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Duthuit, Georges

Full Name: Duthuit, Georges

Other Names:

  • Georges Duthuit

Gender: male

Date Born: 04 June 1891

Date Died: 09 August 1973

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

Place Died: Aix-en-Provence, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): Byzantine (culture or style), Medieval (European), and Modern (style or period)

Career(s): art historians and biographers

Institution(s): École du Louvre


Overview

Writer, Byzantinist and Matisse scholar. Duthuit’s father was a Parisian architect and his mother from landowning family in Auvergne. Both parents succumbed to tuberculosis when Duthuit was twelve and he was sent to live with an indifferent and brutally strict uncle. He learned to live by his wits, developing an engaging personality. As a school he discovered the art of Matisse in the Salon des Indépendents of 1907. At age 19 he met the enigmatic British art cognocenti Matthew Stewart Prichard at a Left-bank vegitarian cafe; Duthuit became Prichard’s most brilliant pre-war disciples (Spurning). An aderhent of Bergsonian esthetics, Prichard advised the young Duthuit that the purest principles of art were to be found in Byzantine art, Mozart and Matisse (Apollo). Duthuit had completed nearly three years of an eight-year military stint when the First World War broke out; as a seasoned soldier, he was among the first to be sent into action. He spent his military leaves at Issy, the home of the artist Henri Matissee. There he met the artist’s daughter, Marguerite Matisse (1895-1982). After the war, he abandoned plans to study architecture in favor esthics. Duthuit believed that civilization was at a point similar to that during the time of the sacking of Constantinople by the Franks. He planned to write a thesis on the lost art of the Byzantine Copts. Duthuit married Matisse’s daughter in 1923 and published a book on Renoir. He accompanied Matisse himself on a 1925 trip to Sicily. He lectured as an adjunct professor at the École du Louvre, assisting the head of the Oriental section, Georges Salles, in a book on Byzantine art. His research took him to the Kaiser-Friedrich Museum in Berlin Bernheims, the gallery representing Matisse, encouraged his son-in-law to write a major book on him in 1928. Duthuit spent years researching it as well as a thesis on Coptic art. In the early 1930s he published two books on Coptic art, hoping for a government posting in Cairo, which never materialized. Meanwhile, the Matisse book, which the artist hoped would become a catalogue raisonne, was relinguished of his publishers until Christian Zervos, an art historian and publisher of Cahiers d’art took it over. Duthuit frequently travelled to England, joining the Gargoyle Club in London, the Bohemian bar run by Prichard-ite David Tennant. In 1933 Duthuit was exposed for having an affair with the wife of Sacheverell Reresby Sitwell, Georgia Sitwell (1905/6-1980); Matisse forbade him to continue writing about him. Duthuit published a survey of the Fauves painters in 1949, reviving interest in this group which had long been neglected. After Matisse’s death in 1954, Duthuit took as his assistant a young literature scholar, Pierre E. Schneider (b. 1925) to again publish a monograph. Duthuit never finished the book, but Schneider became the major Matisse scholar of the following generation, publishing a catalogue raisonné from much of what Duthuit uncovered. In 1956 Duthuit issued a castigation of André Malraux and Malraux’s book Le musée imaginaire in his Le musée inimaginable (Unimaginable Musuem). He and the poet Pierre Reverdy (1889-1960) issued a book on Matisse’s final works, Dernières oeuvres de Matisse, 1950-1954 in 1958. In later years he became known as a scholar of the playright Samuel Beckett (1906-1989). Duthuit wrote on the lesser artists Riopelle, Bram Van Velde and Nicolas de Staël, and the work of Matisse. Yves Bonnefoy edited his writings after his death. Duthuit, along with E. H. Gombrich, virulently objected to Malraux’s concept of an art history/theory where context would be secondary to the psychological forms themselves, as Malraux stated in his book Voices of Silence. Clever, disrespectful and exceedingly funny and handsome (Spurling), his art histories are seldom consulted today.


Selected Bibliography

Byzance et l’art du XIIe siècle. Paris: Stock, 1926; La sculpture copte: statues–bas-reliefs–masques. Paris:G. Van Oest, 1931; and Volbach, Wolfgang, and Salles, Georges. Art byzantin; cent planches reproduisant un grand nombre de pièces choisies parmi les plus représentatives des diverses. Paris: A. Lévy, 1933; Mystique chinoise et peinture moderne. Paris: Chroniques du jour, 1936; English, Chinese Mysticism and Modern Painting. London: A. Zwemmer 1936; Les fauves: Braque, Derain, Van Dongen, Dufy, Friesz, Manguin, Marguet, Matisse, Puy, Vlaminck. Geneva: Éditions des Trois Collines, 1949, English, The Fauvist Painters. New York: Wittenborn, Schultz, 1950; Le musée inimaginable. 3 vols. Paris: J. Corti, 1956; and Reverdy, Pierre. Dernières oeuvres de Matisse, 1950-1954. Paris: Éditions de la Revue Verve, 1958, English, The Last Works of Henri Matisse. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1958; L’image et l’instant. Paris: J. Corti, 1961.


