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Guattàni, Giuseppe Antonio

Full Name: Guattàni, Giuseppe Antonio

Gender: male

Date Born: 1748

Date Died: 1830

Place Born: Rome, Lazio, Italy

Place Died: Rome, Lazio, Italy

Home Country/ies: Italy

Subject Area(s): Classical


Overview

Classical art historian. Guattàni initially studied law. His acquaintance with Giovanni Piranesi (1720-1778) and Ennio Guirino Visconti led him to the study of ancient art. As he accompanied his wife, the famous singer Marianna Bianchi (c1735-after 1790), throughout Europe, Guattàni visited museums and art collections. He collaborated with Visconti and later Visconti’s sons on their Museo Pio-Clementino. In 1784 he began publishing his Monumenti antichi, an authoritative supplement to the writings of Johann Joachim Winckelmann. In 1804, after an extended stay in Paris, he returned to Rome at the invitation of Pope Pius VII to become perpetual secretary of the Pontificia Accademia Romana di Archeologia as well as the Accademia di San Luca. He was also the supervisor of antiquities for sculpture discovered in Rome. He served as well as the advisor to the Polish monarch Augustus III on antiquities. A scholarly description of Rome by Guattàni, the two-volume Roma descritta ed illustrate, appeared in 1805. Another art-historical volume, the result of his travels with his wife to the cultural capitals of Europe, was the 1806 as Memoire enciclopediche, an initially four-volume account of the paintings and sculpture he had seen. Guattàni envisioned this as a continuation of the Monumenti. The via Giuseppe Antonio Guattàni in Rome is named for him.


Selected Bibliography

Monumenti antichi inediti, ovvero notizie sulle antichità e belle arti di Roma Rome: Nella stamperia Pagliarini, 1784-89, 1805; Roma descritta ed illustrate 2 vols. Rome: Pagliarini,1805; Memorie enciclopediche sulle antichita´ e belle arti di Roma. 7 vols. Rome: Pel Salomoni, 1806-19; and Visconti, Ennio Quirino, and Visconti, Giovanni Battista, and Visconti, Filippo Aurelio. Il Museo Pio-Clementino, descritto da Giambattista Visconti. 7 vols. Rome: Luigi Mirri, 1782-1807.


Sources

Encyclopedia of the History of Classical Archaeology. Nancy Thomson de Grummond, ed. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996, vol. 1, pp. 546-47; Cressedi, G. Guattani, Giuseppe Antonio. Enciclopedia dell’arte antica 3, p. 1067.




Citation

"Guattàni, Giuseppe Antonio." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/guattanig/.


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Classical art historian. Guattàni initially studied law. His acquaintance with Giovanni Piranesi (1720-1778) and Ennio Guirino Visconti led him to the study of ancient art. As he accompanied his wife, the famous singer Mar

Gudiol, José

Full Name: Gudiol, José

Other Names:

  • José Gudiol Ricart

Gender: male

Date Born: 1904

Date Died: 1985

Home Country/ies: Spain

Subject Area(s): Spanish (culture or style)


Overview

Historian of Spanish art. Two important works appeared by him in 1948; he and José Pijoán y Soteras issued their Las pinturas murales románicas de Cataluña and he and Juan Antonio Gaya Nuño published their Arquitectura y escultura románicas, the latter for the important Ars Hispaniae series. Gudiol introduced the Spanish symbologist Juan Eduardo Cirlot to Gothic art. 1985 saw the death of three emenent Spanish-subject art historians, Harold E. Wethey, Enrique Lafuente Ferrari and Gudiol.


Selected Bibliography

Goya. 4 vols. Barcelona, 1970; and Pijoán, José. Las pinturas murales románicas de Cataluña. Barcelona: Alpha 1948; and Gaya Nuño, Juan Antonio. Arquitectura y escultura románicas. Madrid: Editorial Plus-Ultra 1948.


Sources

Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986 p. 443; [obituary:] Archivo Espanol de Arte 58 (October/December 1985): 466-467.




Citation

"Gudiol, José." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/gudiolj/.


