Skip to content

Art Historians

Kraus, Henry

Full Name: Kraus, Henry

Other Names:

  • Henry Kraus

Gender: male

Date Born: 1905

Date Died: 1995

Place Born: Knoxville, TN, USA

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

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): labor, Medieval (European), and patronage


Overview

Labor historian and scholar of medieval art patronage. Kraus was the son of immigrants who were active in the I. W. W. (International Workers of the World) trade union and socialists. His family moved to New York city and then Cleveland, Ohio. After a stint at the University of Chicago, he and entered Western Reserve University in Cleveland, where he received his B.A. and M.A. in mathematics, the latter degree in 1928. Initially, Kraus taught high school mathematics. He married Dorothy Rogin and the couple traveled to France the same year where he worked as a medical translator, hoping too launch a writing career, much like other expatriate Americans. However, the Krauses returned to Cleveland, where he met Wyndham Mortimer (1884-1966), an organizer of the Cleveland auto workers. Kraus began writing publicity for the Cleveland Auto Council. In 1936 Kraus moved to Detroit and joined the staff of the United Auto Worker, later the United Automobile Worker, the official newspaper of the U. A. W. He helped organize auto workers into the U. A. W. in Michigan. He and his wife were among the leaders of the Flint Sit-Down Strike in the winter of 1936-1937. Kraus was dismissed from both papers in 1937 and moved to California where he assisted in organizing unions of the West Coast aircraft industry in 1939. The break-up of the action by federal government troops and his repudiation by the international union resulted in Kraus’ abandoning union organizing. During World War II he worked in the shipyards of the Consolidated Steel Corporation and in its engineering department. Ever the progressives, the Krauses lived in interracial housing projects in San Pedro, CA, and led a movement for tenet ownership. In 1947, Kraus published his study of the Flint, Michigan sit-down strike of 1936-1937, The Many and the Few. The 1950s Cold War anti-communist sentiment meant that a socialist like Kraus was blackballed from employment. Kraus and his wife returned to Paris in 1956 and opened the Paris Bureau for Physicians News Service, later called World Wide Medical News Service. In Europe he was able to pursue an interest which dated from his earlier visit, medieval art. After his retirement in 1962 he devoted himself completely to the study of European cathedrals and the publication of scholarly articles and books, assisted by his wife. They initially studied misericords, the hinged choir-stall seat of pews depicting the lives of the craftsmen of cathedrals and churches. Their work rescued many carvings at the duomo at Orvieto, Italy, from neglect. In 1967, Kraus published his first book on medieval art in general, The Living Theatre of Medieval Art, which Indiana University Press agreed to publish through the recommendation of the medievalist Harry Bober. He and Dorothy’s research on misericords appeared in 1975 as The Hidden World of Misericords. Kraus’ most significant book, Gold was the Mortar, an economic analysis of the medieval patronage structure of church building was published in 1979. In 1984 Kraus returned to labor history when he received a five-year MacArthur Foundation Fellowship. This allowed him to research labor archives at Wayne State University in Detroit for his book, Heroes of Unwritten Story. This personal history of the U. A. W. from 1934 to 1939 was published in 1994. He contracted cancer and died at age 89. His papers reside in the Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State University and the Archives of American Art. Kraus used his social beliefs in class structure to analyze the medieval patronage system. His method was revolutionary for American art historians and The Living Theatre of Medieval Art can be considered the earliest medieval art history written in English to use social history as its matrix. Self trained and with a foreign methodology to most established art historians, he resisted the marginalization of his approach. Recalling a meeting with the French medievalist Louis Grodecki, Kraus noted the distain of the university in Strasbourg professor, “Monsieur Kraus s’intéresse à la sociologie de l’art médiéval.” Through documentary analysis, he concluded that the major cathedrals of the 12th to 15th centuries were funded not by the ecclesiastical nobility, but by the wealthy bourgeoisie.


Selected Bibliography

The Living Theatre of Medieval Art. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1967; and Kraus, Dorothy. The Hidden World of Misericords. New York: G. Braziller, 1975; Gold was the Mortar: the Economics of Cathedral Building. London: Routledge & Paul, 1979; and Kraus, Dorothy. The Gothic Choirstalls of Spain. Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1986.


