{"id":35667,"date":"2022-02-11T07:16:05","date_gmt":"2022-02-11T06:16:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/?p=35667"},"modified":"2022-02-24T08:28:12","modified_gmt":"2022-02-24T07:28:12","slug":"miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/","title":{"rendered":"Miss Sabashnikov \u2013 Anthroposophy, Russia, and Christian Paintings"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Margarita Woloschina found answers to her questions of life and knowledge in Rudolf Steiner and in anthroposophy. As a painter, she developed a new art in which she sought Christ and completed her work with great seriousness and completely unsentimental.<\/p>\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator\"\/>\n\n<p>The Waldorf teacher Ernst Wei\u00dfert wrote in 1972 on the occasion of the 90th birthday of Margarita Woloschina (1882\u20131973): \u00abThis Russian person, who has been at home in Germany for forty years, lives among us, despite all the familiarity, enigmatic like a secret ambassador of the past and future of Russia, of Central European esotericism, of the radiantly risen Goetheanum, which was so soon snatched from the earth, of Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s artistic impulse reaching far into the future.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-1-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-1-35667' title=' Ernst Wei\u00dfert, in: Rosemarie Wermbter (Hg.), Margarita Woloschina. Life and work. Stuttgart 1982, p. 5. '><sup>1<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"h-die-reiche-herkunft\">Rich Origin<\/h3>\n\n<p>Margarita Woloschina had a remarkable childhood and youth in ancient Russia, in extremely wealthy circumstances. Her father owned gold mines in Siberia, forests and estates in central Russia, and houses in Moscow. He ran a tea wholesale business with China and traveled with her through the vastness of Russia. The entrance hall of the magnificent house in Moscow, where she grew up, was converted into an Egyptian temple in which the \u2039guardian of the threshold\u203a was approached between columns decorated by hieroglyphs. Horse and cart stood in front of the house with the coachman. Two of her father&#8217;s brothers owned a famous publishing house, and his cousin Theodor Sabaschnikov was the first in Paris to publish Leonardo da Vinci&#8217;s works in facsimile print and had become an honorary citizen of the city of Vinci. Margarita&#8217;s mother was the granddaughter of Moscow&#8217;s Mayor Koroljew, the first Russian merchant visited by a tsar. Under these circumstances, Margarita received a brilliant education, got to know many languages, history, and art, but also ancient Russia, not least through the numerous servants, including the nannies: \u00abThey sewed and sang, individually or in choir, monotonous, melancholic folk songs, and the words of these songs created in my soul a world of archetypes, from which I drew the mood for my artistic work throughout my life. [&#8230;] There is a Russian proverb: \u2039Nourish how the Earth nourishes, teach as the Earth teaches, love as the Earth loves.\u203a When I later heard the word \u2039Mother Earth\u203a, I saw a face in front of me that was similar to my nurse Feklusha.&#8221;<span id='easy-footnote-2-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-2-35667' title=' Margarita Woloschina, The green snake. Memoirs. Stuttgart 7, 1997, p. 18 f.'><sup>2<\/sup><\/a><\/span> Margarita experienced Russian Christianity, the prayers in front of the icon in the morning and in the evening, the unforgettable Easter. From the age of 10 to 13 she was with her mother, brother Aljoscha, tutors and servants in other European countries, in the Swiss mountains, in France, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, and in Germany. She met Memling in Bruges and Rembrandt in Amsterdam, Leonardo&#8217;s Last Supper in Milan, Raphael in Florence \u2013 she, who had an extraordinary capacity for acceptance and experience, for art and nature, sensitive and spiritually gifted. She copied paintings in the museums, attended an art school in Paris for months, had great teachers in the art of painting after her return to Moscow, including Ilya Repin in Petersburg. But Tolstoy, from whom she sought advice for her path in art, disappointed her; a craftswoman or farmer&#8217;s wife, as he said, who paints in the evening for recreation, she did not want to and could not become. It wasn&#8217;t all easy. The misery of the declassified classes had not escaped her as a child (\u00abI felt responsible for all the suffering in the world.\u00bb) <span id='easy-footnote-3-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-3-35667' title='Ibid., p. 93.'><sup>3<\/sup><\/a><\/span>); In a youthful way, she experienced the devastating power of the materialistic view of the world and human beings. Then she found Plato, the Bhagavad Gita, and Vladimir Solovyov&#8217;s \u2039Justification of the good\u203a \u2013 and loved the objectively spiritual in mathematics. She achieved great success with her first paintings, finally went to Paris and freed herself from her family, worked in studios, and, together with her future husband, the painter and poet Max Woloschin, met great artists, including philosophers such as Bergson. Nevertheless, she continued to ask about the meaning of art and its relationship to life.