Sources

“Georges Duthuit.” Apollo 78 (July 1963): 68-69; Bonnefoy, Yves, ed. Représentation et présence: premiers écrits et travaux, 1923-1952. Paris: Flammarion, 1974; Labrusse, Rémi. Georges Duthuit: écrits sur Matisse. Paris: Ecole nationale supérieure des beaux-arts, 1992; Spurling, Hilary. Matisse the Master. London: Hamish Hamilton, 2005, pp. 257-265, 291; Labrusse, Rémi. “Notice Biographique.” Autour de Georges Duthuit. Aix-en-Provence: Galerie d’Art du Conseil Général des Bouches-du-Rhône/Actes Sud, 2003, pp. 87-91; [obituary:] “Georges Duthuit.” L’Oeil no. 219 (October 1973): 55.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Duthuit, Georges." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/duthuitg/.


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Writer, Byzantinist and Matisse scholar. Duthuit’s father was a Parisian architect and his mother from landowning family in Auvergne. Both parents succumbed to tuberculosis when Duthuit was twelve and he was sent to live with an indifferent and br

Duverger, Erik

Full Name: Duverger, Erik

Gender: male

Date Born: 1932

Date Died: 2004

Place Born: Ghent, East Flanders, Flanders, Belgium

Place Died: Ghent, East Flanders, Flanders, Belgium

Home Country/ies: Belgium

Career(s): archivists and researchers


Overview

Art historian; archival researcher: Erik Duverger was the son of historian and art historian, Jozef Duverger, and a Hungarian mother, Terez Belazy. The young Duverger was raised in his birthplace. After graduation from high school at Ghent Sint-Pauluscollege, he studied art history and archaeology at Ghent University, where his father had been professor since 1949. In his father’s footsteps, Erik specialized in the study of textile arts, particularly Flemish tapestry. Beginning in 1956, he contributed articles regularly in the periodical Artes Textiles. He graduated in 1957. His thesis was on art collections and art trade in Ghent in the seventeenth and the first half of the eighteenth century. In 1958, a travel award brought him to France, where he did archival research in Lille and Paris. During the summer he studied at Munich University, becoming a junior researcher at the Belgian Research Council (Nationaal Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, NFWO). He married Denise Van de Velde, also an art historian. In his publications, Duverger continued to focus on tapestry, as well as on art trade. In 1960 he received an award from the Koninklijke Academie van België voor Wetenschappen, Letteren en Schone Kunsten for his study on the history of private art collections in the Duchy of Flanders. In 1961 he earned his doctor’s degree with a broader study in this field, Kunsthandel en Kunstverzamelingen te Gent omstreeks de jaren 1600 tot 1850 (Art trade and art collections in Ghent between 1600 and 1850), which he never published. He remained an employee of the Belgian Research Council, obtaining in 1973 a permanent position, which he held until his retirement in 1997. From 1964 onward he was a regular contributor to the Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek, a publication of the Koninklijke Academiën van België, for which his father served as editor between 1964 and 1979 (vol. 1 to 8). In 1969 he presented a paper in Budapest on art trade between Flanders and Central Europe in the seventeenth century, and, in 1975, a conference in Warsaw on relations with Poland in the seventeenth century. When the section of Fine Arts of the Koninklijke Academie created a committee for the publication of art historical sources in the (historical) Netherlands in 1982, Duverger committed himself to setting up a series dedicated to archival sources concerning seventeenth-century inventories of Antwerp art collections and household inventories in the Antwerp City Archives. This decision had a huge impact on Duverger’s scholarly career. For the next 20 years he published the (ultimately) twelve-volume Antwerpse kunstinventarissen uit de zeventiende eeuw, in the series Fontes Historiae Artis Neerlandicae. The first volume appeared in 1984. In 1992 Duverger was elected a corresponding member, and, in 1995, an active member, of the Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie voor Wetenschappen en Kunsten. In 1996, he became a member of the Committee of the Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek. He was co-editor of the 16th volume, published in 2002. Between 1992 and 1998, Duverger held a guest professorship at Ghent University, where he taught the history of applied arts, art and art trade, and the history of tapestry. He published an impressive amount of articles on weavers and merchants of tapestry and their international contacts, most frequently in Artes Textiles. From 1983 onward he also was a regular contributor to the Allgemeines Künsterlexikon. He was involved in the organization of several tapestry exhibitions and in the publication of catalogs. With Guy Delmarcel, he coauthored the catalog, Brugge en de tapijtkunst/Bruges et la tapisserie in 1987. For the 1996 edition of the Dictionary of Art Duverger wrote entries on important centers for tapestry production, such as Antwerp, Bruges, Brussels, Ghent, Oudenaarde, and Tournai. After his retirement, Duverger remained active in his field. In 2000 he presented a paper in Budapest on “Les Tapisseries flamandes en Hongrie.” He died in 2004. His documentation on the Antwerp tapestry merchant Cornelis de Wael appeared posthumously, Documenten betreffende de Antwerpse tapijthandelaar Cornelis de Wael, erfgenaam van de firma Wauters, prepared for publication by his wife. Duverger’s Antwerpse kunstinventarissen uit de zeventiende eeuw is an important primary-source collection of documents, reflecting Duverger’s belief in that approach to art history. Extensively used by art historians of the 17th century, it has been praised by many, including Hans Vlieghe in his Burlington Magazine review of 1986, as a foundational work.