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Historian of Spanish art. Two important works appeared by him in 1948; he and José Pijoán y Soteras issued their Las pinturas murales románicas de Cataluña and he and Juan Antonio Gaya Nuño

Gudlaugsson, Sturla

Full Name: Gudlaugsson, Sturla

Other Names:

  • Sturla Jonasson Gudlaugsson

Gender: male

Date Born: 1913

Date Died: 1971

Place Born: Skagen, Nordjylland, Denmark

Place Died: Rotterdam, South Holland, Netherlands

Home Country/ies: Denmark

Subject Area(s): connoisseurship, Dutch (culture or style), iconography, Northern Renaissance, painting (visual works), and seventeenth century (dates CE)


Overview

Connoisseur; specialist in Dutch seventeenth-century painting and iconography; Director of the Netherlands Institute for Art History and the Mauritshuis in The Hague. Gudlaugsson was born in Skagen as the son of the Icelandic poet Jonas Gudlaugsson (1887-1916). His mother, Maria Ingenohl, was a Dutch woman raised in Germany. After the death of her husband, she moved with Gudlaugsson, her only child, to Berlin. Gudlaugsson studied art history in Berlin and in Munich. His teachers in Berlin included Oskar Fischel and Wilhelm Pinder. In spring 1936, he did research in the Netherlands, in the Amsterdam Rijksprentenkabinet. In 1939, he obtained his doctoral degree at the University of Berlin with the dissertation: Ikonographische Studien über die holländische Malerei und das Theater des siebzehnten Jahrhunderts with Pinder as his advisor. The study deals with the rather complicated relationship between scenes in theater plays and representations in Dutch genre painting. The book of his Dutch friend, Frithjof W. S. van Thienen (1901-1969), Das Kostüm der Blütezeit Hollands (Berlin, 1930), had been an important source of inspiration. After his student years, Gudlaugsson worked as a volunteer in the Berlin Schlossmuseum. In 1939, however, he decided to leave Nazi Germany, and moved first to Denmark, where he was appointed assistant in the Nationalhistoriske Museum Frederiksborgslot in Hilleröd. Early in 1942, he immigrated to the Netherlands, where he found employment in the Municipal Museum of The Hague. He joined the Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Dokumentatie (Netherlands Institute for Art History) in The Hague in 1943 (remaining there until 1970). In 1965, he succeeded his life-long colleague Horst Gerson as the director of the institute. With accuracy and connoisseurship he documented the art historical collection, including thousands of photographs of works of art. His interest in portraits and his knowledge of the history of the costume were often useful. He continued his research on the relationship between theater and Dutch seventeenth-century painting. In 1945 De komedianten bij Jan Steen en zijn tijdgenoten (Comediants by Jan Steen and his contemporaries) appeared. In a series of articles he focused on Dutch paintings depicting scenes from the popular plays “Lucelle” and “Granida”, the former translated into Dutch by G.A. Bredero (1585-1618), and the latter written by P.C. Hooft (1581-1647). In this same period, Gudlaugsson started working on the Dutch painter Gerard ter Borch. In his article “De datering van de schilderijen van Gerard ter Borch” he dealt with the chronology of a series of paintings of Ter Borch, correcting the dates previously given by Eduard Plietzsch in his 1944 monograph on Ter Borch. Gudlaugsson criticized the method followed by Plietzsch and argued that along with the stylistic analysis different approaches are necessary to establish a valuable chronology for the oeuvre of Ter Borch. In his own research, Gudlaugsson took into account distinctive aspects of the representations: the costume, decorative features of interiors, and the resemblance between persons in different paintings. In 1959-1960 appeared his magnum opus: Geraert ter Borch. In the first volume the artistic evolution of the painter’s oeuvre is described in close relation with the succeeding periods of his life. The second volume, the critical catalog, contains an amount of information, including references to the history of costume and emblemata. The book won the 1960 “Karel Van Mander Prize”. It was praised in the Connoisseur (146, January 1961: 270) and Oud Holland (79, 1964: 135-139). In a remarkable lecture, Gudlaugsson elucidated his broad knowledge on emblematic iconography in Dutch seventeenth-century genre painting, but the manuscript remained unpublished. As director of the Rijksbureau, Gudlaugsson coordinated the revision and re-edition of J.-B. de la Faille‘s Van Gogh catalog. In 1966 he joined the editorial board of Oud Holland, in which journal he published frequently. Between 1964 and 1968 he wrote a series of contributions in Kindlers Malerei Lexicon. Along with his position in the Rijksbureau, Gudlaugsson had a caring interest for the Royal Cabinet of Paintings the Mauritshuis in The Hague. Its successive directors, J. G. van Gelder and A. B. de Vries frequently consulted Gudlaugsson on ongoing affairs in the museum. On June 1st, 1970, Gudlaugsson eventually succeeded De Vries as director of the Mauritshuis. To honor the retiring director, Gudlaugsson organized an exhibition of the paintings acquired by De Vries for the Mauritshuis, and wrote the catalog: Vijfentwintig jaar aanwinsten Mauritshuis [1945-1970]. Gudlaugsson had only just begun his new position when he unexpectedly died in March 1971, at the age of 57. For many years, Gudlaugsson did investigations on nineteenth-century painting, focused on the Biedermeier period, but his premature death left the work unfinished. Walter Liedtke wrote that Gudlaugsson’s 1959-1960 work on ter Borch the opening of a golden age in Dutch scholarship.