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter size-large is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloshina-Selbstportrait-1905-736x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-35263\" width=\"368\" height=\"512\" srcset=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloshina-Selbstportrait-1905-736x1024.jpg 736w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloshina-Selbstportrait-1905-216x300.jpg 216w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloshina-Selbstportrait-1905-770x1072.jpg 770w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloshina-Selbstportrait-1905-1103x1536.jpg 1103w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloshina-Selbstportrait-1905-1471x2048.jpg 1471w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloshina-Selbstportrait-1905.jpg 1500w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 368px) 100vw, 368px\" \/><figcaption>Self-portrait, Margarita Woloschina, 1905. Art Museum of Penza, Russia.<\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"keiner-will-selber-denken\">Nobody wants to think for themself<\/h3>\n\n<p>In Zurich, where she had come to in 1905, she heard a lecture by Rudolf Steiner, at the age of 23. \u00abFor the first time, I heard about a path to the knowledge of the higher worlds corresponding to our time. I looked up close at Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s profile, heard his warm, enthusiastic voice, and took every word like good news. Is it really possible that there is a knower, a real messenger of the spirit in our time?\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-4-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-4-35667' title='Ibid., p. 153.'><sup>4<\/sup><\/a><\/span> In the fall of 1905, through the mediation of Anna Minslova, she was able to take part in Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s internal training course in Berlin (\u2039Grundelemente der Esoterik\u203a (Basic Elements of Esotericism), met Mathilde Scholl, Eugenie von Bredow, Eliza von Moltke, Sophie Stinde, Countess Pauline von Kalckreuth, and Marie von Sivers. \u00abHe spoke about the spiritual precursors of the Earth and human beings. I often wondered by what capacity in ourselves we could follow these descriptions at all, since those states of the Earth, those levels of consciousness of human beings were so little similar to ours. I had to wonder that there are still pictures, still words in our language to describe them. Was one addressed by these descriptions because something of those past worlds had remained in us and around us and was only lifted into the light of consciousness by the word, something primordial, innate? Man himself, connected to the universe from the primordial beginning and only gradually detaching himself from it, is he not to be deciphered as a hieroglyph into which the whole world is secreted? Is it not a fruit of the past, in which at the same time the core of the future lies? I realized that I was not a random guest on Earth, but a co-responsible person who could become a helper in the act of salvation. The myths in which I have lived since my childhood have now turned out to be an essential reality.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-5-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-5-35667' title='Ibid., p. 157.'><sup>5<\/sup><\/a><\/span> In the following years, although she often traveled back and forth between Russia and Paris, she attended many of Rudolf Steiner&#8217;s great courses, in Berlin and Hamburg, Paris, Oslo, Helsingfors, Nuremberg, Kassel, and Munich. She did not understand everything by any means: \u00abAs Steiner already then spoke about the coming catastrophes, about the war of all against all, about the fission of the atoms and the resulting annihilation, I listened to him completely uncomprehending \u2013 what kind of catastrophes could come in our so firmly established, humane culture?\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-6-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-6-35667' title='Ibid., p. I58.'><sup>6<\/sup><\/a><\/span> She had many one-on-one conversations with him about the inner training path and the art, the history, the present, and the future. \u00abI don&#8217;t want to press you, but I want to help you like an older brother.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-7-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-7-35667' title='Ibid., p. 199.'><sup>7<\/sup><\/a><\/span> Again and again, he gave her exercises and took her inner path tremendously seriously. \u00abThe great warmth that emanated from it acted like an invigorating force on me.\u00bb She told him about a spiritual experience of nature in Russia and asked him about meditative sayings for the course of time and year. He promised her the sayings (\u00ab&#8230; that he would give them later and that he understood very well what I wanted\u00bb, April 21, 1909<span id='easy-footnote-8-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-8-35667' title='Margarita Woloschina, From diary entries. In: Erika Beltle, Kurt Vierl (Hg.), Erinnerungen an Rudolf Steiner (Memories of Rudolf Steiner). 1st Edition. Stuttgart 1979, p. 55.'><sup>8<\/sup><\/a><\/span>); at Easter 1913, four years later, he showed her the recently published \u2039Seelenkalender\u203a (Soul Calendar) in Helsingfors.<\/p>\n\n<p>She did not always feel comfortable in the circles of anthroposophists. The circle of followers surprised her, also in Hamburg, during the course on the Gospel of John. \u00abThe men seemed pedantic and philistine to me and the women prosaic and at the same time sentimental. In ancient times, it was probably other people who followed a spiritual messenger?