Selected Bibliography

[complete list:] “Publicaties van Erik Duverger” in Liber Memorialis Erik Duverger. Bijdragen tot de kunstgeschiedenis va de Nederlanden. Wetteren: Universa Press, 2006, pp. xvii-xxxvi; Antwerpse kunstinventarissen uit de zeventiende eeuw. (Fontes Historiae Artis Neerlandicae.) 14 vols. Brussels: Koninklijke Academie voor Wetenschappen, Letteren en Schone Kunsten van België, 1984-2006; Documenten betreffende de Antwerpse tapijthandelaar Cornelis de Wael, erfgenaam van de firma Wauters. (Fontes Historiae Artis Neerlandicae IV) vol. 1 and 2, Brussels: Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie van België voor Wetenschappen en Kunsten, 2008.


Sources

Pauwels, Henri. “In memoriam Erik Duverger 3 augustus 1932 – 19 maart 2004” in Pauwels, Henri, van den Kerkhove, André, Wuyts, Leo (eds). Liber Memorialis Erik Duverger. Bijdragen tot de kunstgeschiedenis va de Nederlanden. Wetteren: Universa Press, 2006, pp. I-V; Dewettinck-Bourgois, Maria. “Erik Duverger, de mens en de navorser” ibidem, pp. vii-xvi; [review:] Vlieghe, Hans in Burlington Magazine 128, no. 1004 (Nov. 1986): 832-833.




Citation

"Duverger, Erik." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/duvergere/.


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Art historian; archival researcher: Erik Duverger was the son of historian and art historian, Jozef Duverger, and a Hungarian mother, Terez Belazy. The young Duverger was raised in his birthplace. After graduation from hig

Duverger, Jozef

Full Name: Duverger, Jozef

Gender: male

Date Born: 1899

Date Died: 1979

Place Born: Sint-Niklaas-Waas, Liège, Wallonia, Belgium

Place Died: St.-Amandsberg, East Flanders, Flanders, Belgium

Home Country/ies: Belgium


Overview

Professor of Art History at Ghent. Duverger attended high school in his birthplace and studied history at the Catholic University of Louvain, where he obtained his doctoral degree in 1923. In 1924, he became a teacher at the Royal Atheneum in Ghent. He held this position for more than 20 years. In the meantime, he studied art history at the Hoger Instituut voor Kunstgeschiedenis en Oudheidkunde, at the Rijksuniversiteit (State University) in Ghent, where he obtained his second doctoral degree in 1930, with a dissertation on the artists who worked in the Southern Netherlands under the patronage of Margaret of Austria, Margareta van Oostenrijk en de kunstenaars. His adviser was Domien Roggen. In 1933, he published a study on sculptors who worked in Brussels, along with an appendix on Klaas Sluter, who was active in Dijon, De Brusselsche steenbickeleren der XIVde en XVde eeuw, met een aanhangsel over Klaas Sluter en zijn Brusselsche medewerkers te Dijon. In the same year, he received an award from the Académie Royale de Belgique for his monograph on the sculptor Conrat Meijt, ca 1480-1551, which was published in 1934. Another study on Brussels as an artistic center followed in 1935, Brussel als kunstcentrum in de XIVde en XVde eeuw. All these and most of his later publications are based on extensive archival research. In the 1930s, Duverger temporarily taught at the Ghent Institute for Art History and Archeology. His courses included sources, bibliography, and historiography of Flemish art, and history of tapestry. In 1941, he obtained a regular teaching position. In 1945, he published a critical study on the authenticity of the dedicatory inscription on the frame of the Ghent Altarpiece, Het grafschrift van Hubrecht van Eyck en het quatrain van het Gentsche Lam Gods-retabel [etc.]. This was a response to the 1933 publication of Émile Renders, Hubert van Eyck, personnage de légende. This Belgian connoisseur and banker had argued that the quatrain on the Ghent Altarpiece was a forgery, and that Hubert van Eyck never existed. Duverger convincingly refuted this theory, which by that time had aroused much controversy under art historians. In 1949, he was appointed professor at the faculty of Arts of Ghent University. He specialized in the field of decorative and applied arts, in particular tapestry. Between 1949 and 1951, and between 1963 and 1966, he was the president of the Institute for art history and archeology. He was the founder of the Centrum voor de Geschiedenis der textiele kunsten (1951), and the Interuniversitair Centrum voor de Studie van de Tapijtkunst (Interuniversity Center for the History of Flemish Tapestry). He wrote an introductory overview of the history of Flemish tapestry for the 1960 publication by Roger-Adolf d’Hulst, Vlaamse wandtapijten van de XIVde tot de XVIIde eeuw. As an active member (since 1948) of the Fine Arts Division of the Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie van België he was involved in the organization of several symposia, “Het herfsttij van de Vlaamse tapijtkunst” (1959), “De Bloeitijd van de Vlaamse tapijtkunst” (1961), and “Rogier van der Weyden en zijn tijd” (1964). He also was involved in creating the Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek, a publication of the Koninklijke Academiën van België. He was the editor of the first eight volumes, which appeared between 1964 and 1979. Although Duverger wrote almost all his works in Dutch, he established an international reputation. In 1964, he became a member of the Comité international d’Histoire de l’Art (CIHA). In 1968, his former students, friends, and colleagues honored him with a volume of 69 contributions, Miscellanea Jozef Duverger. In 1982, Duverger was posthumously honored by the Academy. On that occasion, the tenth volume of Artes Textiles, dedicated to Duverger, was offered to his widow. It contains articles on tapestry by specialists in Belgium and abroad, celebrating the legacy of a person who played a major role in the Flemish art history. His son, Erik Duverger, also an art historian, wrote the Antwerpse kunstinventarissen uit de zeventiende eeuw, beginning in 1984.


