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Art Historians

Montfaucon, Dom Bernard de

Full Name: Montfaucon, Dom Bernard de

Gender: male

Date Born: 1655

Date Died: 1741

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): ancient and Medieval (European)


Overview

Established the ground for later French historical scholarship with early scientific exploration of ancient and medieval cultures. Thematic treatment of Greek art as opposed to Winckelmann’s historic view.


Selected Bibliography

L’Antiquité expliquée et représentée en figures. 10 vols. 1719; Monumens de la monarchie française. 1729.


Sources

Cauman, Samuel. The Living Museum: Experiences of an Art Historian and Museum Director, Alexander Dorner. New York: New York University Press, 1958, p. 22; Bazin 79




Citation

"Montfaucon, Dom Bernard de." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/montfauconb/.


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Established the ground for later French historical scholarship with early scientific exploration of ancient and medieval cultures. Thematic treatment of Greek art as opposed to Winckelmann’s historic view.

Montaiglon, Anatole de

Full Name: Montaiglon, Anatole de

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): archives (institutions)


Overview

art historian; archival research


Selected Bibliography

Recueil de documents inédits sur l’histoire des arts en France. ed. Philippe de Chennevières. 14 vols. Archives de l’art français, 1851-1852.; Livrets des Salons 1673-1800. 43 vols. 1851-1852.


Sources

Bazin 482




Citation

"Montaiglon, Anatole de." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/montaiglona/.


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art historian; archival research

Monsanto, Antonio Edmundo

Full Name: Monsanto, Antonio Edmundo

Gender: male

Date Born: 1890

Date Died: 1948

Place Born: Caracas, Distrito Capital, Venezuela

Place Died: Caracas, Distrito Capital, Venezuela

Home Country/ies: Venezuela

Subject Area(s): painting (visual works) and Venezuelan


Overview

Painter, instructor, and historian of Venezuelan art. Monsanto studied at the Academia de Bellas Artes in Caracas under Emilio Mauri and Antonio Herrera Toro. He belonged to several artistic circles, developing friendships with Nicolas Ferdinandov, Emilio Boggio, and Samys Mutzner. Monsanto co-founded the group Circulo de Bellas Artes with fellow painters Leoncio Martinez and Manuel Cabre. He ended his career as a painter in 1921, devoting himself to studying art history. In 1936, Monsanto was appointed Director of the Academia de Bellas Artes, where he spent the remainder of his career teaching.



Sources

The Dictionary of Art



Contributors: LaNitra Michele Walker


Citation

LaNitra Michele Walker. "Monsanto, Antonio Edmundo." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/monsantoa/.


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Painter, instructor, and historian of Venezuelan art. Monsanto studied at the Academia de Bellas Artes in Caracas under Emilio Mauri and Antonio Herrera Toro. He belonged to several artistic circles, developing friendships with Nicolas Ferdinandov

Monneret de Villard, Ugo

Full Name: Monneret de Villard, Ugo

Gender: male

Date Born: 1881

Date Died: 1954

Place Born: Milan, Lombardy, Italy

Place Died: Rome, Lazio, Italy

Home Country/ies: Italy

Subject Area(s): ancient, archaeology, architecture (object genre), Christianity, Coptic (Orthodox Christianity), Early Christian, epigraphy, Islam, Islamic (culture or style), Islamic architectural styles, Medieval (European), and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Archaeologist, epigrapher, and historian of ancient Christian and Islamic architecture. Monneret de Villiard began his career as an architect, later becoming an instructor of medieval architecture at the Politenico in Milan. His interest in archaeology led him to North Africa, where he studied Coptic art and its Greek and Egyptian origins. In 1923, Monneret de Villard completed a monograph on the Aswan, an Islamic necropolis. He was a major contributor to the scholarship on the Nubian region during the medieval period, leading several archaeological excavations in Addis Ababa. After moving to Rome in 1934, Monneret de Villard began studying Ethiopian art, as well as Babylonian and Iranian artistic practices. He was hired to teach Christian archaeology at the University of Rome, and received the national prize of the Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei in1950. When he died in 1954, Monneret de Villard was working on a book about Iraqui textiles.



