At the dawn of the 20th century, the Austrian capital Vienna was a hotbed of intellectual and artistic enterprise. Freud was developing psycho analysis. Painters such as Egon Schiele (A-gon SHE-leh) and Gustav Klimt (GOO stahf KLIMT) explored new schools of visual art. But it was also a time feeding the seeds of World War One. A time that spawned the anti-semitism of Adolf Hitler. Tomorrow and Wednesday renowned choreographer Martha Clarke will present her vision of that era at the Northrop Auditorium in Minneapolis. Her piece "Vienna Lusthaus' (LOOST-howss) features frank and provocative dances. First produced in the mid-1980's, she has now revised and expanded the piece. Martha Clarke told Minnesota Public Radio's Euan Kerr she was originally inspired by an exhibition of Schiele's (SHE-leh's) work. It then evolved when playwright Charles Mee, who she calls Chuck, offered to write accompanying texts exploring themes of love and hate.