere, emotion and tone. For example the green colour used in the first print may help accentuate the expression of Pantalon’s possessiveness and jealousy towards Pierrette, who, as we discover later, will give him reason via her affair with Pierrot.

Serenade (plate 1)

    Such handling of colour, as a monochrome, overall tone for each image, is reminiscent of its use in early silent cinema. One of the most famous expressionist films of this era, The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1919) by Robert Wiene (1873-1938), is a perfect example of the colour code developed by this new mass media to palliate its muteness. Daylight and exterior scenes are tinted with a yellowish hue, night scenes with blue, interior private ones with variations of pink, etc. It is this exact “code” that Eggeler appears to have used here for his reinterpretation of his cycles. This was most likely another device elaborated for the greater assimilation of his work with the specific visual vocabulary of popular culture, within the magazine which itself is a medium already directed at that particular audience. Even before this slight reinterpretation of Eggeler’s print cycles in Kokain, the art historian and critic Gustav Glück (1871-1952) had recognised what he termed a kinoromantischor (cine-romantic) quality in Eggeler’s works. Although this was a clear attack of Eggeler’s art on the part of Glück who certainly did not view the medium of film as having any artistic qualities, it is interesting to note that contemporaries did see this affinity between the artist’s narrative print series and the cinema which in part inspired him. 


The Cabinet of Dr Caligari

    Moreover, it is a known fact that Eggeler showed keen interest in cinema, since he co-signed a contract with Hanns Heinz Ewers which reserved him the exclusive rights for the cinematographic adaptation and artistic direction of the author’s short stories “The Last Will of Stanislawa d’Asp” and “The Tophar Bride”, as well as an option on the filming rights for the remainder of his then, present and future works. Ewers had for his part already created his first film d’auteur in 1913 with The Student Of Prag directed by Paul Wegener (1874-1948) and later created his own cinematographic firm, Hanns Heinz Ewers Produktion, in 1928. Since his partiality to Eggeler’s artistic work was evident from the early stages of their collaboration, and further proven by their many common projects and long correspondence, it seems only natural that the author would have wished to share this new common interest with the artist.

    As a plastic artist, Eggeler’s attraction to this relatively new and highly popular media was understandable, especially considering the involvement of many contemporary artists’ in the creation of set designs. As Viennese press clippings from the late 1920s and early 1930s indicate, Eggeler regularly took part in similar activities at the Künstlerhaus where he was in charge of decorating rooms for annual balls and other festivities according to specific themes such as: ‘Spielzeug für Große Kinder’ (Toys for Big Children) with representations of Heaven and Hell in 1927, ‘Venusberg’, Hexenküche (Witches’ Kitchen) and Walpurgisnacht (Walpurgis Night) in 1929 or Traumland (Dreamland) in 1930. Eggeler was thus familiar with forms of the Gesamtkunstwerk or total work of art involving larger spaces and would have accordingly had a proper understanding of what this aspect of film production required. Eggeler’s interest in cinema is concomitant with the rapid expansion and development of the medium in Vienna during the years directly following World War I. The fields of film production and cinema then experienced a virtual boom which contemporary descriptions of Vienna as the “Film-Mecca” appropriately illustrate. Eggeler who signed his contract with Ewers in 1922 thus most likely primarily intended to take advantage of this situation. The fact that none of the projects mentioned in the contract appear to have been realised may be due in part to the decline in film production caused by the general economic collapse of the late 1920s.

    Outside of Vienna, where it was distributed by Eggeler’s and Bauer’s own publishing company Verlag, den modernen Revue Kokain, Kokain was also circulated in Germany through Karl Emil Krug’s Diskus-Verlag in Leipzig. The magazine was thus a means for Eggeler not only to promote his work outside of Vienna proper, but also beyond the bounds of Austria in general, allowing the artist to reach a larger public – the German art market being particularly attractive at that time due to its prosperity and its exceptional interest in the graphic arts. In parallel with the boom of popularity experienced by the artistic original print in the 1920s German-speaking world, the country saw the proliferation and equal success of literary and illustrated magazines – a situation of which Eggeler tried to take advantage. The Kokain venture, like many others, unfortunately did not last and production ceased after five issues. One probable reason for this premature end is the difficult contemporary situation of the press in Austria, still subjected to antiquated and extremely restrictive publication laws and the permanent threat of censorship. Indeed, Kokain did not escape that fate since its third issue was censored, confiscated by the authorities and charged with “pornography”. Eggeler himself had already suffered his work to be censored twice, once in 1921 when he published his illustrations of Schnitzler’s play Reigen which itself already enjoyed a particularly scandalous reputation, and the second time when the jury of the Künstlerhaus artists society refused to exhibit his work on account of its “erotic” contents. But the most evident reason for Kokain’s short life is the deterioration of Bauer’s and Eggeler’s relationship. In a letter to Ewers dated from the 21st of March 1926, Eggeler describes his former associate’s illegal dealings and informs the author that he has filed a complaint against him, at which occasion he discovered that his was not the first. He concludes : “The devil take him!”

    Eggeler’s career as an artist, though short by most standards, is thus a very rich and special example of the circumstances and developments of contemporary artistic currents. With regards to the category of the graphic arts particularly, Eggeler’s oeuvre constitutes an interesting and eloquent expression of the intermediate quality of the print medium. As an art form, the print indeed possesses a particular versatility that other media such as painting or sculpture cannot afford. As previously demonstrated, this multi-functionality of the print is related to the varied formats in which it appears – the book, the portfolio, the magazine, but also completely independently framed on the exhibition wall. Most eloquent in terms of this intermediate nature of the print is the fact that Eggeler not only experimented with different formats, but that he even repurposed some of his previously published works, thus confirming their adaptability to various form, function and related audience. Eggeler thus navigated, like many contemporary graphic artists, within the print medium’s own artistic hierarchy, between the products of a “high” culture and those of its “low” counterpart.