Sources

The Dictionary of Art



Contributors: LaNitra Michele Walker


Citation

LaNitra Michele Walker. "Monneret de Villard, Ugo." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/monneretu/.


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Archaeologist, epigrapher, and historian of ancient Christian and Islamic architecture. Monneret de Villiard began his career as an architect, later becoming an instructor of medieval architecture at the Politenico in Milan. His interest in archae

Mongan, Elizabeth

Full Name: Mongan, Elizabeth

Gender: female

Date Born: 1910

Date Died: 2002

Place Born: Somerville, Middlesex, MA, USA

Place Died: Rockport, Knox, MA, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): prints (visual works)

Career(s): curators


Overview

Print authority and curator; assembled major print collection now at National Gallery of Art. Mongan’s father was a prosperous Somerville, MA physician, Charles Mongan. Like her older sister, Agnes Mongan, who also became an art historian, she attended Bryn Mawr College. Between 1937 and 1963, Mongan worked for for Lessing J. Rosenwald, heir to the Sears, Roebuck fortune, as curator for his print collection. Mongan steered Rosenwald into purchasing prints from the modern era, including color examples from 19th- and 20th-century France as well as German Expressionism. Mongan’s exhibitions catalogs, including the groundbreaking The First Century of Printmaking, 1400 to 1500 (1941) at the Art Institute of Chicago remain important texts on the history of graphic art. Rosenwald’s collection moved to the National Gallery of Art in Washington in 1943, and Mongan moved with the collection as curator. The Rosenwald Collection, now over 22,000 prints and is one of largest graphics collection in the world. She wrote significant catalogs on Klee, Fragonard, Morisot, and Daumier. She retired from the National Gallery in 1963. In her retirement, she taught art history at Smith College from 1969 to 1975. In 1986, Harvard benefactor Melvin Sieden established the I Tatti Mongan Prize, in honor of Agnes and Elizabeth Mongan for “a scholar of Italian Renaissance art, French art, drawings, and connoisseurship.” In 1988 she wrote the catalogue raisonné of Gauguin prints.


Selected Bibliography

and Wolf, Edwin. The First Printers and their Books: a Catalogue of an Exhibition Commemorating the Five HundredthAnniversary of the Invention of Printing. Philadelphia: The Free Library of Philadelphia, 1940; and Hofer, Philip, and Seznec, Jean. Fragonard Drawings for Ariosto. New York: Pantheon Books, 1945; and Joachim, Harold, and Kornfeld, Eberhard W. Paul Gauguin: Catalogue raisonné of his Prints. Bern: Galerie Kornfeld, 1988; Selections from the Rosenwald Collection, National Gallery of Art. Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art, 1943; and Schniewind, Carl O. The First Century of Printmaking, 1400-1500. Chicago: Art Institute of Chicago and R.R. Donnelly & Sons Company, 1941; Rosenwald Collection: an Exhibition of Recent Acquisitions. Washington, DC: The Gallery, 1950; Berthe Morisot: Drawings, Pastels, Watercolors, Paintings. New York: Tudor Pub. Co. [Charles E. Slatkin Galleries in collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston exhibition], 1960.


Sources

“Former curator Elizabeth Mongan Dies.” Portsmouth Herald (online) Saturday, June 15, 2002; The I Tatti Mongan Prize (Villa I Tatti website) http://www.itatti.it/events/the_i_tatti_mongan_prize.htm.




Citation

"Mongan, Elizabeth." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/mongane/.