\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-9-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-9-35667' title='See N0. 2, p. 199 f.'><sup>9<\/sup><\/a><\/span> She also told Steiner again and again about her doubts, about herself and about others. \u00ab\u2039I have witnessed some parts of the Russian church service too real to doubt their truth. [&#8230;] In Russia, you are serious and simple in church, here, everyone is sentimental and sweet.\u203a \u2039Sweet?\u203a \u2013 He started laughing. \u2039But there is nothing in me that would evoke sentimentality.\u203a \u2039Not in you, but everything is projected in the opposite way to what you want. You want freedom and thought, and the opposite arises; here your authority prevails and no one wants to think for themself.\u203a \u2039Yes, but I want nothing else than freedom, that depends on the people themselves.\u203a \u2039Is there no danger that the sublime words lose their power, for example, the names of the hierarchies, if they are repeated more often?\u203a \u2039But I do not say them in vain.\u203a \u2039I mean the other people.\u203a \u2039That is their tactlessness then.\u203a \u2039But you give these words, and you can&#8217;t ask people what they don&#8217;t have in them.\u203a \u2039That will pass. In 2000 years it will be different.\u203a\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-10-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-10-35667' title='See No. 8, p. 55 f.'><sup>10<\/sup><\/a><\/span> Such conversations did not only take place once \u2013 not many people talked to Rudolf Steiner in this way; few had Woloschina&#8217;s stature, her spirit, her sense of quality and level, her spiritual tact, and her directness in dealing with him. She was saddened that he had Schur\u00e9&#8217;s plays staged: \u00ab \u2039What he writes is a rough illustration, but not art.\u203a \u2039It would be wrong to think that if I had his stuff performed, it would also mean that I liked it. But there is nothing else at the moment, and people need it. To you, it seems unsympathetic that I do this?\u203a I couldn&#8217;t see it. \u2039Yes, you see, if I were of a tranquil nature like you, I would not have spoken otherwise. I understand you very well \u2013 but I have to act.\u203a\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-11-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-11-35667' title='See No. 8, p. 57 f.'><sup>11<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"alignleft size-large is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloschina_Marg-720x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-35261\" width=\"360\" height=\"512\" srcset=\"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloschina_Marg-720x1024.jpg 720w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloschina_Marg-211x300.jpg 211w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloschina_Marg-770x1095.jpg 770w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloschina_Marg-1080x1536.jpg 1080w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloschina_Marg-1440x2048.jpg 1440w, https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/SP2_Woloschina_Marg.jpg 1500w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 360px) 100vw, 360px\" \/><figcaption>Margarita Woloschina, 1914. Archive at the Goetheanum<\/figcaption><\/figure><\/div>\n\n<p>\u00abThere were probably not very many at that time who, like her, fully understood what he meant and what he wanted,\u00bb wrote Rosemarie Wermbter, who knew Margarita Woloschina like few others and took care of her work.<span id='easy-footnote-12-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-12-35667' title='Rosemarie Wermbter (Hg.), Margarita Woloschina. Life and work. P. 135.'><sup>12<\/sup><\/a><\/span> Also with life at the Goetheanum in the years of the war, it was for \u2039Miss Sabashnikov\u203a, as Rudolf Steiner called her by her maiden name (\u00abintentionally\u00bb, as he told her), not always easy. \u00abI found our life in Dornach, closed off from the world, to be sectarian and averse to life. Apart from Michael Bauer, who else was interested in the cultural phenomena of the modern world? Who would want to deal independently with the phenomena of this world? We knew everything before we experienced it. There was always a quote from Rudolf Steiner between us and being. Didn&#8217;t Rudolf Steiner intend the opposite? Didn&#8217;t I have to gain my own experiences?\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-13-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-13-35667' title='See No. 2, p. 301 f.'><sup>13<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n<p>He talked to her a lot about spiritual Russia, the importance of anthroposophy for the future of Eastern Europe, and also about Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, and Solovyov. \u00abHe stands in a penitential shirt before Christ for all humanity,\u00bb he once told her about Dostoevsky.<span id='easy-footnote-14-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-14-35667' title='See No. 2, p. 203.'><sup>14<\/sup><\/a><\/span> Among important anthroposophists, she was sometimes uncomfortable, although not around Michael Bauer, who became a friend of hers and accompanied her inwardly even in times of need, such as in Russia from 1917 to 1922.<span id='easy-footnote-15-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-15-35667' title='Cf. Peter Selg, Michael Bauer. A colleague of Rudolf Steiner. Dornach 22021, p. 95 f.'