Selected Bibliography

[For a selection of his publications, see:] Gerson, Horst. Jaarboek van de Maatschappij der Nederlandse Letterkunde te Leiden 1971-1972: 161-164; Ikonographische Studiën über die holländische Malerei und das Theater des siebzenhten Jahrhunderts. Wurzburg: Dissertions-Verlag K.J. Triltsch, 1938; De komedianten bij Jan Steen en zijn tijdgenoten. The Hague, 1945; “Bredero’s Lucelle door eenige zeventiende eeuwsche meesters uitgebeeld.” Nederlandsch Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 1 (1947): 177-195; “Representations of Granida in Dutch Seventeenth-Century Painting I” Burlington Magazine 90 (1948): 226-230; II: 348-351; III 91 (1949): 39-43; “Adriaen Pauw’s intocht te Munster, een gemeenschappelijk werk van Gerard ter Borch en Gerard van der Horst” Oud Holland 63 (1948): 39-47; “De datering van de schilderijen van Gerard ter Borch” Nederlandsch Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek 2 (1948-1949): 235-267; “Aanvullingen omtrent Pieter Post’s werkzaamheid als schilder” Oud Holland 69 (1954): 59-71; Geraert ter Borch. 2 vols. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1959-60; “Kanttekeningen bij de ontwikkeling van Metsu” Oud Holland 83 (1968: 13-43; Vijfentwintig jaar aanwinsten Mauritshuis. The Hague, 1970.


Sources

[obituaries:] De Vries, A.B. “S.J. Gudlaugsson” Burlington Magazine 113 (July-December 1971): 742-743; “In Memoriam S.J. Gudlaugsson” Oud Holland 86 (1971): 1-2; Emmens, J.A. “In Memoriam Dr. Sturla Gudlaugsson” Simiolus 4, 3 (1971); Gerson, Horst. Kunstchronik 24 (1971) 274-276; Gerson, Horst. “Sturla Jonasson Gudlaugsson” Jaarboek van de Maatschappij der Nederlandse Letterkunde te Leiden 1971-1972 (1973): 150-164; Bergström, Ingvar. “In memoriam Sturla J. Gudlaugsson 1913-1971” Konsthistorisk Tidskrift 42 (June 1973): 67; Müller-Hofstede, Cornelius Weltkunst 41 (1971): 350; Liedtke, Walter. “The Study of Dutch Art in America.” Artibus et Historiae 21, no. 41 (2000): 214.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen and Monique Daniels


Citation

Lee Sorensen and Monique Daniels. "Gudlaugsson, Sturla." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/gudlaugssons/.


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Connoisseur; specialist in Dutch seventeenth-century painting and iconography; Director of the Netherlands Institute for Art History and the Mauritshuis in The Hague. Gudlaugsson was born in Skagen as the son of the Icelandic poet Jonas Gudlaugsso

Guicciardini, Lodovico

Image Credit: Wikidata

Full Name: Guicciardini, Lodovico

Other Names:

  • Lodovico Guicciardini

Gender: male

Date Born: 19 August 1521

Date Died: 22 March 1589

Place Born: Florence, Tuscany, Italy

Place Died: Antwerp, Flanders, Belgium

Home Country/ies: Italy

Subject Area(s): biography (general genre) and Netherlandish

Career(s): art historians

Institution(s): none


Overview

Merchant, writer and biographer Netherlandish artists. Guicciardini was the son of Jacopo Guicciardini (d. 1552) and Camilla d’Agnolo des Bardi (d. 1557). His uncle was the historian Francesco Guicciardini (1483-1540). He was well educated according to the affluent means of his family including learning Latin and some Greek. He moved to Antwerp by 1542 where he remainded his whole life. In 1567, after publishing some minor works, collections of anecdotes and maximes, etc., he published Descrittione di m. Lodouico Guicciardini patritio fiorentino, di tutti i Paesi Bassi, a geopolitical description of the area which included a significant discussion of artists. The work is a major source of information on the artists of the period. A French edition appeared the same year. The same year, Guicciardini suffered the first of a series of political incarcerations, imprisoned and his home confiscated for criticism of the ruling Duque de Alba, Governor of the Netherlands. In 1569 he was denounced for alleged dealings with Protestants and again imprisoned, this time in Brussels. In 1582 he was arrested in connection with a plot to assasinate William the Silent, Prince of Orange and in 1588 arrested again during the last years of the war against the Protestants. He was released because of his age. A third and final edition of Descrittione was printed by Plantin the same year. Guicciardini was pensioned his final years (50 livres d’artois) from Antwerp. He died at 68 and is buried in the Antwerp Cathedral. An English edition of the Descrittione appeared in 1593. The artistic biographical section of the Descrittione is an amalgam of personal experience, the input of artists (Lucas de Heere and Dominicus Lampsonius) and portions of the first edition of the Vite (1550) by Giorgio Vasari. Guicciardini adopts Vasari’s assertion that Jan van Eyck discovered oil painting and reference to the (presumed) Portinari Altarpiece of Hugo van der Goes. Vasari clearly read Guicciardini’s work for in his second edtion of the Vite, 1568, Vasari includes Jan’s brother, Hubert van Eyck, mentioned in Guicciardini’s work. As a whole, Descrittione is one of the first accounts to treat the Low Countries as a whole (Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani)


