Thursday, June 30, 2011

Dramaturg's Statement

Researching for a play like Woyzeck is about at arduous as trying to make the plot 100% linear. Upon the playwright’s death, the scripts’ scenes were left unassembled and, some argue, missing the rumored ending with Woyzeck being on trial. As a whole, the play is considered an “unstable” text which poses many problems concerning author’s intent, story line and etc. There is also no mention of a specific town, state, or country for the setting or even a specific time period. In fact, Prussia (where Buchner was from) was split up into a bunch of little kingdoms, independent cities, towns and et cetera that made the whole country very discombobulated. However, there are clues to many textual problems that can be answered by the ideas the play presents.
We know Georg Buchner began writing the play around 1836 and remained unfinished at the time of his death in 1837. In Prussia, around this time, was going through a period that came to be known as the German Romanticism which presented ideas Buchner tossed aside. In fact, critics say that Woyzeck is a critique of the social system that was in place at that time. Buchner, and a number of other rebels, sought to depict the world realistically and filled with hopelessness, monotony, and suffering which came to be known as Bourgeois Realism. In this point in history, poverty ran amok, cholera spread like wildfire and where butcher's meat was a luxury. The average life expectancy was low and child mortality was very high. The three main antagonist in Woyzeck are from a higher social class and openly express and exert their view of the world in this light upon our protagonist which helps lead him to his demise.
Even though all this information is helpful to get into the right frame of mind for the characters in Woyzeck, the play structurally still poses to be a problem. Should the text be approached as a fragmented piece or should there be an attempt to piece it together to make a comprehensible story? Many productions approached the text “as is” but added little nuances that assisted in telling the overall story.  The Rough Magic SEEDS ran away with the "theatricality is key" idea by presenting the show in a cabaret style. The Clarence Brown Theatre took a different approach by presenting the work with all the familiarities of a normal play but used minimal props accompanied by artistically simple lighting. In 2006, the California Institute of the Arts approached Woyzeck as a work of art (as it is such) and literally presented it that way. They performed the show in a form of gallery setting where the audience followed a green line on the floor that led them around the space as scenes were happening. The show was performed in a 40 minute loop repeating three times and the audience could stay as long as they liked. However, The Brooklyn Academy of Music took the play Woyzeck to a whole new world, in 2008, by writing music for the show, giving new jobs to the characters and occasionally would throw in some lines from Buchner’s script. They also grasped the extreme theatricality idea that worked with the other productions but Charles Isherwood felt that they went too far. He felt that the artistic team strayed too far from the text and almost wasn’t the same story. Overall, past productions of Woyzeck that seemed to get the most positive reviews had just the right amount of theatricality and knew when to pull back.
If our artistic team were to approach this as a theatrical piece as opposed to a more realistic play, then casting Georg Buchner’s Woyzeck Non-Traditionally will add to the beauty of the work. There is no indication in the script to necessary physicality of the characters except that Marie should be attractive in order for the Drum-Major to have motivation to pursue her and the child is…well…a child. If the play were to be presented as a realistic interpretation instead of having that circus feel, then many Traditional casting considerations would arise. Eventhough, some of the roles in Woyzeck, like the apprentices', children, and students, lack a specific sex in their character descriptions, there are certain ones who MUST be their perspective male/female roles. Not only is it against copyright law to cast characters opposite to their gender specific roles, the 1800's is an unforgiving time period in which you could not publicly have homosexual relationships, therefore, Woyzeck and Marie or the Drum-Major and Marie could not be the same sex. Casting the play Non-Traditionally would give the production team more artistic liberties than the latter.
As the play is textually unstable, anyone who attempts to produce the play will have to overcome some obstacles. Different productions have tackled these hurdles differently but the ones who were the most successful at it, didn't make the work Woyzeck into something that it wasn't. My advice would be to present Woyzeck artistically but still respect the non linear style and the focus of the delusional "antihero" in the text.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Producing Woyzeck Statement