    In terms of its thematic emphasis on genres like the fantastic, the macabre, the grotesque and the erotic, Eggeler’s oeuvre is again a great example of such popular tendencies among artistic circles of the time. If Eggeler aligns himself to “Expressionism” as his notebooks and the program of Kokain testifies, it would perhaps more accurately be the Austrian Expressionist tendencies that his oeuvre reflects as exemplified by the art of Alfred Kubin, Egon Schiele or even Oskar Kokoschka (1886-1980). In fact, Eggeler was rather part of an unofficial contemporary current pushed to the margins of greater modernist movements, one that has often been called the “andere moderne” or “other moderns”. This alternate modernity drew largely from aspects of the fantastic, the magical and dream worlds and is the direct predecessor of the Viennese School of Fantastic Realism developed by Albert Paris Gütersloh (1887-1973) in the late 1940s. However, whereas this later trend corresponds to a majorly plastic interpretation of the fantastic, Eggeler’s approach was idiosyncratically developed in parallel, even in concordance with the contemporary literary form of the genre. Although academically trained, Eggeler chose an artistic path reflecting his personal interests and passions, be that literature, book collecting or music. He thus infused his creation with a distinctive fascination for the strange, the grotesque and the macabre in life and love.

    Much is left to uncover about both Eggeler’s life and art. After his death, most of his oeuvre was unfortunately scattered to the four winds, making it difficult to estimate how much may now be lost, or at least hidden, out of the researchers’, collectors’ and amateurs’ reach. His notebook here again offers a captivating insight into what the artist may have achieved; nearly fifty pages filled with preparatory notes for numerous cycles corresponding to broad thematic categories such as lives of saints, popular tales, fantastic stories, Commedia dell’arte pantomimes, etc. If Eggeler may be considered a “minor” or at least lesser known artist, this very particularity makes his oeuvre an essential example in the still little trodden history of a Viennese art circuit belonging to alternate artistic identities such as the aforementioned “also-artist”, amateur and other dilettante. Accordingly, his work offers a rare glimpse into a certain Viennese and more generally German-speaking subcultural milieu of somewhat marginal artistic circles affiliated with literary networks – here notably brought together by the “Phantastisch” genre. All in all, the study of oeuvres such as that of artists like Stefan Eggeler are most important for the comprehension of a still little documented period of Austrian art, even more so with regards to graphic arts, postdating the canonical fin-de-siècle and its figureheads, Klimt, Schiele and Kokoschka.




The Shadowy World Of Stefan Eggeler

 

 (1894-1969)

 

by John Hirschhorn-Smith

 

Introduction.

    This essay first appeared in the Side Real Press edition of Kokain (Side Real Press 2022) which was in itself a collection of translations (by Joe Bandel) of the original rare 1925 magazine for which Eggeler was the art editor.

    It has been slightly tweaked to enhance its appearance online, a few minor corrections made but with a lot of extra illustrations added. It is, by far, the fullest biography of Eggeler in English to date. 

    Although is essay is © by myself, I am happy for it to be quoted elsewhere provided I am credited as the author of it.

    For those seeking a more critical analysis of his work, art historian Fiona Piccolo's essay (also from the Side Real Press Kokain volume) ' "A Certain Fantastical Verisimilitude." The Life and Art of the Elusive Stefan Eggeler' is HERE.

    When I began my research I discovered, as is often the case, that what I thought was terra incognita, was in fact populated by other similar souls approaching the same subject from different directions all of who added to my knowledge in various ways. I am thus hugely grateful to Fiona Piccolo (University of the Sorbonne) who has done much to fill in gaps in our Eggeler knowledge via her tireless archival efforts detailed in her (French language texts 'La relation texte-image dans les illustrations du fantastique des pays germaniques par Stefan Eggeler'. (The relationship between text and image in Stefan Eggeler's illustrations of the fantastique genre from  the German-speaking countries) Master’s thesis, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, 2018 and 'Le cycle: concept et forme dans la suite d’estampes chez Stefan Eggeler (1894- 1969)' (The cycle: concept and form in printed suites of Stefan Eggeler (1894- 1969) ). Master’s thesis, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, 2019.  

    I also wish to thank Nik Pollinger who shared his family archive with me, Doctor Wilfried Kugel (Hanns Ewers’ biographer), Martin Willems (Heinrich Heine Institute Düsseldorf), Nikolaus Domes (Künstlerhaus-Archiv, Vienna), Jonas Ploeger, Michael T. Ricker, and Franz Katzer. 

    Any inaccuracies or mistakes in what follows are my own and I would be VERY GRATEFUL from anyone offering corrections or amendments. I would also be very keen to hear from anyone who has further information on this amazing and enigmatic artist. I am also seeking a number of items for my own collection especially variant editions of the books, particularly those of the Meyrink/Eggeler volume 'Der Mann auf Der Flashe' and information regarding ORIGINAL ARTWORKS AND PRINTS. I would thus be extremely grateful to hear from anyone with such material.

    Finally, I would like to extend special thanks to Erich and Inge Fitzbauer who not only knew Eggeler but largely rescued what remained of his archive after his death. This project in dedicated to them.

 


The Shadowy World Of Stefan Eggeler

 

 (1894-1969)

 

by John Hirschhorn-Smith

 

 
Selbstbildnis (Self Portrait) 1915. (Mezzotint).
   
    Even within the field of so-called ‘fantastic’ art, the name of Stefan Eggeler (1895-1969) is largely unknown outside a small circle of collectors and fans of 'weird fiction, his biography fragmentary and even his slender bibliography filled with inaccuracies. 
 
    This despite the fact Eggeler was for a few short years a highly regarded, award-winning artist of the early 1920s who  illustrated the three biggest names in Germanic supernatural fiction that of the period, Hanns Heinz Ewers, Gustav Meyrink and Karl Hans Strobl, as well as playwright Arthur Schnitzler, in de-luxe editions. His own portfolios of  “Zyklen” (a cycle of prints accompanied by minimal text to tell a story) were well received despite their controversial subject matter such as (plague, witchcraft and the occult) an edginess that extended into his arguably most ‘commercial’ (if such a term can ever be used concerning him) work as artistic editor of the short-lived magazine Kokain which ran for a five issues in 1928 before folding amid police prosecutions and acrimony. The images in Kokain were his last published works and virtually marked the end of an artistic career which he later disingenuously termed his ‘second life’ which he had kept separate (and later hidden) from what would be a long career as a legal advisor. It had barely spanned a decade.