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Print authority and curator; assembled major print collection now at National Gallery of Art. Mongan’s father was a prosperous Somerville, MA physician, Charles Mongan. Like her older sister, Agnes Mongan, who also became an

Mongan, Agnes

Full Name: Mongan, Agnes

Gender: female

Date Born: 1905

Date Died: 1996

Place Born: Somerville, Middlesex, MA, USA

Place Died: Cambridge, Middlesex, MA, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): drawings (visual works)

Career(s): curators


Overview

First woman museum curator at Harvard University’s Fogg Art Museum; authority on drawings, especially Ingres. Mongan’s father was a prosperous Somerville, MA physician, Charles Mongan. She received a BA at Bryn Mawr in 1927, and afterward, at her father’s insistence, spend a year abroad. She chose to study Italian art in a Smith College Seminar in Florence and Paris, then traveling to northern Italy and central Europe, giving her early experience in examining original art. She received her MA two years later from Smith. She joined the staff at the Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, in 1928 under Paul J. Sachs to catalog the prints and drawings, most of which were donations of Sachs himself. In 1936 Mongan and Sachs secretly traveled to Vienna to investigate buying the most important prints and drawings collections in the world. The Archduke Albrecht, in an attempt to gain the title Emperor of Hungary (and support his mistresses), was in secret negotiation to sell his print collection to the Boston Museum of Fine Art. Mongan and Sachs spent months authenticating the drawings by Rembrandt, Michelangelo and Watteau. Before the deal could be sealed, the Austrian government learned of the plan and nationalized the museum into what is now the Albertina. Back in the United States, Mongan continued to work closely with Sachs, but Harvard’s policy not to allow women as curators prevented her from being named as such. Instead, she advanced in 1937 to a title of “Keeper of Prints.” With Sachs she produced the three-volume 1940 catalog Drawings in the Fogg Museum of Art. Erwin Panofsky approached Mongan about a monograph on the dappled gray horse in prints, which she declined. In 1947 the University rescinded its gender policy and Mongan was made the first Curator of Drawings. In 1951 she was made Assistant Director, advancing to associate director in 1964. In 1969 she was named Director of the Fogg, the only the second woman to direct a major art museum in the United States (Adelyn Dohme Breeskin, had preceded her at Baltimore in 1947). After Sach’s retirement in 1948, it was Mongan who led the famous Harvard seminars in museology and prints, now careful to include women among her numbers. She retired in 1971 but remained Curator of Drawings until 1975. Harvard held a 1985 symposium in honor at the Fogg, and, in 1994 opened the Agnes Mongan Center for the Study of Prints, Drawings and Photographs in her honor. In her retirement, she continued to work on Fogg catalogs, issuing From David to Corot shortly before her death in 1996. Students who pointed to Mongan as a mentor include Suzanne Folds McCullagh and Margaret Morgan Grasselli. Her sister, Elizabeth Mongan, was a works-on-paper authority in the area of prints. She was also the curator of prints for Lessing J. Rosenwald and later his print collection at National Gallery of Art. Mongan was an authority on the drawings of Jean-August-Dominique Ingres. In her tenure she increased Harvard’s holdings of the artist to fifty-five drawings, making it the largest holding outside France. Based principally on connoisseurship, she encouraged the Fogg to collect known forgeries as a way to teach connoisseurship to Harvard students.


Selected Bibliography

Edited. One Hundred Master Drawings. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1949; Master Drawings, Selected from the Museums and Private Collections of America. Buffalo, NY: Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, Printed by F. W. Burow’s sons, 1934; and Condon, Patrica. Ingres, in Pursuit of Perfection: the Art of J.-A.-D. Ingres. Louisville, KY: J. B. Speed Art Museum, 1983; David to Corot: French Drawings in the Fogg Art Museum. Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press, 1996; and Sachs, Paul. J. Drawings in the Fogg Museum of Art. 3 vols. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1940; edited. Memorial Exhibition; Works of Art from the Collection of Paul J. Sachs, 1878-1965. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society, 1965; and Naef, Hans. Ingres Centennial Exhibition, 1867-1967; Drawings, Watercolors, and Oil Sketches from American Collections, [Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University]. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society, 1967; edited. King, Georgiana Goddard. Heart of Spain. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1941.