     As with any production, Woyzeck has problems within the text that must be addressed during pre-production. Upon the playwright’s death, the scripts’ scenes were left unassembled and, some argue, missing the rumored ending with Woyzeck being on trial. As a whole, the play is considered an “unstable” text which poses many problems concerning author’s intent, story line and etc. These concerns raise the question that if produced, should the text be approached as a fragmented piece or should there be an attempt to piece it together to make a comprehensible story? Another problem would arise when coming up with a set design because the script calls for numerous locations throughout the show and we spend very little time there. Even the transitions pose a problem as there are so many of them. How would a production team handle the transition between scenes so as to avoid blackouts in order to keep fluidity of the piece and hold the audience's attention and interest? Would the actors do the transitions themselves or have crew members do the work? Since Woyzeck is so fragmented, how would a production team set the appropriate mood for the entire show?
     If Sam Houston State University were to produce Woyzeck in the upcoming UTC production season, there would be some problems in that area as well. We would have to decide which space would be most suitable for the play (Erica Starr or Showcase) so that the audience can either feel more connected to the characters or feel a sense of alienation. If it were decided to produce Woyzeck in the Showcase, the problem of having a substantially smaller budget would emerge. What kind of accommodations would need to be made in order for the show to work on a mere $200? Would it be best to take a minimalist approach or to allow the designers free reign with what was already available in the theatre? The community itself may pose a problem as they are more comfortable in seeing a Tennessee Williams or Rogers and Hammerstein show than one of this nature. Patrons may feel that it is a waste of their money to see a show that they don't fully understand.  
   Past productions of Woyzeck have overcome the aforementioned obstacles in numerous creative, and effective ways. In 2006, the California Institute of the Arts approached Woyzeck as a work of art (as it is such) and literally presented it that way. They performed the show in a form of gallery setting where the audience followed a green line on the floor that led them around the space as scenes were happening. The show was performed in a 40 minute loop repeating three times and the audience could stay as long as they liked. Showcasing the piece in this manner would negate the need to make Woyzeck into a totally comprehensible story with a beginning and end. The Clarence Brown Theatre took a different approach by presenting the work with all the familiarities of a normal play but used minimal props accompanied by artistically simple lighting which is the current style of plays done in the Showcase theatre (it's easy on pocketbook). The Rough Magic SEEDS ran away with the "theatricality is key" idea by presenting the show in a cabaret style. By adding that layer of artificiality to the play would allow the audience to grasp the dark message but at a safe distance. 
   The critiques had mixed reviews about the various styles of Woyzeck but a trend that I found was that if you shouldn't stray too far away from the script and that the show is more easily digested if it is almost presented in circus form. In 2008, The Brooklyn Academy of Music wrote music for the show, gave the characters different jobs, and would occasionally recite scripted lines from Buchner's version. The critiques were in awe over the piping, the tank the actors would swim in, but Charles Isherwood felt that they went too far. Rachel Andrews felt that the Rough Magic Seeds version of Woyzeck had just the right amount of theatricality because the director knew when to pull back. In the majority of the reviews I read, the critiques respected the non linear style and the focus of the delusional "antihero" in the text and as long as they could see that respect in the productions, it was an overall good review.   

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Production History of Woyzeck

Producing Organization: Jim Henson Foundation
Theatre/Venue: Joseph Papp Public Theatre/Newman Theatre
City, State: New York, NY
Month(s), Year: November 23, 1992 - January 3, 1993Director: JoAnne Akalaitis
Designers: Marina Draghici (set), Gabirel Berry (costumes)

     Because of the nonlinear style and the focus on an irrational antihero, the play is open to free-handed interpretation. In search of "Woyzeck," Ms. Akalaitis uses alternate scenes and extracts from early drafts of the play, filtering Henry J. Schmidt's translation through her fervid theatrical imagination. The difficulty this director has had in dealing with Shakespeare is not in evidence in her treatment of Buchner. - Mel Gussow
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Jeff Diamond as WoyzeckProducing Organization: Clarence Brown Theatre (University of Tennessee)
Theatre/Venue: Carousel Theatre
City, State: Knoxville, TN
Month(s), Year: Oct. 7-24, 2010
Designers: Christopher Pickart (Set Design), Kenton Yeager (Lighting Design)