Sources

Bober, Harry. “Foreward.” The Living Theatre of Medieval Art. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1967, pp. xiii-xviii; Kleinbauer, W. Eugene. Research Guide to the History of Western Art. Sources of Information in the Humanities, no. 2. Chicago: American Library Association, 1982, P. 117; [obituary:] “Henry Kraus, Labor Historian And Writer on European Art, 89.” New York Times February 1, 1995, p. 20.




Citation

"Kraus, Henry." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kraush/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Labor historian and scholar of medieval art patronage. Kraus was the son of immigrants who were active in the I. W. W. (International Workers of the World) trade union and socialists. His family moved to New York city and then Cleveland, Ohio. Aft

Kraus, Franz Xaver

Full Name: Kraus, Franz Xaver

Other Names:

  • Franz Xaver Kraus

Gender: male

Date Born: 18 September 1840

Date Died: 28 December 1901

Place Born: Trier, Rhineland Palatinate, Germany

Place Died: San Remo, Imperia, Liguria, Italy

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): archaeology, Christianity, German (culture, style, period), and Medieval (European)


Overview

Founder of archaeological studies in medieval art history in Germany; church reformer. Kraus’ parents were Paul Kraus (1804-1865), an art teacher at Gymnasium in Trier and Maria Magdalena Kraus (1801-1871). The young Kraus graduated from the same Gymnasium in 1858 and entered the seminary. He left the seminary in 1860 for financial reasons, travelling to Paris, tutoring French there and studying science at the Bibliothèque Nationale. Kraus wrote and submitted a paper to the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg (without taking classes there) which qualified him for a doctorate (Ph.D.) in 1862. He returned to Trier the same year, completing his theological studies in 1864 and ordained a priest. The same year he moved to University of Freiburg, studying under the church historian Johann Baptist Alzog (1808-1878) and also at Tübingen. He completed a second dissertation, this one in theology, from Freiburg in 1865 on the topic of the church father Synesius of Cyrene (fl. 392-413). He was posted to Pfalzel (today, greater Trier). Kraus failed to secure a teaching post at the Trier seminary, however, in part because of his criticisms of the relics in the Diocese. While Kraus was publishing on theological issues and reform, he began writing texts on art based upon his religious knowledge and interest. His Die Kunst bei den alten Christen appeared in 1868. In 1872 Kraus was appointed to the faculty of the University of Strasbourg to a chair of Christian art history. Kraus’s academic enemies were still strong. An appointment at Breslau in 1874 was blocked by the Bishop of Breslau, Heinrich Förster (1800-1881). As Kraus became more and more disillusioned with the political nature of the Roman Catholic church, he focused attention on studying the extant objects and buildings of medieval Germany. He published an inventory of medieval art, Kunst and Alterthum in Elsass-Lothringen, in 1876. In 1878 he succeeded his mentor Alzog in Freiburg as professor of church history. During his Freiburg tenure, Kraus wrote his books of most lasting value, on art and a biography of Dante. These included, beginning in 1882, his Real-Encyklopadie der christlichen Alterthumer (volume 2 published in 1886). He was appointed curator of religious antiquities in Baden, and a member of the Baden Historical Commission from 1883 onward. Kraus was commissioned by the Baden government to produce a facsimile of the Codex Maness for the 500-year anniversary of the Heidelberg University (1886), published by Trübner in 1887. In 1890 he was made a privy councillor, holding the pro-rectorship of the university, 1890-1891. His most important work, Geschichte der christlichen Kunst appeared in 1896. In his final years, he sat on the executive board of the newly-founded Kunsthistorisches Institute in Florence. Kraus died of stomach cancer at age 61 during a recuperative stay at Sanremo. At his death, he left his considerable library to the the town of Trier and money for a Chair and an Institute for Christian Archaeology at the University of Freiburg. The second volume of the Geschichte der christlichen Kunst, covering to the close of the Italian Renaissance, was completed by Joseph Sauer (1872-1949) in 1908. Kraus is buried in the Freiburg central cemetery. Kraus founded the study of archaeological (physical monuments) research for the middles ages in Germany (Schiel, 1979). Willibald Sauerländer included Kraus among the “pantheon of great [early] art historians” of medieval art whose numbers included Adolphe Napoléon Didron, Charles Cahier, Camille Martin and Ferdinand Piper.