Selected Bibliography

Descrittione di m. Lodouico Guicciardini patritio fiorentino, di tutti i Paesi Bassi, altrimenti detti Germania inferiore : con piu carte di geographia del paese, & col ritratto naturale di piu terre principali : con amplissimo indice di tutte le cose piu memorabili. Antwerp: Guglielmo Siluio, 1567, English, The Description of the Low Countreys and of the Prouinces thereof, Gathered into an Epitome out of the Historie of Lodouico Guicchardini. London: Peter Short, 1593


Sources

Dictionary of Art 13: 806; Aristodemo, Dina. “Lodovico Guicciardini e la ‘Descrittione di tutti i Paesi Bassi’.” Studi e problemi di critica testuale 16 (April 1978): 217-224; Aristodemo, Dina. “La figura e l’opera di Lodovico Guicciardini: prospettive di ricerca, in Lodovico Guicciardini (1521-1589).” Actes du Colloque international, Bruxelles… 1990, edited by Pierre Jodogne. Leuven: Peeters Press, 1991, pp. 19-36; “Guicciardini, Lodovico.” Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/lodovico-guicciardini_(Dizionario-Biografico)/.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Guicciardini, Lodovico." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/guicciardinil/.


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Merchant, writer and biographer Netherlandish artists. Guicciardini was the son of Jacopo Guicciardini (d. 1552) and Camilla d’Agnolo des Bardi (d. 1557). His uncle was the historian Francesco Guicciardini (1483-1540). He was well educated accordi

Guiffrey, Jean

Full Name: Guiffrey, Jean

Other Names:

  • Jean Guiffrey

Gender: male

Date Born: 1870

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: France

Career(s): curators


Overview

Prud’hon scholar and curator Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and later conservator at the Musée du Louvre. In 1924 he authored the catalogue raissone on P. P. Prud’hon. Guiffrey’s two areas of specialty were French primitives and eighteenth-century French painting.


Selected Bibliography

L’oeuvre de P. P. Prud’hon. Paris: A. Colin, 1924.


Sources

“New Curator for Boston, Jean Guiffrey of the Louvre, Paris, Coming to Art Museum.” New York Times April 11, 1911 p. 11.




Citation

"Guiffrey, Jean." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/guiffreyj1870/.


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Prud’hon scholar and curator Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and later conservator at the Musée du Louvre. In 1924 he authored the catalogue raissone on P. P. Prud’hon. Guiffrey’s two areas of specialty were French primitives and eighteenth-century Fr

Guiffrey, Jules

Image Credit: Wikidata

Full Name: Guiffrey, Jules

Other Names:

  • Jules Marie-Joseph Guiffrey

Gender: male

Date Born: 1840

Date Died: 1918

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

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

Home Country/ies: Ukraine

Subject Area(s): eighteenth century (dates CE), French (culture or style), seventeenth century (dates CE), and tapestries


Overview

Administrator and historian of tapestries and 17th and 18th century French art. Guiffrey studied law and paleography. In 1866, he was appointed Keeper of the Archives Nationale, where he worked until 1893. While working at the Archives, Guiffrey became the editor of the publications of the Société de l’Art Francais, renaiming them Nouvelles archives de l’art francais. He contributed articles on a wide range of topics to dozens of scholarly journals, including the Gazette des beaux-arts and the Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires. In 1881, Guiffrey published Comptes des Batiments du roi sous le regne de Louis XIV, the first of two important works on 17th and 18th century French painting. The second book, Inventaire général du mobilier de la couronne sous Louis XIV (1885-6), was a compilation of Paris Salon exhibition catalogues. Guiffrey was appointed director of the Mobilier National in 1893, where he worked until 1908.


Selected Bibliography

Inv. Gén. du mobilier de la Couronne sous Louis XIV. 2 vols. Paris, 1885-1886. L’Histoire générale de la tapisserie. 3 vols. 1880.


Sources

Bazin 482, The Dictionary of Art



Contributors: LaNitra Michele Walker


Citation

LaNitra Michele Walker. "Guiffrey, Jules." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/guiffreyj/.