Selected Bibliography

[bibliography to 1968, and later, see] Onghena, M.J. in Miscellanea Jozef Duverger, 1968, 1, pp 13-23, and Onghena, M.J. “In memoriam Jozef Duverger.” Artes Textiles. 10 (1980); De Brusselsche steenbickeleren der XIVde en XVde eeuw, met een aanhangsel over Klaas Sluter en zijn Brusselsche medewerkers te Dijon. Ghent, 1933; Conrat Meijt; ca 1480-1551. Brussels: Palais des Académies, 1934; Brussel als kunstcentrum in de XIVde en XVde eeuw. Antwerp-Ghent, 1935; Het grafschrift van Hubrecht van Eyck en het quatrain van het Gentsche Lam Gods-retabel [etc.] Brussels: AWLSK, 1945; and van Gelder, H.E. Kunstgeschiedenis der Nederlanden van de Middeleeuwen tot onze tijd. Utrecht: W. de Haan, 1954-56; “Geschiedenis van de Vlaamse Tapijtkunst.” in D’Hulst, R.-A. Vlaamse wandtapijten van de XIVde tot de XVIIde eeuw. Brussels, Arcade, 1960, pp. IX-XXXI; “Brusselse patroonschilders uit de XIVde en de XVde eeuw.” De Bloeitijd van de Vlaamse Tapijtkunst, Colloquium, Brussels, 1961. Brussels: AWLSK, 1969: 205-226; “Enkele gegevens betreffende Rogier van der Weyden en zijn kring.” Internationaal Colloquium Rogier van der Weyden en zijn tijd, 1964. Brussels: AWLSK, 1974: 83-102.


Sources

De Seyn, Eug. Dictionnaire biographique des Sciences, des Lettres et des Arts en Belgique. 1. Brussels: éditions L’Avenir, 1935, p. 429; Onghena, M.J. “Prof. Dr. Jozef Duverger.” Miscellanea Jozef Duverger. Bijdragen tot de Kunstgeschiedenis der Nederlanden. Ghent: Vereniging voor de Geschiedenis der Textielkunsten, 1968. 1, 7-12; D’Hulst, R.-A. “Jozef Duverger, kunsthistoricus en hoogleraar.” Nationaal Biografisch Woordenboek. 9 (1981): 225-230; Onghena, J. “In memoriam Jozef Duverger.” Artes Textiles 10 (1980); Steppe, J. “Leven en werk van Prof. J. Duverger” Academiae Analecta. Mededelingen van de Koninklijke Academie voor Wetenschappen, Letteren en Schone Kunsten van België. Klasse der Schone Kunsten 44 (1983) 2: 1-8.



Contributors: Monique Daniels


Citation

Monique Daniels. "Duverger, Jozef." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/duvergerj/.


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Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Professor of Art History at Ghent. Duverger attended high school in his birthplace and studied history at the Catholic University of Louvain, where he obtained his doctoral degree in 1923. In 1924, he became a teacher at the Royal Atheneum in Ghen

Dvořák, Max

Image Credit: Wikipedia

Full Name: Dvořák, Max

Gender: male

Date Born: 04 June 1874

Date Died: 08 February 1921

Place Born: Roudnice, Ústecký Kraj, Czech Republic

Place Died: Hrušovany nad Jevišovkou , Jihomoravský Kraj, Czech Republic

Home Country/ies: Austria

Subject Area(s): art theory


Overview

One of the pillars of “Vienna-School” of art history; employed a Geistesgeschichte methodology (cf. Dilthey). Dvořák was the son of a archivist and librarian for the Palace of Roudnice, Bohemia. He was born in Raudnitz, Bohemia, which is present-day Roudnice, Czech Republic. He began his education in Prague, migrating to Vienna in 1895 where he completed a doctorate in history at the Institut für österreichische Geschichtsforschung in 1897 in Vienna. While in Vienna he became intrigued with the works of Aloïs Riegl and Franz Wickhoff the latter also a graduate of the Institut. In 1901 he completed his Habilitation on thirteenth- and fourteenth-century manuscript illumination in Bohemia. He became Wickhoff’s assistant, and by 1902 a lecturer (Privatdozent) at the University of Vienna. Riegl died in 1905 and Dvořák, with the help of Julius Alwin von Schlosser, was appointed to Riegl’s position as curator of public monuments in Austria, part of the teaching staff of the University. When Dvořák was appointed a full professor in 1909, the appointment touched off the great schism among the art faculty at Vienna. The decidedly pro-Germanic camp resented the Czech Dvořák’s elevation; their retribution erupted at Wickhoff’s death when the group succeeded in appointing the maverick and nationalist ideologue Josef Rudolf Thomas Strzygowski from Graz, an art historian much criticized by Wickhoff, Riegl and Schlosser. Josef Rudolf Thomas Strzygowski set up his own, competing art history institute, known as the Wiener Institut, resulting in Dvořák and Strzygowski teaching from different art history “centers” within the same University. Dvořák took his position as public monuments curator seriously, helping save many Austrian art treasures for post-World War I war reparation. He published a guideline for conservation, the Katechismus der Denkmalpflege (1916), continuing the publication of the Kunstgeschichtliches Jahrbuch der Zentralkommission für die Erhaltung der Kunst- und historischen Denkmale, and the establishment of an inventory of Austrian and Hungarian monuments, österreichische Kunstopographie in 1907. Dvořák’s lectures on baroque art of 1905-1906 constructed a history of modern art beginning with Tintoretto and running through Velázquez, Rembrandt and the impressionists. Though in later years his conception of art would often be viewed a set of tensions, idealism vs. naturalism, etc., his allegiance to art of all periods remained. He was one of the early writers to deal in an objective way with Italian Mannerism, a style still condemned by many art historians (cf. Wölfflin) as degenerate. It occupied his 1918-20 lectures. Donald Posner characterized Dvořák’s 1920 one on El Greco and Italian Mannerism, in which he analyzed the subjective and expressionistic motives of the style as a “spiritual crisis” as brilliant. One of his Dvořák’s publications was a forward to a 1921 picture facsimiles by Oskar Kokoschka. He died in Grusbach, Czech Republic, which is present-day Hru’ovany nad Jevi’ovkou, Cezch Republic. He is buried in the cemetery at Grußbach bei Znaim (Hrušovany) in a traditional grave, although Adolf Loos had designed a modernist mausoleum for him.