    This short time period partly explains why he remains in relative obscurity compared to other artists who explored similar themes such as Max Klinger (1857-1920), Alfred Kubin (1877-1959) and Hugo Steiner-Prag (1880-1945) and those of the subsequent ‘fantastic realist’ school led by fellow Austrian Ernst Fuchs (1930-2015).

    As perhaps befits an artist whose work dealt in the shadowlands of the psyche, Eggeler himself is also an elusive figure almost actively resisting research. This introduction, with all its biographical lacunae and circumspect speculation, merely attempts to give a brief summary of Eggeler’s life and work. Any errors in the telling of that are my own.

    Stephan (the spelling ‘Stefan’ was adopted primarily as a byline for his art practice) Eggeler was born in Vienna on Christmas Eve 1894 the only child of Anna and Andreas Eggeler. Vienna was then capital of the Habsburg Empire, a vast territory that encompassed not only Austria and Hungary, but Bohemia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, large parts of Poland and Romania, and even a portion of Italy. Andreas was a minor but long-serving member of the imperial court and thus followed the elderly emperor Franz Joseph (1830-1916) as he moved between the vast winter and summer Palaces of the Hofburg and Schönbrunn; services for which Franz Joseph would personally award him the Gold Cross of Merit in 1898. The Eggeler family did not live at either palace, residing instead at an apartment on Margaretenstraße in central Vienna conveniently situated a few miles equidistant between the two.

    The 1890s are the period Stefan Zweig  in his autobiography The World of Yesterday (1941) described as “‘the Golden Age of Security’ a well-ordered world with a clear social structure and easy transitions between the parts of that structure, a world without haste.” Yet this was also a period during which Vienna was about to sow the seeds of major twentieth-century events. In its cafes and salons, one might meet Sigmund Freud who in 1895 had just begun the research which would lead to his The Interpretation of Dreams (1899), or the artists Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele and Oscar Kokoschka plotting to create the Vienna Sucession in 1897 together with the ‘Young Vienna’ group of  ‘progressive’ writers which included Arthur Schnitzler, Hermann Bahr, Hugo von Hofmannsthal and Zweig himself. All accompanied by a soundtrack of  ‘modern’ compositions by the likes of Gustav Mahler and Arnold Schönberg. Later, in the years immediately prior to WWI, those same cafes would host the likes of Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, Joseph Stalin and Adolf Hitler.

    Eggeler’s early education was at the protestant school at Karlsplatz in central Vienna followed by the nearby Elisabeth Gymnasium which he recalled in a notebook of autobiographical fragments as “boring and bleak, like probably all these schools.” In this text, he also describes his explorations of the vast ornamental summer gardens of the Schönbrunn Palace with its “ancient avenues trimmed according to the French style, allegorical and mythical statues, trees and old water basins, the Roman ruin, the obelisk, the Gloriette” but adds the sad refrain that he was “always alone.” Such solitary experiences might well have helped foster and develop his inward artistic leanings such as learning to play the violin and piano, drawing and an interest in old buildings.

    Although Andreas was supportive of these interests, allowing him to take twice-weekly evening classes at Vienna’s Graphische Lehr und Versuchsanstalt (Graphic Education and Research Institute), he did not consider the arts a viable career instead wishing him to take a law degree and enter the civil service. 

Graphische Lehr und Versuchsanstalt Vienna (1938) Credit: Wikipedia.

    At the same time, Stefan’s art teacher was assuring him that “the pinnacle of all happiness was admission to the Academy of fine arts.” Thus it was that in late 1912 Eggeler would dutifully enroll at the University to study law and simultaneously sit, and pass, the exams for entry to the Academy. However, once he discovered that “I would have to draw heads for a year, then simple nudes, until I was finally allowed to start drawing heads and nudes for another year in the poorly lit drawing rooms” he left the Academy to concentrate on his legal degree. However, he did return to the Graphische Lehr to take further vocational classes in etching, woodcut and lithography, under the tutelage of Professor Ludwig Michalek (1859-1942) a well-respected painter and etcher.

    The artworks that survive from this period are largely boldly-coloured lino and woodcuts of urban and rural buildings, based upon sketches made during visits to various small towns and villages around Vienna which perhaps show some influence of the prints of Carl Moll. None of the work indicates an interest in the supernatural or macabre although some of the architectural elements (buildings and fountains) would be incorporated into that later work.

Untitled Lithograph dated 1913. (© Fitzbauer archive).

    In March 1914 Eggeler was the youngest participant in the forty-seventh exhibition of the Austrian Artists Association at the spiritual home of the avant-garde the Secession building. Although the glory days of the movement itself had passed, exhibitions held there were still regarded as prestigious and Eggeler must have been proud that his etching ‘Old House with Flowers’ sold on opening day. More importantly, it was here that he met Ferdinand Schmutzer (1870-1928), then President of the Academy and one of the most important Viennese portrait artists of the period. Schmutzer was also a master etcher and the Academy’s Professor of printing. Recognizing Eggeler’s abilities, he invited Eggeler to join his spezialschule (special school) of graphic arts which, despite the latter’s misgivings regarding the Academy in general, he accepted.

    At the outbreak of war in July 1914 Eggeler enlisted but, for reasons unknown, was shortly discharged as ‘unfit for service’, which enabled him to continue his law degree and his fledgling ‘second life’ as an artist. With the Secession building now re-purposed as a Red Cross hospital, exhibitions were now mounted at the nearby Künstlerhaus (Artists house) and although his work was reviewed and even achieved modest sales, Eggeler felt that he was never going to make a career as an artist. Thus, upon his graduation in 1917, he left his art materials in Vienna and took up a post as a k.k. (imperial and royal) trainee involved with the restructuring of the civil service for the local district authority in Gmünd, a small town 75miles N.W. of Vienna.