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Administrator and historian of tapestries and 17th and 18th century French art. Guiffrey studied law and paleography. In 1866, he was appointed Keeper of the Archives Nationale, where he worked until 1893. While working at the Archives, Guiffrey b

Grisebach, August

Image Credit: Wikidata

Full Name: Grisebach, August

Gender: male

Date Born: 04 April 1881

Date Died: 24 March 1950

Place Born: Berlin, Germany

Place Died: Heidelberg, Saxony, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Institution(s): Universität Heidelberg


Overview

University lecturer and full professor. Grisebach was born in Berlin in 1881 to the architect Hans Otto Grisebach (1848–1904) and Emmy Hensel (1858–1936). He attended the Joachimsthalsches Gymnasium in Berlin, completing his abitur in 1900. From c. 1900 to 1904, he studied art history in Berlin for four semesters, Munich for one, and returned to Berlin for his final three. During this time, he studied under Heinrich Wölfflin and Berthold Riehl. Grisebach received his doctorate in 1906 from Berlin under Wölfflin. From 1906 to 1907, he worked as a volunteer with the Berlin museums. His dissertation, Das deutsche Rathaus der Renaissance (The German Renaissance City Hall), was published in Berlin in 1907. Grisebach completed his habilitation in 1910 at the Technische Hochschule Karlsruhe. From 1912 he worked as a private lecturer. Grisebach married his first wife, Svanhild Jörgenson, in 1913. In 1918, Grisebach joined the University of Berlin as an associate professor and rose quickly through the ranks, becoming a full professor at the Technische Hochschule Hannover in 1919 and moving to Breslau in 1920. Grisebach divorced his wife in 1924 and married Dr. Hanna Blumenthal (1899–1988) the same year. In 1929, he studied at the Bibliotheca Hertziana in Rome. Grisebach succeeded Carl Neumann as a professor in Heidelberg in 1930. From 1931 to 1933, Grisebach served as chairman of the Heidelberger Kunstverein. In 1933, the Ministry of Culture attempted to dismiss him from his position due to “political unreliability” on the basis of the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, but nothing incriminating could be brought against him; as a result, the proceedings were dropped. He was forced into retirement on September 30, 1937, on the basis of Article 6 (“Simplification of Administration”) of the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service; reasons included his “non-Aryan” wife, who was of Jewish parentage, and rededication of the chair, in order to provide the Minister of State Paul Schmitthenner (1884–1963) (not to be confused with the architect Paul Schmitthenner (1884–1972)) with a scheduled chair for military policy and history. The dean of the faculty agreed, as two professorships in art history could not be justified; Grisebach resisted in vain. Although he received a pension, he was not considered emeritus and thus no longer had academic rights. Attempts to emigrate failed, as well as attempts to secure a professorship in Basel. From 1937 to 1945, Grisebach operated as a private scholar in Timmendorf, residing in a house belonging to his father. From 1945, he worked in Potsdam. Grisebach returned to Heidelberg in 1946, losing his household goods and library in the move. The Heidelberg University Senate had pleaded for his reinstatement in 1945, but it dragged on until March 1947. The ministry and university committees could not agree to establish a new chair for him, as he was about to retire; his former chair had been rededicated, and a newly created chair had been filled by Walter Paatz. From 1947 he was a full member of the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences, and once again served as the chairman of the Heidelberger Kunstverein from 1947 to 1949.

Ernst Gall described the individual nature and impact of Grisebach’s work as such: “But it was precisely these years of quiet seclusion that also allowed his last major work to mature, Die Kunst der deutschen Stämme und Landschaften . . . Here he has given us that which was particularly in keeping with his sensitive character, attuned to clairvoyant intuition, an analysis of German artistic creation, so manifoldly fractured in its roots, that penetrates to the deep primordial depths of the soul. Grisebach was a grateful disciple of Wölfflin, from whom he had learned more in seeing and interpreting the ‘forms’ than is learnable; in a very personal continuation, he formed a spiritual relationship to the works of art that elevated all formal penetration to psychological interpretation. The lecture on the fundamentals of French art, held in Heidelberg in 1947, shows the very personal nature of his relationship to the visual arts, which, as an image of a lived life, had become for him above all the founder of the power of expression of the soul.”