Selected Bibliography

[complete bibliography:] Schiel, Hubert. “Das Schrifttum von F.X. Kraus.” Kraus, Franz Xaver. Tagebücher. Cologne: J. P. Bachem, 1957, pp. 765-776; [dissertation:] “Studien fiber Synesios von Kyrene.” Theologische Quartalschrift 47 (1865); Beitrage zur Trierischen Archaologie and Geschichte. I. Der heilige Nagel in der Domkirche zu Trier. Trier, 1868; Die Kunst bei den alten Christen. Frankfort am Main, 1868; Die christliche Kunst in ihren friihesten Anfangen. Mit besonderer Berucksichtigung der neuesten Resultate der Katakomben-Forschung popular dargestellt. Leipzig, 1872; and Rossi, Giovanni Battista de, and Northcote, J. Spencer, and Brownlow, W.-R. Roma sotterranea: die römischen Katakomben. Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder’sche Verlagshandlung, 1873; Kunst und Alterthum in Elsass-Lothringen. 3 vols. Strassburg: Schmidt, 1876-1889; Synchronistische Tabellen zur christlichen Kunstgeschichte: ein Hülfsbuch für Studierende. Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder, 1880; and Sauer, Joseph. Geschichte der christlichen Kunst. 2 vols. Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder’sche Verlagshandlung, 1896-1908; Essays. 2 vols. Berlin: Paetel, 1896-1901.


Sources

Lauchert, Friedrich. “Kraus, Franz Xaver.” Catholic Encyclopedia, 1913, pp. 699-700; Schiel, Hubert, ed. Kraus, Franz Xaver. Tagebücher. Cologne: J. P. Bachem, 1957; Schiel, Hubert. “Kraus, Franz Xaver.” Neue deutsche Biographie 12 (1979), pp. 684-685; Sauerländer, Willibald. “Émile Mâle.” Dictionnaire critique des historiens de l’art actifs en France de la Révolution à la Première Guerre mondiale [website] http://www.inha.fr/spip.php?article2433; Graf, Michael. Franz Xaver Kraus (1840-1901): zwischen Kulturkampf und Modernismuskrise. Münster: Lit Vlg. Hopf, 2003.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Kraus, Franz Xaver." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/krausf/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Founder of archaeological studies in medieval art history in Germany; church reformer. Kraus’ parents were Paul Kraus (1804-1865), an art teacher at Gymnasium in Trier and Maria Magdalena Kraus (1801-1871). The young Kraus graduated from the same

Kramrisch, Stella

Full Name: Kramrisch, Stella

Gender: female

Date Born: 1896

Date Died: 1993

Place Born: Nikolsburg, Czechoslovakia

Place Died: Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA

Home Country/ies: Austria

Subject Area(s): Asian, Indian (South Asian), and South Asian


Overview

Art historian of South Asian art. Studied under Josef Rudolf Thomas Strzygowski at University of Vienna. Dissertation on early Buddhist sculpture (1919). 1921-50 taught at University of Calcutta. During those years she edited Journal of the Indian Society of Oriental Art and published numerous works including magnum opus, The Hindu Temple (1946). She traveled to the U.S. as early as 1922, but after the assassination of her husband in Pakistan (1950), she moved there permanently to the United States where she taught at the Institute of Fine Art, New York University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Methodologically, Kramrisch remained close to her mentor, Strzygowski, studying the object using a metaphysical approach and employing distinctly non-western concepts in her history writing. While a student, she was influenced by Kandinsky’s art theory and the theosophy of Rudolf Steiner (whom she knew personally). In India, she converted to Hinduism and amassed a significant collection of South Asian art objects which she ultimately sold or willed to the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The major exhibition she mounted at the museum in 1968, “Unknown India” perhaps best demonstrates her belief that the understanding of both aristocratic and common art objects were necessary to appreciate a culture’s artistic accomplishment.


Selected Bibliography

[complete bibliography:] Dye, Joseph M., III, comp. “A Bibliography of the Writings of Stella Kramrisch.” in Exploring India’s Sacred Art: Selected Writings of Stella Kramrisch. Philadelphia: University of Philadelphia Press, 1983, pp. 35-48; [dissertation:] Untersuchungen zum Wesen der frühbuddhistischen Bildnerei Indiens. Ph. D., University of Vienna, 1919; The Hindu Temple. 2 vols. Calcutta: University of Calcutta, 1946. (Repr. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1976). Presence of Siva. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1981; Unknown India: Ritual Art in Tribe and Village. Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1968;


Sources

New York Times, January 24, 1999, Section 2: 35. Dictionary of Art 18: 437-8; Miller, Barbara Stoler, “Stella Kramrisch: A Biographical Essay,” pp 3-34, in Exploring India’s Sacred Art: Selected Writings of Stella Kramrisch, Barbara Stoler Miller, ed. Philadelphia: University of Philadelphia Press, 1983; Threads of Cotton, Threads of Brass: Arts of Eastern India and Bangladesh from the Stella Kramrisch Collection. Philadelphia Museum of Art exhibition catalog, 1999.