     The set and lighting are perfect for this play. Very few props are used, making the setting appear barren and impoverished. In a similar fashion, the lighting is simple but artistically done. In one dramatic scene, Marie and Woyzeck stand at opposite ends of the stage. They are each cast in spotlights. The mood is tense and somber. The circus scene is perhaps the best example of the lighting effects. As the mood transitions from tense to jovial, the lights change from blue side lights to white overhead lights. Woyzeck and Marie visibly become happier. The entire atmosphere is changed with simple, yet artistic, lighting. The performers and set designers certainly help to make Woyzeck a great performance, but it doesn’t hurt that the play is also well written and translated. - David Barnett
http://utdailybeacon.com/entertainment/2010/oct/11/woyzeck-rendition-captivates-audiences/

     Brilliantly shaped by director John Sipes, whose conception of an ending to Buchner's unfinished theatrical journey is more than worth one's time and cost of admission, there is not a false step in the entire production. 
     Set on Christopher Pickart's starkly brutal, linear stage that becomes a kind of character in the play, the social structure of "Woyzseck" is sharply delineated by costume designer Marianne Custer's frank demarcation of dirt-drab clothing for Woyzseck and the rest of the underclass, while those on the ruling rungs above them appear in full color.
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Producing Organization: Upstream Theatre
Theatre/Venue: Not Specified
City, State: St. Louis, MO
Month(s), Year: 04/17/09 - 05/03/09
Designers: Michele Siler (Costume Designer), Steve Carmichael (Lighting Designer)



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Producing Organization: California Institute of the Arts
Theatre/Venue: Butler Building 2
City, State: Valencia, CA
Month(s), Year: 2006
Designers: Jeanette Yew (lighting), Katie Midlam (costume)

http://www.portfolio.theatercalarts.com/torrybend/set+design/woyzeck/

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Producing Organization: Rough Magic SEEDS
Theatre/Venue: S.S. Michael & John, Dublin
City, State: Temple Bar, Dublin 8
Month(s), Year:
Designers: Sinead Wallace (lighting), Laura Howe (costume)

     ...we are moved to pity by the contrast of emotions he elicits through presenting tragedy in cabaret style. It is a brave but in this instance very effective step as juxtaposing tragedy against an opposite background could so easily result in farce. But, not here. This is a highly imaginative, clever, very sexy production of a play that can be anything but. - Patsy McGarry
http://matttorney.com/Woyzeck_Review.html

     Director Matt Torney sets the play in its own era, but creates a Brechtian-like artificiality by overlaying it with a cabaret atmosphere...
     Torney has also set himself a risky experiment, and it is hard not to wonder if he will succeed in merging the production's stylised nature with the tragic realism of the play itself. But if this director's voice is strong, it is also careful, and Torney knows when to pull back... - Rachel Andrews
http://www.matttorney.com/Woyzeck_review_2.html

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Producing Organization: Jim Henson Foundation/Handspring Puppet Company of South Africa
Theatre/Venue: Joseph Papp Public Theatre
City, State: New York, NY
Month(s), Year:
Designers: William Kent (director & production designer)

In his latest incarnation, Woyzeck has found himself a new skin (black), a new homeland (South Africa during apartheid), a new job (servant) and, perhaps most fitting of all for a creature so bedeviled by society, a new medium of expression: he is now a puppet. - Lawrence Van Gelder
http://www.nytimes.com/1994/09/08/arts/theater-review-woyzeck-highveld-woyzeck-puppet-still-yanked-around-life.html
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Producing Organization: A Vesturport Theater of Iceland and Reykjavik City Theater production
Theatre/Venue: Brooklyn Academy of Music, Howard Gilman Opera House
City, State: Brooklyn, NY
Month(s), Year: September-December 2008
Designers: Borkur Jonsson (set), Filippia Elisdottir (costumes)

Helmer Gisli Orn Gardarsson has hit on something highly clever here: some elderly, idea-rich dramas go down more smoothly when presented in circus form. - Sam Theilman
http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117938729?refCatId=33

...it’s hard to fathom what attracted these artists to Büchner’s deeply pessimistic play, since they so blithely disregard both its letter and its spirit. - Charles Isherwood
http://theater.nytimes.com/2008/10/17/theater/reviews/17woyz.html