    Life outside the capital, with its wartime shortages and rationing, was more relaxed but Eggeler found the job dull and the town very provincial and so retrieved his art supplies and resumed his practice. Alongside numerous drawings and several commissioned portraits and no doubt partly influenced by the war, his work began to emphasize darker themes such as suicide, death and, especially, the danse macabre in which cowled and skeletal figures are shown menacing towns and properties or emerging from woodlands and lakes to claim their oblivious victims. This period of work culminated in 1918 with his two earliest ZyklenPuppenspiel III (Puppet Show III) and Die Seuche der Pestilenz (The Plague of Pestilence).

    Eggeler produced a number of Puppenspiel cycles, all involving characters from the Commedia Dell’arte such as Pierrot, Pierrette, Harlequin, and Pantalon. The Commedia Dell’arte, especially the tragicomic figure of Pierrot, had been a popular source of inspiration for the decadent writers of the previous century such as Paul Verlaine, Jules LaForgue. and Leon Hennique (the latter writing a Pierrot play in collaboration with J-K Huysmans). These writers tended to portray a darker more violent side to Pierrot than earlier authors but a common theme is  his struggle to attain love and wealth, efforts for which he is invariably thwarted by destiny and the cunning of others.

    Puppenspiel III is a grotesque tale of tragedy in which Pierrot kills his newly-wedded wife’s (Pierrette) lover in a duel, only to be murdered by the lover’s friend. The friend is caught, convicted and executed alongside the adulterous Pierrette. Eggeler stated that it was in part inspired by the ‘most gruesome photos’ of wedded couples he had seen displayed in a Gmünd photographer’s window.

First image from the Puppenspiel III portfolio (1918).

Die Seuche der Pestilenz took part of its inspiration in old tracts on folklore and witchcraft, both long-standing interests of Eggeler that he would often draw on in his artwork, but is also surely influenced by the Spanish ‘flu pandemic of 1918. This cycle concerns a witch contaminating a town’s water supply and poisoning the entire population. 

First image from the Die Seuche der Pestilenz portfolio (1918).

    “On the suggestion of a friend” he put both forward for the 1919 spring exhibition in Vienna’s Künstlerhaus. Much to his surprise the works were accepted and the Die Seuche der Pestilenz won the prestigious Dumba prize, named after Austrian art patron Nikolaus Dumba (1830-1900). The Künstlerhaus also appointed him as a member and his ‘second life’ as an artist was effectively launched.

    Eggeler capitalized on this with a solo exhibition at the Halm and Goldmann Gallery in Central Vienna in October that year, in what would be the only solo show of his career. Alongside Die Seuche der Pestilenz are two earlier Puppenspiel cycles (Puppenspiel II appears in Issue 3 of Kokain ) and Der Narr und der Teufel (The Fool and the Devil), in which Harlequin labours seven years for the Devil only to be immediately robbed of his wages at a local Inn and must thus return to his master to begin the process again. There was also a cycle on the legend of St Simeon tempted to leave his pillar by the Devil, a series of ‘Eight Bad Dreams’ and various portraits and self-portraits. Sadly many of these images, some of which dated back to 1913 are lost or, as in the case of Der Narr und der Teufel, dispersed, although the Fitzbauer archive does hold the complete series of the latter’s preparatory drawings.

    An Eggeler notebook of the 1920s details the extraordinary amount of new work produced over that period. In 1920 alone, alongside numerous single etchings, landscapes and portraits (some of these commissioned), he produced seven cycles of drawings, two for stories by renowned supernatural author E.T.A. Hoffmann (one of Eggeler’s favourite authors) and seven drawings for Faust, drawing inspiration from the chapbook versions of the Faust legend rather than Goethe’s play. Three of the Cycles, (Amine, Die Drei Freier (The Three Suitors) and Walpurgisnacht (Walpurgis Night) would all later be published as limited edition print portfolios.

    The most intriguing production of this period is Der Spielmann und der Teufel im Verwunschenen Schloss (The Musician and the Devil in the Haunted Castle), another portfolio consisting of six hand-tinted woodcuts. Although Eggeler would use both linocuts  and woodcuts as mediums for producing numerous ex libris labels, this is the only cycle Eggeler ever produced using this technique. Its time-consuming method of production and its initial edition of only twenty copies printed locally perhaps indicates this to be a more personal than commercial project. The story concerns a violinist arriving in a new town and winning the hand of the Innkeeper’s daughter by removing a devil that lives in a ruined castle nearby. This is achieved by charming the devil with his music and then trimming the devil’s talons so that he is also able to play the instrument.

The first image from Der Spielmann und der Teufel im Verwunschenen Schloss (self-published 1920)

It is interesting to note that the musician figure bears some resemblance to both Eggeler (who also played the instrument) and the virtuoso violinist Niccolò Paganini (1782 - 1840); the latter’s abilities were sometimes said to have been the result of a pact with the devil. It is also perhaps significant, although it is almost as an aside in the notebook, that Eggeler (an artist/musician in a small town) mentions his marriage to Ottilie Löwy, the fourth of six children of a successful Jewish store owner in Gmünd that same year.

Ottilie Löwy (Etching) 1919 (© Fitzbauer archive).

    Also not mentioned in the notebook is the appearance of Eggeler’s work on two local authority vouchers relating to the Jugendhilfswerk (Youth Relief Organisation) which offered holidays to children and youths.

    Partly funded by central government, local authorities were also expected to contribute to the scheme, and as part of that effort some regions issued vouchers for various denominations that could be redeemed at various youth hostels. Eggeler produced two designs showing the hostels at Gmünd and nearby Gaming, which appeared as part of a series of vouchers issued in June 1920.

Five Kronen and fifty Heller vouchers designed by Eggeller (c1920) 

    The Walpurgisnacht prints were not published until 1922 but are of  interest as the portfolio includes a two-page ‘preface’ written by one of Eggeler’s favourite living writers, Gustav Meyrink (1868-1932) now best known as the author of The Golem (1915).

