User:Claudiamoon/Drafts-Goethe-Schiller Monument (Rietschel)

Goethe-Schiller Monument, is a public artwork by German artist Ernst Friedrich August Rietschel, located in Washington Park, which is in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. The bronze sculpture from 1908 depicts two men, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friedrich von Schiller, one holding a laurel wreath and the other a scroll. The 12 foot artwork rests upon a 26 foot long granite base.

Description
The Goethe-Schiller Monument consists of two idealized men standing side by side. One of the men, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe passes a laurel wreath to the younger man, Friedrich von Schiller, who holds a scroll in his proper left hand. Goethe is attired in a knee-length coat, a shirt with a ruffled collar, a vest and leggings. Schiller is attired in a mid-calf length coat, a vest and leggings. The sculpture stands atop a tiered granite base containing an exedra. The sculpture has three inscriptions. On the lowest left side of the sculpture it says: RIETSCHEL, ERNEST F. On the front of the plinth, in incised letters, it says: GOETHE SCHILLER. On the front of the base it says: GOETHE SCHILLER. The granite base contains three plaques. The plaque on the left side reads:

Was Du ererbt von Deinen

Vatern hast Erwirb es,

um es zu besitzen

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

1749-1832

Weltburger-World Citizen

The plaque on the right side reads:

Wer nichts waget

der durf nichts hoffen

Friedrich von Schiller

1759-1805

The plaque in the center reads:

Erected by the German Citizens of Wisconsin

and dedicated to the city-June 14, 1908

Rededicated September 4, 1960

German-American Societies of Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's 250th birthday

August 28, 1749

celebrated on August 1, 1999 by the

German-American Societies of Milwaukee, Wisconsin

The Goethe-Schiller Monument is administered by the Milwaukee County, Department of Parks, Recreation and Culture.

Historical information
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friedrich von Schiller were both highly influential German poets, dramatists and writers that became friends in Weimar, Saxony. The Germans that came to the United States after 1848, as well as the German thinkers who came after 1870, brought Goethe and Schiller's ideas with them.

Originally, the Milwaukee Swabian Benevolent Society wanted to erect a monument to Schiller, a fellow Swabian, but other Milwaukee German societies wanted to participate in the monument's creation. In 1902 thirty organizations and various private donors, including local families such as the Vogels, Brumders, and Nunnemachers, formed a monument association to raise funds for the artwork. They raised $10,000 for the monument and $5,000 for the pedestal. "In 1908, a coalition of German groups had little trouble agreeing that Germania in Milwaukee should be represented by a copy of the bronze statue created by artist Ernest Rietschel for the front of the Dresden Court Theater in Weimar, Saxony. The larger community was quick to accept the monument." The Milwaukee monument was thus cast by the Lauchhammer foundry in Poland from the 1848 original mold.

The monument was dedicated on June 12, 1908 as part of a great celebration that included thousands of people singing and reading Goethe's and Schiller's works, a dedication speech by Christian Steger, and a gymnastics demonstration. The monument had to be moved from its previous location in Washington Park to its current location west of the Emil Blatz Temple of Music in 1960 because of Highway 41's location. The rededication ceremonies took place on September 1, 1960. A time capsule that had been placed in the base of the monument was found. It contained both German and English newspapers and magazines, records of the Schiller-Goethe Association and copies of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and Social Democratic Herald.

There are four copies of the Goethe-Schiller Monument in the United States. They are located in Milwaukee, San Francisco, Syracuse, and Cleveland.