Citation

"Kramrisch, Stella." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kramrischs/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Art historian of South Asian art. Studied under Josef Rudolf Thomas Strzygowski at University of Vienna. Dissertation on early Buddhist sculpture (1919). 1921-50 taught at University of Calcutta. During those years she e

Kramm, Christiaan

Full Name: Kramm, Christiaan

Other Names:

  • Christiaan Kramm

Gender: male

Date Born: 1797

Date Died: 1875

Place Born: Utrecht, Netherlands

Place Died: Utrecht, Netherlands

Home Country/ies: Netherlands

Subject Area(s): Dutch (culture or style) and Flemish (culture or style)

Career(s): art historians


Overview

Writer of a dictionary of Dutch and Flemish artists, architects and painters. Kramm was the son of a cloth-merchant. At age 13, he was apprenticed to the silversmith, N. van Voorst, in Utrecht. In 1815 he joined the studio of the painter Pieter Christoffel Wonder (1780-1852). Kramm soon became a private teacher in drawing. In 1920 he found employment in the new theater of Utrecht as decorator. Here he developed his skill in architectural design. In 1826 he was appointed director of the architecture department of the municipal schools of Design and Architecture in Utrecht. In 1934, he introduced classes in designing gothic architecture in order to prepare the students for future work in neo-gothic architecture. After the rebuilding of the so-called Paushuis in Utrecht, by that time the provincial Governor’s house, and the building of the Palace of Justice in the same city, Kramm was appointed, in 1839, architect of the province of Utrecht. He designed public buildings and private houses, as well as a number of neo-gothic churches. He also directed restoration projects, and the rebuilding, between 1835 and 1862, of the Beverweerd castle. As a painter, Kramm specialized in portraits. He is mostly known for his 1857-1864 dictionary of Dutch and Flemish painters, sculptors, engravers and architects, from the fifteenth up to the mid-nineteenth century, De levens en werken der Hollandsche en Vlaamsche kunstschilders, beeldhouwers, graveurs en bouwmeesters van den vroegsten tot op onze tijd. This huge work of six volumes and a supplement is a sequel to the 1842-1843 dictionary of Johan Immerzeel Junior, De levens en werken der Hollandsche en Vlaamsche kunstschilders, beeldhouwers, graveurs en bouwmeesters, van het begin der vijftiende eeuw tot heden. Kramm intended to complete and to correct Immerzeel’s work with additional facts and information. Unlike Immerzeel, Kramm mentioned his sources in each biography, often with quotations. He considered both dictionaries as complementary to each other. He stated that he aimed to offer critical and complete information. He had great admiration for the scholarly approach of Johann Dominico Fiorillo, who had published, between 1798 and 1820, a nine-volume work on art history. Kramm’s own work offers an impressive amount of facts, anecdotes, details, and personal observations about artists and their works. His romantic vision on major artists of the past is immediately apparent. In his entry on Rembrandt, whom he glorifies as a national hero, he enthusiastically inserts a contemporary event, the 1852 unveiling of the painter’s statue in Amsterdam. In reaction to Arnold Houbraken, who in his eyes had slandered artists such as Jan Steen, Adriaan Brouwer, and Frans Hals, Kramm wants to see these artists in a much more positive light. Even though Kramm’s remarkable work is not always well-organized and often lacks focus, its documentary value is very high.


Selected Bibliography

[for a complete list, see] Wap in De levens …, Amsterdam: Israël, p. 10; De levens en werken der Hollandsche en Vlaamsche kunstschilders, beeldhouwers, graveurs en bouwmeesters van den vroegsten tot op onze tijd. 7 vols. Amsterdam: gebroeders Diederichs, 1857-1864.


