Tag Archive | "amber eyes"

The Ephrussis Brought to Life – By David Pryce-Jones – David Calling – National Review Online

The Ephrussis Brought to Life – By David Pryce-Jones – David Calling – National Review Online

1321263383 19 The Ephrussis Brought to Life   By David Pryce Jones   David Calling   National Review Online

I have just returned from Vienna, where I went to celebrate the launch of the German edition of Edmund de Waal’s the Hare with Amber Eyes. This tells the story of the Ephrussi family, who were bankers and businessmen originally from Odessa and once household names. Edmund has an Ephrussi grandmother (to declare an interest, I have an Ephrussi great-grandmother). By profession he is a ceramicist, very well known.  This is his first book, and a runaway success everywhere. I think the Viennese publisher Zsolnay said to me that he had already sold 30,000 copies in a few days.

The book is marvellously well written, but that doesn’t explain why it is such a hit. the reason seems to be that what happened to the Ephrussis is something everyone can identify with, something of a parable. Settling in Vienna, in the 1860s they built a Palace on the Ringstrasse, a huge and extraordinary monument on six floors around an enclosed courtyard. Here was standing evidence to their wealth, success, and their evident belief that they were assimilated, so socially acceptable that the city’s rabid anti-Semitism wouldn’t affect them. Wrong, of course. Fortune, creativity, taste, enterprise, social connections, counted for nothing when the Gestapo had its day.

The Palace today belongs to a company called Casino Austria. the rooms are a riot of painted ceilings, ornament, gilding, massive panelling and doors, all restored to former standards. a throng of maybe 200 or more gathered in the courtyard. There were speeches. a representative of the city council asked the crucial question: What had Austria lost by expelling or killing its Jews? Edmund followed up: the book was an act of restitution, meaning that memory of the expunged family was returning to Vienna. he spoke as he writes, movingly free from the anger or self-pity that might have come naturally.

Enthusiastic Nazis and anti-Semites, Austrians like to pretend that they were victims of Hitler. This is how they cover the fact that Casino Austria owns this Palace, and not the Ephrussis, or that when the family bank was Aryanised Herr Steinhausser, its manager for twenty-seven years, took possession of it and after the war saw nothing wrong in what he’d done.  If anyone can humanise the Austrians and get them to see the truth of their conduct and their history, it is Edmund de Waal.

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Rabbit Tales at the Seattle Asian Art Museum

Rabbit Tales at the Seattle Asian Art Museum

1316649859 64 Rabbit Tales at the Seattle Asian Art Museum

what is The Hare with Amber Eyes

Is it “a masterpiece” (Sunday Times), “the most enchanting history lesson imaginable” (The new Yorker), “the perfect book” (Vogue), a “tale of a family heirloom that misses the bigger picture” (The Guardian), or “too much, too little” (some random Amazon reviewer)? well, short of reading the book yourself, the best way to find out is to hear the author discuss the book live. and, next Monday, you will have just such an opportunity, as Edmund de Waal will be presenting a multimedia event about his memoir The Hare with Amber Eyes at the Seattle Asian Art Museum.

Edmund de Waal is a noted English ceramicist whose book journeys back in history to track the fortunes and tragedies of his Euphrussi family forebears. Readers are introduced to banking barons, magnanimous art patrons, and the glittering world of Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. However, the journey also explores the loss and sadness of WWII Austria, a time during which the prominent Jewish banking family did not fare well. but more than just another mid-century memoir, the family’s history is interwoven with the fate of a set of Japanese netsuke figurines that were originally collected by Charles Ephrussi in Paris in the late-1800s and now sit on the shelf of Edmund de Waal. The Hare with Amber Eyes has garnered significant acclaim, debuting on the new York Times paperback list at #20 and at #14 on the Indie National Bestseller list.

Seattle Asian Art Museum // Volunteer Park // September 26 // 7pm // Free

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