Sources

Museum Curator Agnes Mongan. Oral History Collection, Dept. of Special Collections, University of California, Los Angeles Library, 1994; “Agnes Mongan.” Art Journal 25 no. 1 (Fall 1965): 52; Weber, Nicholas Fox. Patron Saints: Five Rebels who Opened America to a New Art: 1928-1943. New York: Knopf, 1992, pp. 263-83; [transcript] Agnes Mongan. Interviews with Art Historians, 1991-2002. Getty Research Institute, Malibu, CA; [obituaries:] Temin, Christine. “Agnes Mongan, Famed Fogg Curator, Dies.” The Boston Globe September 17, 1996, p. E1.




Citation

"Mongan, Agnes." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/mongana/.


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First woman museum curator at Harvard University’s Fogg Art Museum; authority on drawings, especially Ingres. Mongan’s father was a prosperous Somerville, MA physician, Charles Mongan. She received a BA at Bryn Mawr in 1927, and afterward, at her

Molinier, Émile

Full Name: Molinier, Émile

Gender: male

Date Born: 1857

Date Died: 1906

Place Born: Nantes, Pays de la Loire, France

Place Died: Paris, Île-de-France, France

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): Medieval (European) and Renaissance

Career(s): art dealers and curators


Overview

Art dealer, museum curator, and historian of medieval and Renaissance art. Molinier began his career at Ecole des Chartres, where he studied for three years. His brother, Auguste, was a well-known medievalist, and encouraged Emile to pursue art historical scholarship. He was hired to work at the Bibliotheque Nationale for one year before accepting a position at the Louvre in the Département des Objets. In 1886, Molinier published Les Plaquettes, demonstrating his interest in the Italian Renaissance. Throughout his career, he maintained a dual interest in medieval and Renaissance art, publishing catalogues on several museum collections, including the Louvre, the Wallace Collection in London, and the Tresoro di San Marco in Venice. In his book on the history of the applied arts, Molinier produced one of the first studies of Byzantine ivories. After organizing a retrospective exhibition of French art at the 1900 Universal Exposition, Molinier retired from the Louvre in order to work as an art dealer.


Selected Bibliography

Histoire générale des arts appliqués à l’industrie du Ve siècle à la fin du XVIIe. (unfinished)


Sources

Bazin 374, 382; The Dictionary of Art



Contributors: LaNitra Michele Walker


Citation

LaNitra Michele Walker. "Molinier, Émile." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/moliniere/.


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Art dealer, museum curator, and historian of medieval and Renaissance art. Molinier began his career at Ecole des Chartres, where he studied for three years. His brother, Auguste, was a well-known medievalist, and encouraged Emile to pursue art hi

Molho, Anthony

Full Name: Molho, Anthony

Gender: male

Date Born: 1939

Place Born: Thessaloniki, Salonika, Region of Central Macedonia, Greece

Home Country/ies: Greece

Subject Area(s): Renaissance

Institution(s): European University Institute


Overview

Renaissance art scholar


Selected Bibliography

“The Brancacci Chapel: Studies in its Iconography and History.: Journal of the Warburg and Courtald Institutes 40 (1977): 50 -98.


Sources

KRG, 117



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Molho, Anthony." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/molhoa/.