Sources

C.H. Immerzeel and C. Immerzeel, eds., De levens en werken der Hollandsche en Vlaamsche kunstschilders, beeldhouwers, graveurs en bouwmeesters, van het begin der vijftiende eeuw tot heden door J.Immerzeel Jr. Amsterdam: Israël, 1974, 2, pp. 133-136; Wap, [J.J.F]. “Levensberigt van den schrijver” in Kramm, Christiaan. De levens en werken der Hollandsche en Vlaamsche kunstschilders, beeldhouwers, graveurs en bouwmeesters van den vroegsten tot op onze tijd. Amsterdam: Israël, 1974, pp. 1-10; Van der Vies. Nieuw Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek 6 (1924), pp. 893-894; Henkel, M.D. Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler 21 (1927), pp. 418-419; Boersma, T. ” ‘Tijdvakken van een ver verleden welke wij alzoo hopen te zien herleven.’ Christiaan Kramm en zijn betekenis voor het bouwkunstonderwijs en het ‘Gothische Architectuurteekenen’ aan de Utrechtse ‘Stadsschoolen voor Teeken- en Bouwkunde’ 1822-1866.” De Sluitsteen 5 (1989): 83-109; Bosman, Lex. “De geschiedenis van de Nederlandse architectuurgeschiedenis: middeleeuwse bouwkunst” in Hecht, Peter, and Hoogenboom, Annemieke, and Stolwijk, Chris, eds., Kunstgeschiedenis in Nederland. Negen opstellen. Amsterdam: Prometheus, 1998, p. 67.



Contributors: Monique Daniels


Citation

Monique Daniels. "Kramm, Christiaan." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/krammc/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Writer of a dictionary of Dutch and Flemish artists, architects and painters. Kramm was the son of a cloth-merchant. At age 13, he was apprenticed to the silversmith, N. van Voorst, in Utrecht. In 1815 he joined the studio of the painter Pieter Ch

Krahmer, Gerhard

Full Name: Krahmer, Gerhard

Other Names:

  • Gerhard Krahmer

Gender: male

Date Born: 1890

Date Died: 1931

Place Died: Berlin, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): Ancient Greek (culture or style), Antique, the, and Classical


Overview

Specialist in ancient Greek art, particularly sculpture. He was the first to document the difference between archaic-paratactic and classical-hypotactic statuary. Lecturer at the University of Göttingen, 1925-1927. He was forced to break off his lectures in 1927 due to a sickness of the lungs, and went to Egypt and then Greece to recuperate. Krahmer employed the methodology, Strukturforschung, a German theoretical notion attempting to replace the concept of style with a spatial structural analysis, which was linked to cultural identity.


Selected Bibliography

Figur und Raum in der ägyptischen und griechisch-archaischen Kunst, in: 28. HallWPr (1931);”Stilphasen.” RM 38/39, 1923/24, 138-184;”Eine Jünglingsfigur mittelhellenistischer Zeit.” RM 46, 1931, 130-149; “Die Artemis vom Lateran und Verwandtes.” AM 55, 1930, 237-272.


Sources

Archäologenbildnisse: Porträts und Kurzbiographien von Klassichen Archäologen deutscher Sprache. Reinhard Lullies, ed. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1988, pp. 254-255.




Citation

"Krahmer, Gerhard." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/krahmerg/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Specialist in ancient Greek art, particularly sculpture. He was the first to document the difference between archaic-paratactic and classical-hypotactic statuary. Lecturer at the University of Göttingen, 1925-1927. He was forced to break off his l

Kozloff, Max

Full Name: Kozloff, Max

Other Names:

  • Max Kozloff

Gender: male

Date Born: 1933

Place Born: Chicago, Cook, IL, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): Modern (style or period) and photographs