Methodologically, the early work of Dvořák is close to that of Riegl’s. He used Riegl’s evolutionary model of art history, describing (in his Habilitation, for example) the “great stream of artistic development.” He employed a strongly formal analysis of objects, arguing, as for example in Das Rätsel der Kunst der Brüder Van Eyck for a linear progression of art based upon stylistic analysis. In Das Rätsel, Dvořák discounted the naturalism of the van Eyck as a sudden appearance, tracing instead the continuous progression from quattrocento realism through French manuscript illumination to northern Renaissance painting. His later work increasingly demonstrates his belief that the intellectual content, discerned from subject mater and form, is the key to understanding it. Instead of a close, connoisseurship reading of individual works, Dvořák’s later writing opts for broader historical principles. This Geistesgeschichte method is best demonstrated in his Idealismus und Naturalismus in der gotischen Skulptur und Malerei (1917, English, 1967), where he argues among other things, that the degree of verisimilitude of an art object reflects an artist’s personal expression, not a struggle between abstraction and naturalism. The work of Otto Benesch and Hans Tietze both build on this method. Dvořák’s view of Italian Mannerism, that it was an angst-ridden time whose incongruous art reflected a chaotic society was adopted by subsequent art historians of Mannerism. The notion that Dvořák’s art-historical writing verged on the popular, sensational and grandiose has been disputed recently (Rampley). Edwin Lachnit described the Vienna School methodology as a triangle of Dvořák, a history-based approach; Wickhoff, stylistic; and Riegl/Schlosser, the linguistic-historical standpoints. Together these four make up the principal fame and direction of the Vienna school of the early 20th century. Dvořák’s students included Dagobert Frey, Guido Kaschnitz von Weinberg, Karl Maria Swoboda, Josef Borovicka Eugen Dostál Jan Gebauer, Jaroslav Helfert, Antonín Matejcek, Jaromír Pecírka, Oskar Pollak, Zdenek Wirth, Frederick Antal, Richard Offner, Emil Kaufmann Heinrich Schwarz and Robert Hedicke; Ludwig Münz wrote his dissertation under Dvořák but Dvořák’s death precluded its approval. His archives, much of which are still unpublished, are housed at the University of Vienna. In Italy, his method was popularized in the writings of Lionello Venturi.


Selected Bibliography

[habilitation:] “Die Illuminatoren des Johann von Neumarkt.” Jahrbuch der Kunsthistorischen Sammlungen des Allerhöchsten Kaiserhauses (1901): 35-127; “Idealismus und Naturalismus in der gotischen Skulptur und Malerei.” Historische Zeitschrift 119 (1918): 1-62, 185-246. [Also published in Kunstgeschichte: Studien zur abendlichen Kunstwicklung, below]; Idealism and Naturalism in Gothic Art. Preface by Karl Maria Swoboda. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1967; “Das Rätsel der Kunst der Brüder Van Eyck.” Jahrbuch der Kunsthistorischen Sammlungen des Allerhochsten Kaiserhauses 24 (1904): 161-317; Gesammelte Aufsätze zur Kunstgeschichte. edited (posthumously) by Karl Maria Swoboda and Johannes Wilde. Munich: Piper, 1929; Kunstgeschichte als Geistesgeschichte: Studien zur abendländischen Kunstentwicklung. Munich: R. Piper, 1924, English, The History of Art as the History of Ideas. Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984; “Vorwort.” Oskar Kokoschka: Variationen über ein Thema. Vienna: Richard Lányi, 1921, “über Greco und den Manierismus.” [in Kunstgeschichte als Geistesgeschichte volume], abridged English, “El Greco and Mannerism.” Coolidge, John, trans. The Magazine of Art 46 no. 1 (1953): 14-23.


