<p>'A well-researched and very welcome addition to Goethe studies. The authors show, without being dryly academic, how imaginative thinking can develop.'<br />-- Margaret Jones, Anthroposophical Society in Great Britain Newsletter, June 2006<br /><br />'An important study centering around Goethe's famous Italian Journey in the autumn of 1786.'<br />-- David Lorimer, Scientific & Medical Network Review, Spring 2006</p>
Goethe wrote his Italian Journey during his travels south to Italy in the late eighteenth century. David Lowe and Simon Sharp spent 10 months re-creating his journey day-by-day; this unusual and fascinating study into how the twin pillars of Art and Nature influenced Goethe, is the result.
Goethe's writings oscillate between his experiences of Palladio's classical architecture, and experiencing nature. For the first time, David Lowe and Simon Sharp pull these two strands together and show how they are related: how the living geometries and harmonious proportions of buildings can reflect similar principles in nature. Specifically, they argue that Goethe's experiences in Italy helped form his understanding of metamorphosis, leading to his discovery of the 'archetypal plant'.
Follows Goethe's Italian Journey to discover how Art and Nature jointly influenced his work on metamorphosis.
1. Introduction
2. Imagination and the Senses
3. The Way to All Art and Life
4. From the Brenner Pass to Venice
5. The School of Seeing
6. Conclusion
Appendix I: Quotations from Goethe's Italian Journey
Appendix II: The Mysterious Architecture of the Formative Process