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Renaissance art scholar

Molesworth, Hender Delves

Full Name: Molesworth, Hender Delves

Other Names:

  • Hender Delves Molesworth

Gender: male

Date Born: 1907

Date Died: 1978

Place Died: London, Greater London, England, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): sculpture (visual works)

Career(s): curators


Overview

Keeper of sculpture, Victoria and Albert Museum. Molesworth was education at Oundle and University College, Oxford. He studied additionally in Germany and at the Kunsthistorisches Institut, Florence where he became an expert on German sculpture of the 15th and 16th centuries. In 1931 he joined the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, in the Department of Architecture and Sculpture. The following year he married Eve Galloway. He served as the director of the Institute of Jamaica between 1936 and 1938. During World War II, Molesworth was press attache in Abyssinia (modern Ethiopia) from 1942 to 1945. Returning from the War, Molesworth succeeded to Keeper of the Department of Architecture and Sculpture, succeeding Margaret Longhurst, who had retired in 1942. His two-volume Sculpture in England was published in 1951. He was named keeper of Woodwork at the V&A, succeeding Ralph Edwards, in 1954. Following that he published books on furniture. His titles were translated into numerous foreign languages.


Selected Bibliography

Sculpture in England: Mediaeval. London: British Council/Longmans, Green, 1951; Sculpture in England: Renaissance to Early XIX century. London British Council/Longmans, Green 1951; European Sculpture from Romanesque to Neoclassic. New York: F.A. Praeger, 1965; . and Kenworthy-Browne, J. A. Three Centuries of Furniture in Colour. London: Joseph, 1972.


Sources

[obituary:] “Mr H. D. Molesworth.” Times (London) April 26, 1978, p. 20.




Citation

"Molesworth, Hender Delves." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/molesworthh/.


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Keeper of sculpture, Victoria and Albert Museum. Molesworth was education at Oundle and University College, Oxford. He studied additionally in Germany and at the Kunsthistorisches Institut, Florence where he became an expert on German sculpture of

Moir, Alfred Kummer

Full Name: Moir, Alfred Kummer

Other Names:

  • Alfred Moir

Gender: male

Date Born: 1924

Place Born: Minneapolis, MN, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): Baroque and painting (visual works)


Overview

Scholar of baroque painting and drawing. Moir’s father was a medical doctor, William Wilmerding Moir; his mother was Blanche Kummer (Moir). He served in the U.S. Army, 1943-1946, rising to master sergeant. After the war, he attended Harvard University, receiving an A.B.L. in 1948 and an M.A. in 1949. Moir did graduate study at the University of Rome as a Fulbright fellow, 1950-1951, teaching as a graduate student at Tulane University, Newcomb College, New Orleans from 1952 to 1954. After his Ph.D. was granted from Harvard in 1953 (with a thesis on Caravaggio’s influence in Italy), he became assistant professor at Tulane in 1954 and promoted to associate professor of art history in 1959. In 1963 he joined the University of California, Santa Barbara as an associate professor and chair of the department between 1963, rising to professor of art history in 1965. Moir contributed to the exhibition “Art in Italy 1600-1700” at the Detroit Institute of Arts in 1965. He relinquished chair duties in 1969. A book on Caravaggio appeared in 1982. Moir retired from Santa Barbara emeritus in 1991. A second Abrams publishers, title appeared in 1994 on Anthony van Dyck.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] The Character and Development of Caravaggism in Italy and its Regional Aspects. Harvard, 1953; contributor, Cummings, Frederick. Art in Italy, 1600-1700. Detroit: Detroit Institute of Arts/H.N. Abrams,1965; The Italian Followers of Caravaggio. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1967; edited, Seventeenth-Century Italian Drawings from the Collection of Janos Scholz. University of California, 1973. Caravaggio and His Copyists. New York: College Art Association of America, 1975; Caravaggio. New York: Abrams, 1982; Van Dyck’s Antwerp. Antwerp: Museum Plantin Moretus and Stedelijk Prentenkabinett, 1991; Van Dyck. New York: Abrams, 1994.


Sources

Campbell, Richard, and Satkowski, Jane. Master Drawings from the Collection of Alfred Moir. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.




Citation

"Moir, Alfred Kummer." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/moira/.


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Scholar of baroque painting and drawing. Moir’s father was a medical doctor, William Wilmerding Moir; his mother was Blanche Kummer (Moir). He served in the U.S. Army, 1943-1946, rising to master sergeant. After the war, he attended Harvard Univer