Selected Bibliography

  • [dissertation:] Das deutsche Rathaus der Renaissance. Berlin: Meyer, 1907;
  • Danzig. Leipzig: Klinkhardt und Biermann, 1908;
  • [habilitation:] Der Garten, eine Geschichte seiner künstlerischen Entwicklung. Leipzig: Klinkhardt und Biermann, 1910;
  • and Burger, Fritz, and Georg Swarzenski: Die Kunst des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts. Berlin: Akademische Verlagsgesellschaft Athenaion, 1917;
  • Deutsche Baukunst im 17. Jahrhundert. Leipzig: E. A. Seemann, 1921;
  • Carl Friedrich Schinkel: Architekt, Städtebauer, Maler. Leipzig: Insel-Verlag, 1924;
  • Heinrich Wölfflin. Breslau: Trewendt & Granier, 1924;
  • and Grundmann, Günther, and Franz Landsberger: Die Kunst in Schlesien. Berlin: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 1927;
  • Die alte deutsche Stadt in ihrer Stammeseigenart. Berlin: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 1930;
  • Sanssouci. Berlin: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 1944;
  • Die Kunst der deutschen Stämme und Landschaften. Vienna: Neff, 1947;
  • Grundzüge der französischen Kunst. Heidelberg: Rausch, 1947;
  • Potsdam. Berlin: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 1947.

Sources

  • [obituary:] Gall, Ernst. “August Grisebach. ✝ 24.3.1950.” Kunstchronik 3 (1950): 113–14;
  • Grisebach, Hanna. Potsdamer Tagebuch. Heidelberg: Schneider, 1974;
  • Grisebach, Hanna. Der Heidelberger Bergfriedhof. Heidelberg: Heidelberger Verlagsanstalt und Druckerei, 1981, pp. 73–80;
  • Mussgnug, Dorothee. Die vertriebenen Heidelberger Dozenten: zur Geschichte der Ruprecht-Karls-Universität nach 1933. Heidelberg: Winter, 1988, pp. 96–98, ff.;
  • Wendland, Ulrike. Biographisches Handbuch deutschsprachiger Kunsthistoriker im Exil: Leben und Werk der unter dem Nationalsozialismus verfolgten und vertriebenen Wissenschaftler. Munich: Saur, 1999, vol. 1, pp. 243–45.


Contributors: Lee Sorensen and Lindsay Dial


Citation

Lee Sorensen and Lindsay Dial. "Grisebach, August." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/grisebacha/.


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University lecturer and full professor. Grisebach was born in Berlin in 1881 to the architect Hans Otto Grisebach (1848–1904) and Emmy Hensel (1858–1936). He attended the Joachimsthalsches Gymnasium in Berlin, completing his abitur in 190

Grisebach, Lothar

Full Name: Grisebach, Lothar

Gender: male

Date Born: 1910

Date Died: 1989

Place Born: Jena, Thuringia, Germany

Place Died: Hilchenbach, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): documentaries (documents), documentary (general concept), Expressionist (style), German (culture, style, period), and German Expressionist (movement)


Overview

German Expressionist documentary scholar. Grisebach was the son of Jena professor of philosophy, Eberhard Grisebach (1880-1945), whose art connections laid the groundwork for his son’s interests. His father was a second cousin of the art historian August Grisebach and personal friends with the artists Ferdinand Hodler (who became Lothar’s Godfather) and Edvard Munch. The senior Grisebach organized art exhibitions for Kunstverein Jena, where he met and befriended the German Expressionist (Brücke) artist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. His wife (Lothar’s mother), Charlotte Spengler, was daughter of the director of a sanitarium in Davos, Switzerland, where Kirchner was sent to recuperate from metal collapse and drug addiction during World War I. Lothar Grisebach grew up in this household, a talented drawer. During his stays with his grandparents in Davos, his drawings were critiqued by Kirchner. Grisebach studied physics under Peter Pringsheim, brother in law of Thomas Mann, in Berlin. He received his doctorate in 1935 in Berlin. In 1937, however, he gave up physics and started as an painter. He taught art at a school. In the 1960s, Grisebach published two important documentary volumes on Kirchner. The first, his father’s correspondence with Expressionist artists, Maler des Expressionismus im Briefwechsel mit Eberhard Grisebach, in 1962. The second, Kirchner diary during the artist’s years in Davos, Davoser Tagebuch, in 1968. After his retirement in 1975 he lectured “Kunstpädagogik” at the University of Siegen for some years. His son, Lucius Grisebach (q.v.) is also an art historian.Grisebach was not formally trained as an art historian. His importance comes from the important documentary publications in connection with Ernst Ludwig Kirchner.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Der Polarisationsgrad der Fluoreszenz viskoser Farbstofflösungen bei Anregung in verschiedenen Absorptionsgebieten. Berlin, 1935; E. L. Kirschners Davoser Tagebuch: eine Darstellung des Malers und eine Sammlung seiner Schriften. Cologne: M. DuMont Schauberg, 1968; Maler des Expressionismus im Briefwechsel mit Eberhard Grisebach. Hamburg: C. Wegner, 1962; Von Munch bis Kirchner: erlebte Kunstgeschichte in Briefen aus dem Nachlass von Eberhard Grisebach. Munich: Paul List Verlag, 1968.