Career(s): art critics


Overview

Historian and critic of modern art; photographer. Kozloff graduated from the University of Chicago in 1953. Between 1954-1956 he served in the U.S. Army and then returning to the University of Chicago for his A. M. in 1958. He entered New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts in 1959 for his Ph.D. He taught at NYU, joining the Nation as art critic in 1961 (remaining until 1968) and Art International. Kozloff was awarded a Fulbright fellowship for the, 1962-1963 year winning a Pulitzer Prize for critical writing for the same time period. He left NYU without a degree in 1964 and began contributing to Artforum as an associate editor. In 1965 he earned the Frank Jewett Mather, Jr., Award for art criticism from College Art Association of America. He married the artist Joyce Blumberg in 1967 and became a contributing editor to Artforum the same year. Kozloff was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship for 1968-1969. He wrote the volume on Jasper Johns for the Abrams artist series in 1968. In 1972 he was named an associate editor of books at Artforum. He published his book Cubism/ Futurism in 1973. Kozloff was executive editor of the magazine between 1975 and 1977. A second Jasper Johns book appeared in 1986. In 1989 he joined the faculty of the School of Visual Arts. Kozloff switched careers, becoming an art photographer in 1976. He held numerous shows, initially photographing store windows, and then to the people of New York, intentionally following the path of Jewish itinerant photographers of the city. His subsequent notions of photography were criticized, especially the notion that Jewish photographers has a special way of making images.


Selected Bibliography

Photography & fascination: Essays. Danbury, NH: Addison House, 1979; The Privileged Eye: Essays on Photography. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1987; Duane Michals: Now Becoming Then. Altadena, CA: Twin Palms Publishers, 1991; Lone Visions, Crowded Frames: Essays on Photography. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1994; Cultivated Impasses: Essays on the Waning of the Avant-Garde, 1964-1975. New York: Marsilio, 2000; New York: Capital of Photography. New York: Jewish Museum/New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002; Cubism/Futurism. New York: Charterhouse 1973.


Sources

“Max Kosloff.” Challenging Art: Artforum 1962-1974. Newman, Amy, ed. New York: Soho Press, 2000, pp. 474-475; Halasz, P. “Art Criticism (and Art History) in New York: the 1940s vs the 1990: Part Three: Clement Greenberg.” Arts Magazine 57 (April 1983): 84-85.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Kozloff, Max." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kozloffm/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Historian and critic of modern art; photographer. Kozloff graduated from the University of Chicago in 1953. Between 1954-1956 he served in the U.S. Army and then returning to the University of Chicago for his A. M. in 1958. He entered New York Uni

Kostof, Spiro Konstantin

Full Name: Kostof, Spiro Konstantin

Other Names:

  • Spiro Kostof

Gender: male

Date Born: 1936

Date Died: 1991

Place Born: Istanbul, Turkey

Place Died: Berkeley, Alameda, CA, USA

Home Country/ies: Greece

Subject Area(s): architecture (object genre) and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Architectural historian. Kostof attended Robert College, an English-language university-preparatory school in Istanbul. He moved to the United States in 1957 to study drama at Yale University. He switched to art history after hearing the lectures of Vincent Scully, Jr., studying under him as well. Following his Ph.D. in 1961, whose dissertation written under Scully was on the Orthodox Baptistry of Ravenna, he taught at Yale. Four years later he published his dissertation and, after what has been described as a “generational transition/bloodbath” in the department (Sears), he moved to the University of California, Berkeley, to teach architectural history at the newly-founded College of Environmental Design. Kostof was a visiting professor at MIT in 1970. From 1974 to 1976 he was president of the Society of Architectural Historians, teaching as a visiting professor at Columbia University in 1976. In 1985 he wrote what would become a classic textbook, A History of Architecture: Settings and Rituals. In it, Kostof wrote, “all buildings of the past, regardless of size or status or consequence, should ideally be deemed worthy of study.” Kostof was a visiting professorship at Rice University for the 1986-87 year. While engaged in writing a two-volume work on the origins and design of cities world-wide, he was diagnosed with lymphoma. Six months later he died at age 55. His two works, The City Shaped: Urban Patterns and Meanings throughout History and The City Assessed appeared posthumously. The Society of Architectural Historians established the Spiro Kostof Award in 1993 to recognize interdisciplinary books whose content focuses on urban development, the history of urban form or the architecture of the built environment. Kostof believed that architectural histories concentrated far too exclusively on the works of famous designers, resulting in histories that presented the discipline as a linear series of monuments. Architectural history was not a series of styles each an influence or reaction of the past, according to Kostof. He outlined this notion in a five-part television series for PBS, America by Design, in 1987. He pointed out that architecture comes embedded in a framework of vernacular, often transient “background.” True to his dramatic background, Kostof was a dynamic classroom lecturer. As an architectural critic, he frequently criticized modernist megalomaniac architecture–Helmut Jahn’s One Liberty Place in Philadelphia was once singled out–for its carelessness of the built environment surrounding it.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] The Orthodox Baptistry of Ravenna: A Study in Early Christian Art and Architecture. Yale, 1961, published under the same title, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965; Caves of God: the Monastic Environment of Byzantine Cappadocia. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1972; A History of Architecture: Settings and Rituals. New York: Oxford University Press, 1985; America by Design. PBS Television, 1987; The City Shaped. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1991; The City Assembled: the Elements of Urban Form through History. Boston: Little, Brown, 1992.