    Eggeler had initiated a correspondence with him in an attempt to generate collaborative projects and would almost certainly have been aware of Meyrink’s long-standing personal interest in the occult which had begun in semi-mysterious circumstances while suffering a nervous breakdown in 1891. Meyrink had written a novel titled Walpurgisnacht in 1917, but whereas his  tale was one of political upheaval, Eggeler’s etchings were more primal and inspired by the folklore of the pagan ‘Witches’ Night’ traditionally held on May 1st eve. In his short one page preface, Meyrink refers to a ‘cosmic Walpurgisnacht’ and the alignment of a black starless hole over the Southern Cross which is a portent of disaster, a feeling evoked when Meyrink views Eggeler’s etchings.

The first image from the Walpurgisnacht portfolio (Frisch and Co. 1922).

    That same year Eggeler would also produce illustrations for Meyrink’s short story ‘Der Mann auf der Flasche’ (The Man On The Bottle) a surreal tale of revenge which owes something to Poe’s tale ‘Hop Frog’. It was issued by the same publishers of Walpurgisnacht (Frisch & Co.) a year later in a deluxe edition of 300 copies. In a letter to Eggeler, Meyrink informed him that he thought the etchings were  “beautifully original”.

     

Illustration from Der Mann auf der Flasche’ (Frisch & Co. 1923)

    Eggeler also sought collaborative work with the controversial German author Hanns Heinz Ewers, a relationship that seems, from the surviving letters between them, to have been one of mutual admiration.

    Ewers (1871 -1943) was another best-selling author of the period whose novels and short stories such as The Sorcerer’s Apprentice (1910) and Alraune (1911) were suffused with occultism and perversity. This was backed by a high-rolling decadent lifestyle of drink, drugs and sex that gave him the reputation as someone who was, like Lord Byron, ‘mad, bad, and dangerous to know’.

    Ewers loved Eggeler’s artwork, stating that he was the only one of the fifty or sixty so artists that had approached him who had any style and value. Their mutual sympathies and a joint interest in the macabre and grotesque led to some of Eggeler’s best, and controversial, work. In Musikalische Miniaturen (Musical Miniatures), (Frisch & Co. 1921) the prose and imagery seem to complement each other perfectly. The opening sentences indicate their joint credo: “More than ever before, for today’s artist the dream is life itself. And that is certainly the case for the artist who created these prints. In them, he tells about his life – about the dream that is life for him. He is Pierrot and sings his song of love and death to Columbine, the woman he loves”.

    The texts and images which follow portray Columbine in the various decadent tropes of Madonna, whore and ultimately witch; the final image ‘Death Game: The Burning of Witches’, having as its text “She is a saint to him – but also a witch who atones at the stake for her pact with the devil”.  In it  Columbine is shown naked on a pyre surrounded by skeletal figures’ one of which is violating her. This image (with its centrally placed vagina) resulted in the portfolio being prosecuted for obscenity. 

The first and final (prosecuted) image from  Musikalische Miniaturen (Frisch & Co. 1921)

    In contrast, his illustrations for Ewers’ volume Die Herzen der Könige (The Hearts of Kings) (also published by Frisch & Co. in 1922) are more suggestive and dreamlike rather than a literal interpretation of the story which concerns a painter using colours prepared from hearts stolen from the corpses of the French kings. The tale is based on an urban myth relating to the French Alsatian painter Martin Drölling (1752-1817) who was said to have purchased the hearts of Kings stolen from the Saint-Denis Basilica in Paris during the revolution and mixed them with his pigments, which are supposedly used in his Intérieur de cuisine (Kitchen Interior) still on show in the Louvre today.

    Eggeler would no doubt also have relished informing Ewers that as part of the burial process of the Habsburg Emperors, the bodies are interred in the Imperial Burial Crypt beneath the church and monastery of the Capuchin Friars’ but their hearts are removed and separately placed on display in a separate crypt at the nearby Augustinian Church. 

Illustration from Die Herzen der Könige (Frisch and Co. 1922)

    Such was their artistic rapport that in October 1922 Ewers and Eggeler discussed the possibility of Eggeler licensing two of Ewers’ tales ‘Der Letzte Wille des Stanislawa d’Asp’  (The Last Will of Stanislawa d’Asp) and ‘Die Topharbraut’ (The Tophar Bride) for film adaptation. Ewers had long been interested in film as a medium of poetic expression and had experienced critical and commercial success for his art movie The Student of Prague in 1913 so it is possibly an indication of how highly he regarded Eggeler to allow this. Although Ewers would later form his own production company in 1928 there is no record of either of these projects being developed.

    If Ewers was regarded as something of a ‘low-brow’ author, Arthur Schnitzler was regarded as a more ‘intellectual’ if equally controversial heavyweight. Schnitzler (1862-1931) was a member of the ‘Young Vienna’ school of writers and had initially trained, alongside Freud, as a neurologist before taking up a career in writing. He is now perhaps best known for his novella Traumnovelle (Dream Story), (1926) which was the basis for Stanley Kubrick’s film Eyes Wide Shut, but his most controversial work was Reigen (often translated a bit clumsily as Hands Around or Round Dance), (1910), a play which consists of ten short dialogues between couples. In the first, a prostitute attempts to pick up a soldier, the soldier subsequently sleeps with a housemaid who in turns then sleeps with a young gentleman and so on up the social ladder until a Count seeks out the prostitute of the first scene and the cycle (or ring) is complete. Reigen was not publicly performed until 1920, and when it premiered in Berlin was almost immediately closed down and prosecuted for indecency, a situation repeated when it was performed in Vienna a few months later. The subsequent public scandal played out in the press and led to various anti-Semitic attacks on Schnitzler who was described as a ‘Jewish pornographer’.