Sources

[personal correspondence, Lucius Grisebach April 29, 2007]




Citation

"Grisebach, Lothar." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/grisebachl/.


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German Expressionist documentary scholar. Grisebach was the son of Jena professor of philosophy, Eberhard Grisebach (1880-1945), whose art connections laid the groundwork for his son’s interests. His father was a second cousin of the art historian

Grodecki, Louis

Full Name: Grodecki, Louis

Other Names:

  • Louis Grodecki

Gender: male

Date Born: 1910

Date Died: 1982

Place Born: Warsaw, Russia

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

Home Country/ies: Poland

Subject Area(s): Byzantine (culture or style), French (culture or style), Medieval (European), paintings (visual works), Romanesque, and stained glass (visual works)

Institution(s): Université de Paris (Sorbonne)


Overview

Medievalist art historian; influential in French Romanesque studies and stained glass. Grodecki was raised in a Polish-speaking family in Russian-controlled Poland. When he was eighteen, he left to study stagecraft under Emil Preetorius (1883-1973) in Berlin. Later he moved to Paris, enrolling at the école du Louvre. His teacher, Charles Mauricheau-Beaupré advised him to take courses by Henri Focillon at the Sorbonne and Collège de France. Grodecki rose to be one of Focillon’s famous group of students, receiving his licence ès letters in 1932. He was a teaching assistant for Focillon and René Schneider at the Institut d’Art et d’Archéologie of the Sorbonne (1932-1936). During that time he earned his diplôme d’études supérieures (1933) at the College. He never completed his dissertation, however, which centered on the topic of gothic “mannerism.” In 1934 he took French citizenship, serving in the French military (Second Dragoon Regiment, Provins) between 1936-37. Returning to the Institut, he was an assistant to Louis Réau for the academic year 1937-1938, before war tensions with Germany caused him to be recalled to the reserves at Rambouillet, 1939-40. During the German occupation of France, Grodecki was interned at a camp in Drancy (1942-1943) for attempting to save a young Jewish woman with whom he had fallen in love. He worked as an antique dealer for Picard until 1945. After the war he secured a position as the archivist with the Direction de l’Architecture of the Ministry of Culture (1945-1947). There, Grodecki was given the task of documenting the medieval stained glass as it re-emerged from war-safe refuge to the churches. He worked closely with Jean Taralon (1909-1996), later Inspecteur general des monuments historiques, advising him on conservation, and assembling a photoarchive of stained glass. In 1948 fellow Focillon student Sumner McKnight Crosby invited Grodecki to be the first Focillon Fellow at Yale University. There he published a seminal article on thirteenth-century stained glass and, in 1949, a piece on architecture’s relationship to stained glass. He returned to France and the support by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. The academic year 1951-1952 he spent at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton where he met Erwin Panofsky and, elsewhere in America, Hanns Swarzenski whose work on Romanesque art would appear shortly thereafter. He married the Romanesque scholar Catherine Gauchéry (his second wife). In 1959 Grodecki, along with Jean Lafond (d.2009) was asked to write the first French volumes for the Corpus Vitrearum Medii Aevi, which had been founded in 1953 by Hans R. Hahnloser to document extant stained glass. The same academic year he was visiting professor at Harvard University. The years 1953-61 Grodecki was conservator of the Musée des Plans-Reliefs, Paris, a model museum of fortifications in the eighteenth century. In 1958, at age 48, he published his first major monograph, Au seuil de l’art roman: l’architecture ottonienne. In 1961 he was appointed Chargé d’enseignement d’histoire de l’art at the university in Strasbourg. It was his first teaching position; its proximity to Germany brought him close to like minded medievalists, including Willibald Sauerländer, then at Freiburg am Breisgau. In 1970 he received his docteur ès letters at the Sorbonne at age sixty. The following year he was appointed chair in art history there, a position he held until his retirement in 1977. He was succeeded at the Sorbonne by Anne Paillard Prache. His 1973 Le siècle de l’an mille, co-authored with Florentine Mütherich, synthesized his findings with other scholars. After retirement, Grodecki continued to write, despite failing eyesight until 1982 when he died of cancer. His students included Florens Deuchler, Jane Hayward, and Catherine Brisac who had succeeded him in his position at Musée des Plans-Reliefs and completed his unfinished manuscript, Le vitrail gothique.