Sources

Frey, Dagobert. “Max Dvořáks Stellung in der Kunstgeschichte.” Wiener Jahrbuch für Kunstgeschichte 1 no. 15 (1923): 1-21; Benesch, Otto. “Max Dvořák: Ein Versuch der historischen Geisteswissenschaften.” Reportorium für Kunstwissenschaft 44 (1924): 159-97, reprinted in Otto Benesch: Collected Writings. Vol. 4. London: Phaidon, 1973, 267-303; Benesch, Otto. “Max Dvorák (1874-1921).” In Große Österreicher/Neue Österreichische Biographie ab 1815. 10 (1957): 189-198, reprinted in Otto Benesch: Collected Writings. Vol. 4. London: Phaidon, 1973, 304-314; Posner, Donald. “Introduction.” Friedlaender, Walter. Mannerism and Anti-Mannerism in Italian Painting. 2nd ed. New York: Columbia University Press, 1965, pp. xii-xiii; Kleinbauer, W. Eugene. “Geistesgeschichte and Art History.” Art Journal 30, no. 2 (Winter, 1970): 148-153; Kleinbauer, W. Eugene. Modern Perspectives in Western Art History: An Anthology of 20th-Century Writings on the Visual Arts. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971, p. 21 mentioned, pp. 95-97; Rokyta, Hugo. “Max Dvořák und seine Schule in den Böhmischen Ländern.” Österreichische Zeitschrift für Kunst und Denkmalpflege 28 no. 3 (1974): 81-89 [entire issue devoted to Dvořák]; Busse, Hans-Bertold. Kunst und Wisenschaft, Untersuchung zur Asthetik und Methodik der Kunstgeschichtswissenschaft. Mittenwald: Mäander Kunstverlag, 1981: 85-108; Kleinbauer, W. Eugene. Research Guide to the History of Western Art. Sources of Information in the Humanities, no. 2. Chicago: American Library Association, 1982, pp. 152-153; Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, p. 163; German Essays on Art History. Gert Schiff, ed. New York: Continuum, 1988, pp. xlix-lii, 279; Schwarzer, Mitchell. “Cosmopolitan Difference in Max Dvořák’s Art History.” Art Bulletin 74 (December 1992): 669-678; Edwin Lachnit, “Max Dvořák.” The Dictionary of Art 9: 472-3 (1996); Metzler Kunsthistoriker Lexikon: zweihundert Porträts deutschsprachiger Autoren aus vier Jahrhunderten. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1999, pp. 65-68; Rampley, Matthew. “Max Dvorák: Art History and the Crisis of Modernity.” Art History 26 no. 2 (April 2003): 214-237; Aurenhammer, Hans. “Max Dvořák and the History of Medieval Art.” Journal of Art Historiography 2 (2010) https://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/media_152487_en.pdf


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Contributors: Emily Crockett and Lee Sorensen


Citation

Emily Crockett and Lee Sorensen. "Dvořák, Max." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/dvorakm/.


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One of the pillars of “Vienna-School” of art history; employed a Geistesgeschichte methodology (cf. Dilthey). Dvořák was the son of a archivist and librarian for the Palace of Roudnice, Bohemia. He was born in Raudnitz, Bohemia, which is

Dwelshauvers, Jean Jacques

Image Credit: ArchInForm

Full Name: Dwelshauvers, Jean Jacques

Other Names:

  • Hildegard Rebay
  • Hilla Rebay
  • Baroness Rebay von Ehrenwiesen
  • Hildegard, Baroness Rebay von Ehrenwiesen

Gender: male

Date Born: 1872

Date Died: 1940

Place Born: Brussels, Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium

Place Died: Montmaur-en-Diois, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France

Home Country/ies: Belgium

Subject Area(s): anarchism, anarchists, Florentine, Italian (culture or style), Italian Renaissance-Baroque styles, and Renaissance


Overview

Anarchist and scholar of Florentine Renaissance art. Dwelshauvers studied classics and medicine at the university in Brussels. He continued medical study in Bologna. He published important anarchist pamphlets, Le movement anarchiste in 1895 and in 1901 Le mariage libre. As an anarchist, he hated militarism and the political authority of the church. In 1897 he returned to Belgium where he met anarchist and geographer Elisée Reclus. He returned to Florence to receive his medical degree, but never practiced. Instead he remained in Florence to pursue historical studies in self-imposed isolation, away from the urban blight of the poorer classes with whom he identified. He met a colleague of Reclus, Clara Koetlitz, who became his companion. From 1894 onward, he published his art history under the pseudonym “J. Mesnil.” In Italy, Dwelshauvers was a close friend of Aby M. Warburg and Giovanni Poggi. Between 1894 and 1914 Dwelshauvers as Mesnil contributed to a number of Italian, Belgian and French periodicals, including Il Pensiero, Miscellanea dell’ Arte, Le Mercure de France, La Société nouvelle, Le Temps nouveaux and Van nu en straks. At the start of World War I he returned to Belgium. After the war Dwelshauvers associated with communist activities. His intent was to write a book on the whole of Tuscan history during the time of Botticelli. However, in 1938 he published his Botticelli, a work praised by Saxl for the introspection he read into Botticelli’s people. In later years he was a friend of Romain Rolland. As the Germans invaded western Europe at the beginning of World War II, Dwelshauvers fled, ultimately to a monastery in France were, in the words of Fritz Saxl, “he died a refugee in a monastery on a bed of straw.” Whether he took his own life or died naturally was never clear. Dwelshauvers’ (or Mesnil’s) book on Botticelli comprised one of the major 20th-century research on the quattrocento master, together with Herbert P. Horne. It was Dwelshauvers who determined that the “Adoration of the Magi” (Uffizi) was commissioned by Guasparre and not Giovanni del Lama. Ellis K. Waterhouse termed Dwelshauvers’ Botticelli “a worthy successor to Horne.” Dwelshauvers’ economic approach to social history–he understood the social factors of artistic production–was well received by art historians.