Friday, June 17, 2011

Statement of the World of Woyzeck

Georg Buchner began writing Woyzeck around the year 1836 while residing in France where the play remained unfinished upon his death in 1837. There is little indication to where the play is set and what time period the author intended for us to portray. However, Georg Buchner was born and raised in a rural setting near the town of Darmstadt. Darmstadt, all of Prussia (former kingdom and state of Germany), and multiple global affairs were undergoing philosophical, artistic, and government turmoils that parallel those that the characters undergo in Woyzeck. Therefore, I believe it would be appropriate to set the play where Buchner grew up...a world he was intimate with. 
In 1836, Prussia was going through what we now call German Romanticism, which does not mean that everyone was all starry eyed and writing romantic poems.  It was, in fact, a movement that looked to the Middle Ages for a simplier and more unified life. People were striving to better themselves and the world around them. The Germany we know today had not yet been born but was divided into "several hundred kingdoms, principalities, duchies, bishoprics, fiefdoms and independent cities and towns (Source)." (think Texas' counties but each of them having different forms of government) The country and, it seemed, the entire world (Battle of the Alamo occurred February 23 – March 6, 1836) was going through a state of rebellion to the old way of life in hopes of a new beginning...a renaissance of sorts. This way of thinking led to advancements in railways, more comfortable housing laws, innovative medical practices and et cetera. In 1834, the German Customs Union treaty (Zollverein) was enacted which created economic unification by removing tarriff and trade barriers among 18 of the German States and the predecessor of the present-day university (Technische Universität Darmstadt) was founded in 1836.However, all this was still in its baby stages; still learning, growing with mistakes being made along the way. We know today that a man living off only peas is not a good idea, but this world hadn't fully grasped that concept yet.
One of the main topics that I came across upon my research of Woyzeck was that this piece was a critique of the social system that was in place at that time. He completely rejected the ideas of the Romantics and decided to "realistically depict what he saw as the hopelessness of life in a world where isolation, monotony, and suffering prevail and are perpetuated by deterministic historical and biological forces (source)." Buchner was not the only critical mind during the German Romanticism movement. Many movers and shakers such as Heine, Ludwig Börne and Karl Gutzkow tossed aside the ideas of Hegel and Goethe in favor of a more political form of literature. Some were condemned to periods of imprisonment from which Buchner narrowly escaped. This innovative literature came to be known as Bourgeois Realism. 
The world in which this play is set is where poverty ran amok, cholera spread like wildfire and where butcher's meat was a luxury. The average life expectancy was low and child mortality was very high. The three main antagonist in Woyzeck are from from a higher social class and openly express and exert their view of the world in this light upon our protagonist which helps lead him to his demise. Woyzeck presents "a picture of material distress, of physical and psychical sickness, of degradation and humiliation at the hands of a society which systematically refuses to recognize him as a human being (Buchner)." People of higher social status of the 19th Century had a cold hearted attitude towards the poor. They believed that anyone could become successful through arduous work so if you were penniless, homeless and hungry it was your fault. People did not look to others for help and the government did not provide positive resources for the lower class to go to. This was still dark and alien world from which are familiar with today.
As you can see, the world in which Georg Buchner was raised (Darmstadt) would be an appropriate setting  in that the philosophical, artistic, and government turmoils parallel those that the characters undergo in Woyzeck. I believe that by placing the play directly into the world in which Buchner was so intimately familiar with will only bring us closer to understanding his intent and the story of Woyzeck itself. 

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Micro View of the World of Woyzeck