    Eggeler had approached Schnitzler in early 1921, around the time of the Viennese performance and was perhaps hoping to capitalize on the controversy. He would ultimately produce a suite of ten drawings for the play which were published as both a deluxe portfolio and a limited edition book. Schnitzler liked Eggeler personally, considering him talented and amusing company, but did not like the etchings which he thought displayed too much nudity.

     In the booklet accompanying the portfolio, Eggeler writes “In the end, we came to a compromise so to speak, I was willing to dress the Actress in a transparent night-gown, while he permitted the Young Wife to remain naked, although he would have preferred to see her clad in a nightshirt.”

Illustration from Reigen (Frisch and Co. 1921)

    Although he did not care for the Reigen illustrations, Eggeler successfully negotiated with Schnitzler to illustrate a limited edition of the latter’s Der Schleier der Pierrette (The Veil of Pierrette), a play in which Pierrette, finding herself unable to marry Pierrot, suggests a suicide pact with him. However, it is only the hapless Pierrot who drinks the poison. 

Illustration from Der Schleier der Pierrette (Frisch and Co. 1921)

    Eggeler also suggested illustrating Schnitzler’s plays Der Grüne Kakadu (The Green Cockatoo) and Die Schwestern (The Sisters) to no avail and perhaps inspired by his discussions with Ewers regarding film rights, wrote and submitted a potential film treatment (now lost) for Reigen early in 1923. Schnitzler thought the latter “horrible” and their relationship appears to have petered out from this time onward.

    It is at about this time that Eggeler’s style moved from meticulous etchings to the looser more expressionistic pen and ink style. The first fruits of this were published in a volume of Edgar Allan Poe tales Wilde Träume. Eine Auswahl seiner Erzählungen (Wild Dreams. A Collection of his Stories) edited and introduced by Karl Hans Strobl and a collection of  ‘contes cruels’, Novellen Der Grausamkeit by French symbolist Auguste Villiers de l'Isle-Adam (1838-1889) both published in 1923.

Morella from Poe's Wilde Träume. Eine Auswahl seiner Erzählungen (Verlag Der Graphishen Industrie 1923).
 
    It is unknown what prompted this change, but it is possible that as hyperinflation took hold in Germany (in early 1922 the US. dollar was worth 160 German Marks, by November of 1923 that dollar was worth 4,200,000,000,000), together with the collapse of the bibliophile market meant Eggeler needed to find new outlets for his work to support himself and his growing family which now included two daughters, Dora (born in November  1921), and Margit (born in September 1924). Had his contract in Gmünd expired? Was he transferred back to Vienna (the Eggelers were certainly living in Vienna again in 1926) or was he made unemployed? We will probably never know. Directories of the period list Eggeler as ‘artist’ and ‘graphic designer’ which suggests that he was still attempting to maintain a career as an artist rather than a municipal administrator. Any of the above circumstances might have led to him coming into contact with Kokain’s publisher Fritz Bauer.

    Fritz Bauer is something of a mystery man in this story, which was perhaps something deliberately desired by him given that when he does appear in various newspaper reports of the period it is in the context of his being a journalist-cum-occasional publisher whose efforts tended to leave a trail of debts in their wake.

    Eggeler would have been useful to Bauer not only for his artistic abilities, but because of his connections with well known (and controversial) authors whose potential contributions to the magazine might help generate interest in, and perhaps even create a succès de scandale for, the new publication. 

    It is perhaps surprising that Eggeler had never worked in such a commercial environment prior to Kokain, as his work would have been ideally suited to a magazine such as Der Orchideengarten, (The Orchid Garden), the worlds first fantasy magazine, which ran from 1919-1921 under the part editorship of Karl Hans Strobl. This might have been because Eggeler considered himself a ‘fine’ as opposed to ‘commercial’ artist and wished to maintain his distance from such ventures, although Der Orchideengarten included work by well known and respected artists such as Alfred Kubin and Aubrey Beardsley.

    However, it is apparent that Eggeler took to his new role as Kokain’s art editor with dedication and the magazine laid out its credentials with its debut issue in January 1925. The cover proclaimed it to be a ‘Moderne Revue’, its titles seemingly crudely cut and hastily pasted above an illustration depicting a dark moment of a presumably lost weekend in which a leering man is fondling the breast of a seemingly oblivious dishevelled ‘snowbird’ in the shadows of a distorted townscape.

Front cover of the first issue of Kokain


    This edginess continued between its covers; the lead story being a risque tale of New York by Ewers followed by tales of crime, revenge and the supernatural from the pens of Kurt Münzer, Karl Strobl and Martin Keleti  together with the first instalment of the anonymously written ‘Diary of An Extraordinary Woman’, a lesbian spy serial set in international high society. Eggeler produced all the illustrations for the first issue ias well as numerous vignettes, head and tailpieces. Even some of the typefaces used for titles are customized by the application of extra dots and flourishes. 

    Subsequent issues showed the same attention to detail and its contributors made an impresive line-up including further works by Ewers (some under pseudonyms) and other popular but now largely forgotten authors such as Otto Soyka, Joseph Roth and Arthur Zapp. 

    It is also worth noting that the magazine carried a significant number of items in translation by the likes of Leonid Andreyev (one of the best-known authors of the ‘silver age’ of Russian literature), The brothers Karel and Josef Čapek (best known for inventing the term ‘robot’),  Paul Leppin (‘the German-Bohemian Baudelaire’) and Joseph Roth (author of The Radetzky March). Whilst, on the one hand, this might be seen as a refreshing change from ‘home-grown’ material, on the other, it was also the case that copyright laws at that time were somewhat ineffective and thus the original writers of the pieces that appeared under their name might never have known of their appearance or, more pertinently, been paid for their contributions. Their pieces to the magazine rarely appears in their bibliographies.  

    As it has been impossible to locate any information regarding some of the other contributors to Kokain this might indicate that some might be pseudononymous.  Ewers certainly contributed various pieces under his own and alternate names and this begs the question as to whether Eggeler wrote anything apart from the short signed piece  ‘Dearest, Dearest Model’ in Issue 3. Sadly, as no original material relating to Kokain appears to have survived and the only other known pieces of published prose from Eggeler’s pen during his lifetime is a short technical booklet relating to printing techniques; Der Almanach vom Schönen Buch (The Almanac of the Beautiful Book), Artur Wolf (1924) and a very dry contribution to a legal book we will probably never know.