Selected Bibliography

“L’e´ducation des peintres florentins au XVe siècle.” Revue des Ide´es (1910): 1-14; L’art au nord et au sud des Alpes à l’époque de la renaissance: études comparatives. Brussels: G. van Oest & cie, 1911; and Bertaux, E´mile. Italie du Nord: Pie´mont, Ligurie, Lombardie, Ve´nt´ie, E´milie, Toscane. Paris: Hachette, 1916; Masaccio et les débuts de la renaissance. The Hague: M. Nijhoff, 1927; Frans Masereel. Berkeley Heights, NJ: Printed Privately by the Oriole Pr. 1934 [Excerpted from, Ishill, Joseph. Free Vistas: an Anthology of Life & Letters. vol. 1. Berkeley Heights, NJ: Oriole Press, 1933]; Botticelli. Paris: A. Michel, 1938; “On the Artistic Education of Botticelli.” Burlington Magazine 78, no. 457 (April 1941): 118-123; Raphaël. Paris: Braun, 1943?


Sources

Saxl, Fritz. “‘Three “Florentines:’ Herbert Horne, Aby Warburg, Jacques Mesnil.” Lectures, vol. 1. 1957, pp. 342-44; Bonet, M.-N. “Dwelshauvers, Jean-Jacques.” Dictionnaire biographique du mouvement ouvrier francais 12: 135-136.




Citation

"Dwelshauvers, Jean Jacques." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/dwelshauversj/.


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Anarchist and scholar of Florentine Renaissance art. Dwelshauvers studied classics and medicine at the university in Brussels. He continued medical study in Bologna. He published important anarchist pamphlets, Le movement anarchiste in 1895

Dworschak, Fritz

Image Credit: Lexikon der Osterreichischen Provenienz Forschung

Full Name: Dworschak, Fritz

Other Names:

  • Friedrich Dworschak

Gender: male

Date Born: 1890

Date Died: 1974

Place Born: Krems an der Donau, Niederösterreich, Austria

Place Died: Krems an der Donau, Niederösterreich, Austria

Home Country/ies: Austria

Subject Area(s): medals, metal, metalwork (visual works), metalworking, and numismatics


Overview

Numismatist, director of the medals collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna; assisted in Nazi looting of art treasures. Though he had not been previously politically active, Dworschak joined the Nazi party (NSDAP) at the annexation (Anschluss) of Austria in 1938, perhaps at the instigation of Rudolf Noll, an assistant in the antiquity section of the Museum, and was appointed director of the Münzkabinet (medals collection) of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in 1940. Hans Posse, the newly appointed supervisor of the proposed Führermuseum, set him in charge of numismatics collection of the Führermuseum. He collaborated with the Gestapo to identify collections of “enemies of the Reich,” mostly Jews, for dispersal into several museums, including his own Kunsthistorisches. The included the collections of Rudolf Gutmann, Serena Lederer, Viktor Ephrussi and David Goldmann. He became director of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in 1941.{


Selected Bibliography

edited. Die Gotik in Niederösterreich, 1963


Sources

Petropoulous and other say this happened in 1938]. Dworschak developed popular public-outreach tools, akin to the Berlin State Museums, such as the “art object of the month” and the radio program, “Ten minutes of the museum.” After Posse’s death in 1942, Dworschak oversaw the safe housing of art treasures from the Klosterneuburg Monastery to the Museum, and, in 1944 headed the securing of the Kunsthistorisches Museum objects. He was relieved of his position at the Kunsthistorisches in 1945 with the Allied capture of the city. He returned to his native Krems to head the Kulturamts (Culture Authority) and Stadtarchiv (City archives) from 1947 to 1958. In retirement, he headed the “Kunst der Donauschule” (Art of the Danube School) exhibition in St. Florian in 1965. Kühnel, Harry. “Fritz Dworschak.” Mitteilungen des Kremser Stadtarchivs 23-25, 1985; Haupt, Herbert. Das Kunsthistorische Museum: Die Geschichte des Hauses am Ring. Hundert Jahre im Spiegel historischer Ereignisse. Vienna: 1991; Petropoulous, Jonathan. The Faustian Bargan: The Art World in Nazi Germany. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000, p. 179.




Citation

"Dworschak, Fritz." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/dworschakf/.


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Numismatist, director of the medals collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna; assisted in Nazi looting of art treasures. Though he had not been previously politically active, Dworschak joined the Nazi party (NSDAP) at the annexation (A

Dülberg, Franz

Full Name: Dülberg, Franz

Gender: male

Date Born: 1873

Date Died: 1934

Place Born: Berlin, Germany

Place Died: Berlin, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): Netherlandish

Career(s): art historians


Overview

Contributor to the prestigious Handbuch der Kunstwissenschaft series on Netherlandish art.


Selected Bibliography

Niederländische Malerei der Spätgotik und Renaissance. Wildpark-Potsdam: Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Athenaion, M. B. H., 1929; Lucas van Leyden, 1494-1533. Leipzig: A. Schumann, 1924; and de Vries, Jan. Die Welt der Germanen. Leipzig: Quelle & Meyer, 1934.


Sources

Personenakten der DSS [deutsche Schillerstiftung] http://ora-web.swkk.de:7777/dss_online/dss.vollanzeige1?id=204;




Citation

"Dülberg, Franz." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/dulbergf/.