Sources

Sears, Elizabeth. “The Art-Historical Work of Walter Cahn.” in Hourihane, Colum, ed. Romanesque Art and Thought in the Twelfth Century: Essays in Honor of Walter Cahn. University Park, Pa: Penn State Press, 2008, p. 21, note 42; [obituaries:] Glancey, Jonathan. “Professor Spiro Kostof.” Independent (London), December 13, 1991, p. 27; Washington Post December 13, 1991, p. B5; “Spiro Kostof, Professor, is Dead; Architectural Historian Was 55.” New York Times December 10, 1991, p. B20; MacDonald, William Lloyd. “Spiro Konstantinos Kostof, 1936-1991.” Society of Architectural Historians. Newsletter 36 no. 2 ( June 1992): 2-3; “Spiro Kostof, 1936-1991.” Progressive Architecture 73 no. 2 (February 1992): 24.




Citation

"Kostof, Spiro Konstantin." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kostofs/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Architectural historian. Kostof attended Robert College, an English-language university-preparatory school in Istanbul. He moved to the United States in 1957 to study drama at Yale University. He switched to art history after hearing the lectures

Koschatzky, Walter

Full Name: Koschatzky, Walter

Gender: male

Date Born: 1921

Date Died: 2003

Place Born: Graz, Steiermark, Austria

Place Died: Vienna, Vienna state, Austria

Home Country/ies: Austria


Overview

Director of the Albertina, 1962-1986. Koschatzky attended the state gymnasium in Lichtenfelsgasse, Graz, graduating in 1933 and the military academy in Liebenau (1936-40). Between 1940-45 he served in the Austrian army. After the war he returned to Graz and enrolled in Karl-Franzens University, studying art history, archaeology, and history which he financed in part by performances as a jazz musician. In 1948 he married Trude (Caroline) Bauer (d. 1994) in Graz. He received his Ph.D. in 1952, joining the Steirien Landesdienst in 1953 and serving there until 1955 when he moved to state museum, Landesmuseum Joanneum, now the Neue Galerie. He was appointed director of that museum in 1956. In 1961 moved to the Albertina in Vienna as the announced successor to Otto Benesch. He assumed responsibilities as the director of the Albertina in 1962. Koschatzky set about an ambitious exhibition program for the Albertina to raise its reputation worldwide as the premier prints and drawings museum. He was a lecturer at the University of Vienna 1973-87 and visiting professor at Salzburg 1986/87. He received numerous honors and honorary degrees. After his first wife’s death he married (Dr) Gabriela Elias.


Selected Bibliography

[Koschatzky issued many exhibition catalogs in the auspices of the Albertina. Only a few are mentioned here.] Faszination Kunst: Erinnerungen eines Kunsthistorikers. Vienna: Böhlau, 2001; Eine Künstlerin im Wandel der Gegenwart: zu den neuen Werken von Heide Osterider-Stibor. Graz: Schnider Verlag, 2001; and Aberbach, Joachim Jean. The Albertina Exhibition of Hundertwassser’s Complete Graphic Work, 1951-1976. Glarus: Gruener Janura AG., 1973; and Strobl, Alice. Die Albertina in Wien. Salzburg: Residenz Verlag, 1970; and Strobel, Alice. Dürer Drawings in the Albertina. Greenwich, CN: New York Graphic Society 1972.


Sources

Koschatzky, Walter. Faszination Kunst: Erinnerungen eines Kunsthistorikers. Vienna: Böhlau, 2001, pp. 320-23 [CD recording of reminiscences]; [obituary:] The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec) May 10, 2003 p. C10.