    Kokain appears to actively courted controversy from the off and it quickly fell foul of the Austrian censors. The controversial cover of Issue 1 and the lesbian spy serial resulted in it being banned from public display making it literally 'under the counter' but it ran into major problems over Issue 3 with Erwin Stranik’s story ‘In The Cellar Hole’ and Max Stebich’s ‘The Yellow Cat’ both of which included graphic sexual content and in the case of Stranik appalling anti-Semitism. These tales, the ongoing ‘Diary...’ serial and Eggelers artwork led to the magazine’s seizure and prosecution with Eggeler, Bauer and Stranik charged with obscenity.

    It is unclear how it came to pass that the fourth issue (which was a reprint of the previous issue with the addition of an essay on pornography by Erwin Stanik written in reaction to the prosecution) evaded the authorities a second time, but what was certain was that the magazine could not continue its battles with the authorities and survive, especially as tensions between publisher Bauer and artistic editor Stefan Eggeler began to get greater. 

    The final issue is a mixture of short reprinted material with the most substantial contributions being from ‘Raoul Romain’ (Ewers) and Eggeler’s etchings for Schnitzler’s The Veil of Pierrette; the latter’s accompanying text written by Fritz Bauer rather than, as might have been expected, either Schnitzler or Eggeler. The final pages of that issue are advertisements seeking staff for W[iener] Z[eitung] am Abend (Vienna Evening News) the big, interesting, richly illustrated daily newspaper that will appear in Vienna soon.

    The WZ was Fritz Bauer’s latest publishing venture, the ‘WZ’ implicitly standing for Wiener Zeitung (Vienna Newspaper), disingenuously suggesting an affiliation with Vienna’s (and the world’s) longest-running newspaper of that name.

    Bauer’s version only ran until October that year until he was prosecuted for non-payment of various outstanding bills, mainly wages to journalists. At the same time the police banned the sale of Kokain via street sales, newspaper shops and from public display in shop windows, in effect withdrawing it from its market. In a letter to Ewers written after these events, Eggeler states he is filing [unspecified] criminal charges against Bauer, calling him a “cheeky crook” and asks Ewers “not to be angry with me for bringing you into such company!”

    With the collapse of Kokain, Eggeler’s artistic life seems to have virtually ceased and there are no records of further publications including his work. However, he did continue to remain a member of the Vienna Künstlerhaus and, for a few years in the late 1920s, he collaborated with various groups such as the Vienna watercolourist society and the School of Arts and Crafts to design and decorate rooms of the building as part of various Künstlerhaus’ arts’ festivals. In 1929 the building hosted events in rooms decorated under the themes of  ‘Venusberg’, ‘Hexenküche’ (Witches Kitchen), ‘Walpurgisnacht’, ‘Mäusefalle’ (Mousetrap) and ‘Der Garten der Menschenfresse’ (The Garden Of The Cannibals), while the following year saw rooms decorated under themes such as  ‘Eros’ (Hermaphrodite), ‘Opiumhöhle’ (Opium den) and ‘Sodom’. To judge from these titles, they might easily have been suggested by Eggeler. A few photographs of these proto-environments have survived but only one has been identified as having his definite involvement.

Venusberg (1929). The only definitely identified decorations made in collaboartion with Eggeler.
Image (by Julius Scherb) courtesy and © of the Künstlerhaus-Archiv, Vienna. 

    Although Eggeler appears not to have contributed to other Künstlerhaus events he remained a member (with a few lapses) until his death and was awarded the Künstlerhaus’ Golden Laurel for this long-standing association on the occasion of his 70th birthday in 1965.

    The Künstlerhaus decorations are the last we know of Eggeler’s artistic career and would also mark the end of almost any biographical information regarding him, were it not for the recent discovery of a cache of letters exchanged between Ottilie Eggeler and her sister Hedwig Pöllinger during the late 1930s and the work subsequently carried out by a descendant of the Pöllinger family. This new information makes for disturbing and contradictory reading.

    In March 1938, after the annexation of Austria under the Anschluss (the pretence of ‘unifying’ Austria and Germany) and the swift removal of the main political opposition, the Nazis began a systematic program of seizure of Jewish property under a process termed Aryanization. As the comfortably off Löwy family were Jews they were an obvious target and would ultimately be stripped of their property, but just prior to that, Eggeler launched a lawsuit against Ottilie’s brothers Karl and Hermann Löwy, claiming that they had defrauded their widowed mother before her death in 1936.

    In the court papers, the brothers claimed that Eggeler’s action was motivated by revenge, because they had not acquiesced in his attempt to take over the business immediately post Anschluss, ostensibly, so Eggeler claimed at the time, to protect it from the Nazis. Furthermore, they alleged that he had stolen correspondence from the shop’s office on an earlier visit, to concoct his case. They also pointed to a letter from Stefan to their mother in 1936 that indicated that he was in financial difficulties and seeking her support,  threatening to leave Ottilie and the children in her care should she fail to provide some assistance. Finally, the brothers noted that one would have expected the other Löwy siblings to have supported Stefan’s allegations had they any merit.

    Karl and Hermann also backed their defence by providing forensically examined accounts demonstrating the falsity of Eggeler’s claim and the case was swiftly settled in the Löwy families favour.

    What must have been particularly distressing to the family members is that Eggeler deliberately used Nazi expressions, such as signing off his letter about taking over the business ‘Mit Deutschem Gruss’ (‘with a German greeting’ i.e. the Nazi raised arm salute), an entirely unnecessary and intimidatory gesture.

   However, this shameful episode contrasts markedly with the subsequent assistance Stefan renders to Ottilie’s older sister Hedwig concerning Hedwig’s fourteen-year-old child Otto who he helped to escape to England the following year.

