Alma - The Film
Part 2: The Bride of the Wind
After Mahlers death, ALMAs second marriage, in
1915, is to Walter Gropius. During all the years in which
he is forming the Bauhaus movement and revolutionizing the
world of design, she remaines at his side.
Yet neither does this liaison endure. After she has availed
herself of his »precious Aryan seed«, from which
the beautiful, shortlived Manon is born a pure
angel, to whom Alban Berg created a memorial with his Violin
Concerto the once so passionate relationship ends in
agony and alienation.
This relationship is however already overshadowed by ALMAs
excessive relationship with the enfant terrible of the Viennese
art scene, the young painter Oskar Kokoschka. In the seething
cultural environment of Vienna before the
First World War, Kokoschka arouses a furious sensation both
through the ncompromising nature of his painting and also
as the author of two theatre plays about sex and violence.
In 1912 he begins a passionate affair with ALMA Mahler which
lasts for three years. The two live and travel together, and
when they are not making love, Kokoschka paints her. In 1913,
Kokoschka creates an allegorical representation of their love
affair, »The Bride of the Wind«, a vivid image
in which the two lovers are whirling around the space. Even
on ALMAs birthday, Kokoschka refers to his immortal
loved one as a »wild creature« and is convinced
that they are »united in the Bride of the Wind
forever«.
Kokoschka is the ace of hearts among ALMAs four trump
cards. Nevertheless she sees herself forced to break up with
him since Kokoschka comes more dangerously close to her inner
being than any of her men before, or indeed after; until the
end of life she will refuse to see him again. Apart from the
countless paintings and drawings which testify to this anguished
relationship, there is also a saucy lifesize doll, a
faithful reproduction of ALMA down to the most intimate details,
which Kokoschka makes in 1915 in order to console himself
for the loss of his loved one. The doll is destroyed in an
extravagant orgy in Dresden, in 1919.
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