  • Darmstadt is a city in the Bundesland (federal state) of Hesse in Germany, located in the southern part of the Rhine Main Area.
  • The sandy soils in the Darmstadt area, ill-suited for agriculture in times before industrial fertilisation,[2] prevented any larger settlement from developing, until the city became the seat of the Landgraves of Hessen-Darmstadt in the 16th century.
  •  Darmstadt is one of few cities (as opposed to smaller towns) in Germany which does not lie close to a river, lake or coast. It can also boast being the sunniest city in the state of Hesse.[4]
  • The length of the first train track that was built in Bavaria in 1836 between Nuremberg and Furth was only 6 miles, but by 1840 that had expanded to more than 500. (1)
  • 1834 German Customs Union treaty (Zollverein) creates economic unification by removing tarriff and trade barriers among 18 of the German States.(1)
  • 1836 the predecessor of the present-day university (Technische Universität Darmstadt) was founded. Source  
  • German Romantics disagreed with Goethe and Kant that there were rules and limitations in one's moreal life and literature.(1)
  • In 1836 Hesse-Darmstadt was an absolute monarchy with full power resting in the person of the Grand Duke (properly styled Your Royal Highness). This was, of course, Ludwig II at the time- second of Hesse-Darmstadt's Grand Dukes. The Grand Duke controlled all aspects of government. He directed the state in both internal and foreign affairs, was head of the national (Lutheran) church, was head of the only government ministry (the Department of State), and created and implemented all laws from his palace in the capital city of Darmstadt. He was commander of the military and director of the large and well-funded constabulary force that patrolled the cities and towns. The various justices who presided over the nation's courts were also hand-selected by the Grand Duke as well. Source
  • The people of Hesse-Darmstadt could be divided into two simple catagories: those living in the rural areas of the county and those living in it's cities and towns. In 1836 Hesse-Darmstadt had a population of 1,463,000. Of this number more than three quarters were farmers living in rural communities, with only 365,000 inhabiting the Grand Duchy's cities and towns. Source
  • Economically Hesse-Darmstadt was heavily dependent on the goods produced by it's farmers. There were many orchards and ranches in the Grand Duchy and the fruit and cattle they produced made up nearly all of Hesse-Darmstadt's exports. The only other goods produced on the farms were grown in small quantities and were meant for the personal consumption of the farmers, thus Hesse-Darmstadt did not export grain as many other German nations did. Source
  • The only industry that existed in Hesse-Darmstadt in 1836 was a textile mill that produced fabric for export. However, the Grand Duchy lacked the resources to run the mill on it's own and was forced to import the necessary goods. Complicating this problem was the fact that, because the Grand Duchy's income from exports was so meager, policy was to keep a very heavy tariff on imports in place. This, of course, meant that getting the supplies necessary to run the textile mill cost the owners more money and was a source of some contention between them and the ducal government. Source
(1) Biesinger, Joseph A. Germany: a Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present. New York, NY: Facts On File, 2006. Print.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Macro View of the world of Woyzeck


Life in the 19th Century

Natural Disasters 



  • Russia, 1830-31: cholera (500,000 dead)


  • Hungary, 1831: cholera (100,000 dead)


  • Cairo, 1831: Cholera epidemic, which spreads to London


  • London and Paris, 1832: Cholera epidemic (25,000 dead) Source.



  • Government History
    Prussia led a group of 18 German states that formed the German Customs Union in 1834, and the Prussian Thaler eventually became the common currency used in this region. The Customs Union greatly enhanced economic efficiency, and paved the way for Germany to become a single economic unit during the 19th Century's period of rapid industrialization. Austria chose to remain outside the German Customs Union, preferring instead to form its own customs union with the Hapsburg territories--a further step down the path of a unified Germany that did not include Austria. Source.



    German Romanticism - In the philosophy, art, and culture of German-speaking countries, German Romanticism was the dominant movement of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. German Romanticism developed relatively late compared to its English counterpart, coinciding in its early years with the movement known as German Classicism or Weimar Classicism. In contrast to the seriousness of English Romanticism, the German variety is notable for valuing humor and wit as well as beauty. The early German romantics tried to create a new synthesis of art, philosophy, and science, looking to the Middle Ages as a simpler, more integrated period. As time went on, however, they became increasingly aware of the tenuousness of the unity they were seeking. Later German Romanticism emphasized the tension between the everyday world and the seemingly irrational and supernatural projections of creative genius. Heinrich Heine in particular criticized the tendency of the early romantics to look to the medieval past for a model of unity in art and society.