><sup>15<\/sup><\/a><\/span> She once wrote about Felix Peipers and the architects Schmidt-Curtius and Ernst Uehli that they were \u00absolemn, tall, serious people\u00bb who dedicated their lives to the service of Dr. Steiner&#8217;s work. \u00abHer words are thorough and factual, the jokes cumbersome. You can feel such solidity, such seriousness in everything. You can rely on such people. But \u2013 how bored am I with them! Have I been poisoned forever by those brilliant Russian scoundrels? I learn, learn from the Germans, but sometimes the heart grasps such a longing for Russia. But it is doomed, this insane, pathless Russia! No, it&#8217;s not true: it&#8217;s Ivanushka, the dumb one, where the beautiful ring is wrapped in a dirty rag, but the ring has it &#8230;\u00bb (March 8, 1912)<span id='easy-footnote-16-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-16-35667' title='See No. 8, p. 59.'><sup>16<\/sup><\/a><\/span> About the endangered development of the Russian soul, in all its longing and talent, she heard from Rudolf Steiner in detail in Helsingfors, where he also held the Easter meal with her and other Russians (in the course \u2039The spiritual beings in the celestial bodies and kingdoms of nature\u203a). \u00abYou shall, my dear [&#8230;] friends, experience the spiritual through the soul. You shall find the soul to the spirit. You know it because the Russian people&#8217;s soul has immeasurable depths and possibilities for the future.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-17-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-17-35667' title='Rudolf Steiner, The connection of human beings with the elementary world. ga 158. 4th Edition. Dornach 1993, p. 205.'><sup>17<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n\n<h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"die-christliche-kunst\">Christian Art<\/h3>\n\n<p>At the actual center of the encounter, however, were her questions about art, eurythmy, mystery dramas, sculpture, and painting.<span id='easy-footnote-18-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-18-35667' title='Cf. Peter Stebbing (Hg.), Conversations with Rudolf Steiner about painting. Memories of five pioneers of the new art impulse. Arlesheim 2015, p. 135\u2013161.'><sup>18<\/sup><\/a><\/span> She loved the emerging Goetheanum building, in which she was involved \u2013 and Max Woloschin was also able to come to him in the days of the outbreak of war after Margarita had written to him how essential the construction and work on it was (\u00abSince the days of Hieram there has been nothing comparable.\u00bb)<span id='easy-footnote-19-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-19-35667' title='Zit. n. Sergej O. Prokofieff, Rudolf Steiner and the foundation of the new mysteries. Stuttgart 11982, p. 167.'><sup>19<\/sup><\/a><\/span>) \u00abMs. Sabashnikov, can you settle into these forms?\u00bb Rudolf Steiner asked her. <span id='easy-footnote-20-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-20-35667' title='See No. 8, p. 70.'><sup>20<\/sup><\/a><\/span> She carved and painted on the small dome \u2013 Steiner left her Egyptian initiates as the only work when he redesigned the entire small dome at the request of the artists. \u00abChrist must be sought today in all areas, including in paintings\u00bb, was his last word to her. <span id='easy-footnote-21-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-21-35667' title='See No. 2, p. 379.'><sup>21<\/sup><\/a><\/span> She pursued this in tireless work in the almost five decades that remained after his death. \u00abChrist wants to reveal himself today, that is his essence. The light shines into the darkness, and the colors, his revelation, his language are created. And if you speak this language, if you handle the colors with the feeling of reality, with the feeling that He is there, then this is already a Christian painting, then no further content is needed.\u00bb<span id='easy-footnote-22-35667' class='easy-footnote-margin-adjust'><\/span><span class='easy-footnote'><a href='https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/miss-sabashnikov-anthroposophy-russia-and-christian-paintings\/#easy-footnote-bottom-22-35667' title='See No. 2, p. 380.'><sup>22<\/sup><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Margarita Woloschina found answers to her questions of life and knowledge in Rudolf Steiner and in anthroposophy. As a painter, she developed a new art in which she sought Christ and completed her work with great seriousness and completely unsentimental. The Waldorf teacher Ernst Wei\u00dfert wrote in 1972 on the occasion of the 90th birthday of Margarita Woloschina (1882\u20131973): \u00abThis Russian person, who has been at home in Germany for forty years, lives among us, despite all the familiarity, enigmatic [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9186,"featured_media":35259,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[9097,8846],"tags":[9094,8798],"class_list":["post-35667","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-art","category-history","tag-2022-6-en","tag-deepening"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35667","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/9186"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=35667"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35667\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/35259"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=35667"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=35667"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dasgoetheanum.com\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=35667"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}