    Otto’s mother Hedwig had fled to England in March 1939 to escape her violent anti-Semitic ex-husband and the Anschluss while Otto (partially protected because he was, by Nazi definition, a ‘Mischling’ i.e. ‘half breed’) had remained at a boarding school in Vienna with the Eggeler’s looking after him at the weekends. Both Otto and the Eggelers were partly supported by the Löwy family who had by this time lost their property to the Nazis and were now also living a precarious existence in the capital. All concerned were attempting to get Otto a passport to allow passage on a ‘Kindertransport’ to join his mother in the UK, a move opposed by the ex-husband who wished his son to have an ‘Aryan upbringing’.

    It was Stefan who managed to convince Otto’s father to sign a document that gave Stefan the legal authority to sign Otto’s passport and thus allow Otto to leave Vienna, just in time to catch the imminent ‘Kindertransport’ on July 11th, to join his mother in England.

    Whilst this was a brave move by the Eggeler’s who, by looking after Otto, experienced abuse and risked false accusations from Otto’s father that could have been lethal, there is also an element of self-interest in proceedings as Eggeler had asked his sister-in-law (via Ottilie) if she might also be able to help him get a visa to England.

    It is difficult to reconcile these two seemingly contradictory actions by Stefan and one must wonder at the state of their marriage during and after these events. Life for Jews in Nazi-occupied Vienna had become more precarious day by day and Ottilie was increasingly ostracised by Stefan’s family, his widowed mother adopting the racist ideology of the Nazi's and banning family visits to her. It was only the fact that Ottilie was in a so-called ‘privileged’ marriage to an Aryan that was saving her from being deported to a concentration camp from 1941, although there is evidence she was made to do forced labour at a munitions factory.

    Given this backdrop, it is thus incredible that in June 1944 when almost all of Austria’s 200,000 Jews had been expelled or deported to their deaths, Stefan initiated divorce proceedings against Ottilie, something he must have known would put her life in jeopardy and possibly those of his ‘Mischling’ daughters too. Fortunately for them, Ottilie’s lawyer was able to appeal to a Government decree issued the year previously which stated that non-war-essential court proceedings would be held over until after the war was won. That it worked out differently for Austria did not change matters: Stefan re-initiated proceedings as soon as courts began functioning again in mid-1945.

    From what we know of the divorce papers, Stefan claimed an irretrievable breakdown through Ottilie’s mismanagement of the household budget together with other failings over such petty issues such as cleaning and repairing his clothes. He claimed that the marriage had actually been in trouble for a long time and that Ottilie had gone to a lawyer almost twenty years previously (interestingly that would be around 1925/26 the Kokain period) to instigate proceedings against him, but had not followed through at that time for the sake of the children.

    Ottilie robustly defended herself by stating that Stefan had previously indulged in extra-marital affairs and that from late 1943 was spending nights away, a claim backed up by a witness statement from the mistress’ flatmate. With regards to money, what he gave her barely covered the essentials and that during their domestic rows he was violent towards her, calling her a Judensau (Jewish sow) and using similar derogatory terms towards their daughters. It was also denied that the marriage was as irretrievably broken as early as he had claimed.

    Given the weight of evidence against him, the Court decided that it was Ottilie and not Stefan who was the aggrieved party in proceedings and Eggeler was forced to pay alimony to her from the wages he was receiving from his then employment at the Springer publishing house, one of Germany’s largest publishers.  These payments would continue for many years with occasional adjustments when Eggeler changed jobs such as when he began to work for the E-Werke electrical company (responsible for the city’s power stations) in the late 40s and later, the legal department of the Vienna Stadtwerke (Municipal works).

    For her part, Ottilie remained in Austria until 1967, when she joined her daughter Dora, who had since married a Canadian, in Toronto. She remained there until her death in 1968.

    Eggeler remained in Vienna, remarrying in 1948 (not to the lover named in the divorce proceedings) and, it is assumed, continuing to work for the Vienna Stadtwerke until his retirement in the mid-sixties. He contributed to the book of Österreichisches Elektrizitätsrecht nach dem Stand vom 1.6.1956 (Austrian Electricity Law As Of June 1st, 1956).

One of the few known photos of Stefan Eggeler c. 1950 (© Fitzbauer archive).

    It was not until the late sixties that he was ‘rediscovered’ by Erich and Inge Fitzbauer who, after finding one of his portfolios in an antique store, located him by the simple expedient of looking him up in the telephone directory. When they visited him in the small studio flat he maintained next to his apartment they found him kind, courteous and content, surrounded by his collections of books, antiques and musical instruments which included a harmonium upon which he would play pre-Bach music. However, he was reticent about his art and it was not until their third or fourth visit that he showed them any of his original prints and drawings, jokingly referring to the effort it had taken to remove them from the upper shelves. He told them that he no longer made art and when the Fitzbauers suggested that perhaps he should, he replied that he didn’t ‘wish to dirty his hands,’ an enigmatic reply that might refer to either the physical process itself or his previous difficulties with the censors. When he was taken to visit the group show ‘Die Entwicklung der Wiener Schule’ (The Development of the Vienna School) at the Künstlerhaus in July 1968 (which included some of his work, the first exhibition of his work for nearly forty years), the Fitzbauers reported him as seemingly disengaged, appearing to regard his artworks as part of a life that had long ceased to have any great importance to him. The Stefan of the 1920s had long gone. Stephan Eggeler, the retired lawyer would die on July 17, 1969.

    Eggeler’s indifference to his artwork in later life has been mirrored by that of the art world in general. Had he persevered or been re-discovered earlier he might perhaps have been given due recognition for his remarkable oeuvre. Aside from two other exhibitions, one in the Künstlerhaus almost immediately after his death organized by a Künstlerhaus member Karlheinz Pilcz (also a part of Fuch’s ‘fantastic realist’ school) and another organized by the Fitzbauers in 1980, his work has remained largely unseen and ignored. His renaissance is long overdue. It is hoped this essay might assist in some small way towards this.