    Bourgeois Realism
    The deaths of Hegel in 1831 and of Goethe in 1832 released many German writers from the feeling that they stood in the shadow of great men. A new group of writers, only very loosely connected, began to emerge who felt that the aesthetic models of the age of Goethe could be laid aside in favour of a distinctly political form of literature. Inspired by the July Revolution in France (1830), these young German liberals aimed to have a direct impact on social, political, and moral realities. They opted in the main for literary forms such as pamphlets, essays, journalism, and satire. The agitations of this period gave rise to a tradition of political lyric, exemplified by the work of Heinrich Heine, which continued to provide models for political poetry into the late 20th century. Many of the “Young German” writers were prohibited from publishing their writing in Germany, because of their opposition to feudal absolutism and their promotion of democratic ideals. Some produced their works in exile, as in the case of Heine, whose long poem Deutschland, ein Wintermärchen (1844; Germany, A Winter’s Tale) presented a damning critique of his native land, and Ludwig Börne, whose Briefe aus Paris (1831–34; Letters from Paris) provided an influential record of the political ferment in France. Others were condemned to periods of imprisonment, as were Karl Gutzkow for his novel Wally die Zweiflerin (1835; Wally the Sceptic) and Heinrich Laube for his journalistic activity in support of political liberalism. Georg Büchner narrowly escaped imprisonment following the publication of his radical socialist pamphlet Der hessische Landbote (1834; “Messenger to the Hessian Peasants”), an attack on authoritarian government in his native Hesse. He is best known for his revolutionary drama Dantons Tod (1835; Danton’s Death) and for his remarkable dramatic fragment and critique of the social class system, Woyzeck (1879; Eng. trans. Woyzeck), published posthumously.

    The Battle of the Alamo (February 23 – March 6, 1836)
      LIFE IN THE 19th Century
      • In the early 19th century only wealthy people had flushing lavatories. However in the late 19th century they became common.In the early 19th century poor families often had to share toilets and on Sunday mornings queues formed.Given these horrid conditions it is not surprising that disease was common. Life expectancy in towns was low (significantly lower than in the countryside) and infant mortality was very high. British towns and cities suffered outbreaks of cholera in 1831-32 and in 1848-49. Fortunately the last outbreak at last spurred people into action.
      • In the early 19th century most of the working class lived on a dreary diet of bread, butter, potatoes and bacon. Butcher's meat was a luxury.
      • In the early 19th century housing for the poor was often dreadful. Often they lived in 'back-to-backs'. These were houses of three (or sometimes only two) rooms, one of top of the other. The houses were literally back-to-back. The back of one house joined onto the back of another and they only had windows on one side.The bottom room was used as a living room cum kitchen. The two rooms upstairs were used as bedrooms. The worst homes were cellar dwellings. These were one-room cellars. They were damp and poorly ventilated. The poorest people slept on piles of straw because they could not afford beds.
      • The worst thing about poverty in the 19th century was the callous attitude of many Victorians. They were great believers in 'self-help'. That is they thought everyone should be self-reliant and not look to other people for help. They also believed that anyone could become successful through sheer hard work and thrift. Logically that meant that if you were poor it was your fault. Many Victorians (not all) felt that the poor were to blame for their poverty. 

      Sounds & Images from World of Woyzeck

      Music
      Fantasie in C major, Op. 17, was written by Robert Schumann in 1836
      The Fantasie is in loose sonata form. Its three movements are headed:
      The first movement is rhapsodic and passionate; the middle movement (in E flat major) is a grandiose rondo based on a majestic march, with episodes that recall the emotion of the first movement; and the finale is slow and meditative. Source


      The Marriage of Figaro (Overture) - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart     Source

      Rory O'Moore, Samuel Lover, 1797-1868; Irish melody; adapted by Samuel Lover. Source 


      Art:
      Forest Path near Spandau, 1835 by Carl Blechen. Classic German
      Nazarene Movement
      Jacob encountering Rachel with her father's herd
      Joseph von Führich 1836


      Deutsch: Italia und Germania (Sulamith und Maria)
      Johann Friedrich Overbeck 
      German Romanticism
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Romanticism
      Moonrise Over The Sea
      Caspar David Friedrich, (1774–1840)



      Owl on a Grave, 1836-7

      by Caspar David Friedrich
       Cementery
      Caspar David Friedrich
       Man and Woman Contemplating the Moon
      Caspar David Friedrich
      Graveyard under Snow
      Caspar David Friedrich