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Contributor to the prestigious Handbuch der Kunstwissenschaft series on Netherlandish art.

Dumont, Albert

Image Credit: Wikimedia

Full Name: Dumont, Albert

Other Names:

  • Albert Dumont

Gender: male

Date Born: 1842

Date Died: 1884

Place Born: Scey-sur-Saône-et-Saint-Albin, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France

Place Died: La Queue-les-Yvelines, France

Home Country/ies: France


Overview

founder of the Ecole Francaise in Rome at the Farnese Palace. Dumont’s Ecole attracted many students, among them Eugene Müntz.




Archives


Contributors: Emily Crockett and Lee Sorensen


Citation

Emily Crockett and Lee Sorensen. "Dumont, Albert." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/dumonta/.


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founder of the Ecole Francaise in Rome at the Farnese Palace. Dumont’s Ecole attracted many students, among them Eugene Müntz.

Dumont, Catherine

Full Name: Dumont, Catherine

Gender: female

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Subject Area(s): decorative art (art genre) and Mannerist (Renaissance-Baroque style)


Overview

Mannerism; integration of the figure in a decorative system


Selected Bibliography

Francesco Salviati et la décoration italienne 1520-1560. 1973.


Sources

Bazin 192




Citation

"Dumont, Catherine." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/dumontc/.


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Mannerism; integration of the figure in a decorative system

Dunlap, William

Image Credit: Wikipedia

Full Name: Dunlap, William

Other Names:

  • William Dunlap

Gender: male

Date Born: 1766

Date Died: 1839

Place Born: Perth Amboy, Middlesex, NJ, USA

Place Died: New York, NY, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): American (North American)

Career(s): art historians


Overview

First American to write a book on the history of art in the United States, A History of the Rise and Progress of the Arts of Design in the United States, 1834. Dunlap was the only child of a New Jersey housewares merchant, Samuel Dunlap and his wife, Margaret Sargent (Dunlap). The family moved to New York city in 1777 where the father, a Loyalist, was sought refuge (New York was British headquarters at the time). The younger Dunlap was largely self-educated. Despite losing sight in one eye in an accident, he became a professional portrait painter at sixteen, achieving modest fame with two paintings of George Washington. He traveled to London in 1784 to study with Benjamin West where the London theater impressed him as much as the graphic arts. Back in the United States in 1787, Dunlap continued as a portrait painter, yet his true interest was the theatre. In 1787 Dunlap began writing plays. He married Elizabeth “Nabby” Woolsey in 1789. He joined his father’s business, continuing to paint and write. In 1796 he became a partner and manager of the theatrical concern, the American Company and, although several of his plays were produced, none was a success. He left the company, painting to support himself, before returning to the theater in 1806 as manager of T. A. Cooper’s theatrical interests, including the Park Theater. Dunlap left theater managing permanently in 1811 to pursued painting in earnest. He joined the American Academy of the Fine Arts and later through the National Academy of Design organizing exhibitions and working as a professor of historic painting. In 1812 he started the journal Monthly Recorder, a fine arts and literary periodical. He published The Memoirs of George Fred. Cooke, Esq., Late of the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden in 1813 and The Life of Charles Brockden Brown in 1815. His important article on the early history of the American stage, “The History of the American Theatre” appeared in 1832. In 1834 Dunlap self-published his History of the Rise and Development of the Arts of Design in the United States, a biographical dictionary of early American artists with commentary. Though the book is full of errors and prejudice (Rowland), it provides a valuable record of the period. Other histories by Dunlap included The History of New York, for Schools (1837) and volume one of The History of the New Netherlands, the Province of New York, and State of New York in 1839, the year of his death. History of the Rise and Development of the Arts was the first book to trace the emergence of the visual arts tradition in the United States (Lyons). He conceived of his book as “a reverse Gibbon,” referring to the book Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, by Edward Gibbon (1737-1794). Dunlap worked throughout his life toward diversifying an American taste in art and drama, which were still largely British-centric. Many theater historians regard as the father of the American drama. The History as a relatively random assembly of biographies. More recently, Maura Lyons asserted Dunlap’s accomplishment was to create a “partisan tract shaped by competing professional, regional and commercial interests..


Selected Bibliography

[complete art bibliography:] “Anotated Bibliography of William Dunlap’s Published Writins on the Visual Arts.” in Lyons, Maura. William Dunlap and the Construction of an American Art History. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2005, pp. 167-172; A History of the Rise and Progress of the Arts of Design in the United States. New York: [self published] printed by George P. Scott, 1834.


Sources

Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art: de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, p. 538; The American Vasari: William Dunlap and His World. Exhibition catalog with essay by Arlene Katz Nichols. Hirsch & Adler Galleries, New York, 1999; mentioned, Rowland, Jr. Benjamin. “Introduction.” Jarves, James Jackson. The Art-idea. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1960, p. xxvii; Lyons, Maura. William Dunlap and the Construction of an American Art History. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2005.


Archives


Contributors: Emily Crockett and Lee Sorensen


Citation

Emily Crockett and Lee Sorensen. "Dunlap, William." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/dunlapw/.


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First American to write a book on the history of art in the United States, A History of the Rise and Progress of the Arts of Design in the United States, 1834. Dunlap was the only child of a New Jersey housewares merchant, Samuel Dunlap a