Citation

"Koschatzky, Walter." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/koschatzkyw/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Director of the Albertina, 1962-1986. Koschatzky attended the state gymnasium in Lichtenfelsgasse, Graz, graduating in 1933 and the military academy in Liebenau (1936-40). Between 1940-45 he served in the Austrian army. After the war he returned t

Körte, Gustav

Full Name: Körte, Gustav

Gender: male

Date Born: 1852

Date Died: 1917

Place Born: Berlin, Germany

Place Died: Göttingen, Lower Saxony, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): Antique, the, Classical, and Etruscan (culture or style)


Overview

Specialist in Etruscan art and culture. Professor of Archaeology at Rostock University 1881-1905, Göttingen University, 1907-1917. notes about Körte’s opinions on Giotto appear in Richard Offner‘s annotated catalog of the 1937 Mostra Giottesca.



Sources

Archäologenbildnisse: Porträts und Kurzbiographien von Klassichen Archäologen deutscher Sprache. Reinhard Lullies, ed. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1988: 102; Ladis, Andrew. “The Unmaking of a Connoisseur.” in, Offner, Richard. A Discerning Eye: Essays on Early Italian Painting. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998, p,19, note 1.




Citation

"Körte, Gustav." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/korteg/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Specialist in Etruscan art and culture. Professor of Archaeology at Rostock University 1881-1905, Göttingen University, 1907-1917. notes about Körte’s opinions on Giotto appear in Richard Offner’s annotated catalog of the 19

Kootz, Samuel M.

Full Name: Kootz, Samuel M.

Other Names:

  • Samuel Melvin Kootz

Gender: male

Date Born: 1898

Date Died: 1982

Place Born: Portsmouth, Portsmouth, VA, USA

Place Died: New York, NY, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): Abstract Expressionist and American (North American)

Career(s): art dealers


Overview

First author of an American art survey to write sympathetically about Abstract Expressionism; art dealer. Kootz earned a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of Virginia in 1921. He practiced briefly before moving to New York city to work as an account executive in advertising handling motion pictures clients. During that time he published Modern American Painters in 1930, an early text on contemporary American artists. Kootz switch careers in 1934 again, now a silk converter, where he commissioned Stuart Davis and Arthur Dove to design scarves. He selected paintings of Abstract Expressionism for a 1942 show at Macy’s department store. In 1943 his New Frontiers in American Painting became the first to positively treat the emerging Abstract Expressionist artists in a book on American art (Ashton). He resigned from his agency in 1944 to become a dealer of modern American art, opening his gallery the following year. As a gallery dealer, he subsidized the emerging artists in 1947, Robert Motherwell and William Baziotes among others, sending the two artists to Florida to paint uninterrupted. The Kootz Gallery held the first post-World War II exhibition of Picasso’s work in the United States in 1947. His personal rapport with the artist led him–at Picasso’s suggestion–to close his gallery and sell Picasso’s work exclusively by appointment. However, Kootz missed greater public interaction. Kootz reopened his gallery, now on Madison Avenue, holding an exhibition of Abstract Expressionist painters–the first gallery to show–called, “the Intrasubjectives,” the term he coined for the movement, in 1949. In 1950, Kootz commissioned two important figures in the New York art world, the critic Clement Greenberg and the Columbia art historian Meyer Schapiro to launch what was to become a series of modernist exhibitions, titles “Talent.” These shows gave first-time exposure to Franz Kline, Helen Frankenthaler and Morris Louis. He closed the gallery in 1966, insisting that it had lost its usefulness as a venue for new art–the field now so full of “merchants.” He also wrote two detective novels and one play. Kootz was a leader in bringing elevating American modernist taste and promoting the important artists of the New York School. His Modern American Painters chided American chauvinism, pointing out that important American painters and found the roots in stiles outside the continent (Ashton).


Selected Bibliography

Modern American Painters. New York: Brewer & Warren, 1930; New Frontiers in American Painting. New York: Hastings House, 1943; “Peinture moderne et expression sociale.” in, Gagnon, Maurice, ed. Fernand Léger; la forme humaine dans l’espace. Montreal: Les éditions de l’Arbre, 1945.


Sources

Ashton, Dore. The New York School. New York: Penguin, 1979, pp. 35, 145; [obituaries:] Glueck, Grace. “Samuel M. Kootz Dead at 83, An Activist for American Art.” New York Times August 9, 1982, p. D8; Art in America 71 (August 1983): 27.




Citation

"Kootz, Samuel M.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kootzs/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

First author of an American art survey to write sympathetically about Abstract Expressionism; art dealer. Kootz earned a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of Virginia in 1921. He practiced briefly before moving to New York city to work a