Methodologically, Grodecki was a Focillon-style formalist who exploited archaeological data to its fullest. In reaction to chartrists scholars such as Emil Mâle, who frequently relied on written accounts and 19th-century engravings for their scholarship, Grodecki insisted on examination of the monuments themselves. Unusual for a French scholar, Grodecki possessed a strong command of Germanic literature on art history and a willingness to incorporate the intellectual traditions of Adolph Goldschmidt, Julius Alwin von Schlosser and Wilhelm Pinder, all of whom he had heard lecture on their own soil. A strong personality, he has been described by his students as capable of bullying and unduly argumentative (Caviness, 2000). His celebrated dispute with Robert Branner–whom he had met when both excavated St. Denis under Crosby–over the attributions of Pierre, Eudes and Raoul de Montreuil (1964), appeared to be more than academic. In gentler disagreement with Panofsky, his two 1961 articles on St-Denis used more concrete sources than Panofsky’s philosophical texts to theorize a program for the church.


Selected Bibliography

[complete bibliography] études d’art médiéval offertes à Louis Grodecki. Paris: Ophrys, 1981, pp.19-32; L’Architecture ottoniene: au seuil de l’art roman. Paris: A. Colin, 1958; Sainte-Chapelle. Paris: Caisse nationale des monuments historiques, 1960; The Stained Glass of French Churches. London: L. Drummond, 1948; Chartres. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1963 ; Vitraux des églises de France, Paris: éditions du Chêne, 1947 [actually, 1948]; L’architecture ottonienne; au seuil de l’art roman. Paris: A. Colin, 1958; L’architecture ottonienne; au seuil de l’art roman. 2 vols. Paris: A. Colin, 1958; Le vitrail gothique au XIIIe siècle. Fribourg, SW: Office du livre, 1984. English: Gothic stained glass : 1200-1300. London: Thames and Hudson, 1985; and Prache, Anne, and Recht, Roland. Architecture gothique. Paris: Berger-Levrault, 1979, English [published earlier] Gothic Architecture. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1977; Recensement des vitraux anciens de la France. Paris: Editions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1978- : Les Vitraux du Centre et des Pays de la Loire. Recensement des vitraux anciens de la France 2. Paris: éditions du Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1981; Les vitraux de Paris, de la région parisienne, de la Picardie et du Nord-Pas-de-Calais. Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique, 1978; Le vitrail roman. Fribourg, SW: Office du livre, 1977; and Mütherich, F., and Taralon, Jean, and Wormald, Frances. Le Siècle de l’an mil. Univers des formes [series]. Paris: Gallimard, 1973; “Pierre, Eudes et Raoul de Montreuil à l’abbatiale de Saint-Denis.” Bulletin monumental 122 (1964): 269-74.


Sources

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. 48 mentioned; Sauerländer, Willibald. “Le Savant.” Revue de l’art 55 (1982): 6-8; Caviness, Madeline. “Necrology: Louis Grodecki (1910-1982).” Gesta 21 (1982): 157-8; 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. 84, mentioned; Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, p. 490; Caviness, Madeline H. “Louis Grodecki (1910-1982)” in Medieval Scholarship: Biographical Studies on the Formation of a Discipline. Volume 3. New York: Garland, 2000, pp. 307-321.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Grodecki, Louis." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/grodeckil/.


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Medievalist art historian; influential in French Romanesque studies and stained glass. Grodecki was raised in a Polish-speaking family in Russian-controlled Poland. When he was eighteen, he left to study stagecraft under Emil Preetorius (1883-1973

Groenewegen-Frankfort, Henriette

Image Credit: Brown

Full Name: Groenewegen-Frankfort, Henriette

Other Names:

  • Henriette Groenewegen-Frankfort

Gender: female

Date Born: 1896

Date Died: 1982

Place Born: Rotterdam, South Holland, Netherlands

Place Died: Kimmeridge, Dorset, England, UK

Home Country/ies: Netherlands

Subject Area(s): ancient and archaeology


Overview

Archaeologist and scholar of ancient art. Groenewegen’s father, Hermanus Ysbrand Groenewegen (b. 1862), was a minister and professor of theology at a seminary in Leiden and later a professor of philosophy of religion and ethics at the University of Amsterdam. She studied Greek and Chinese philosophy at the University of Amsterdam where she met Henri Frankfort, another ancientist student a year younger than she. The two became engaged in 1920. In 1921 Groenewegen was granted an M. A. in philosophy and Frankfort one in Netherlands Language and Literature and history. Before their marriage, Frankfort traveled to London to study with the Egyptian archaeologist Sir Flinders Petrie (1853-1942). She accompanied Frankfort, teaching French at a girl’s school on the South Coast of England. Petrie invited him to Egypt and the archaeological dig at Qau el-Kebir. Frankfort returned to London, marrying “Jettie” Groenewegen (as she was known) in 1923 and completed a second M. A. at the University of London the same year. The two lived in Athens for the 1924-1925 academic year at the British School of Archaeology. Frankfort wrote his doctoral dissertation there. The Frankforts worked in tandem for up to six months each year on two major archaeological digs: the excavations of London’s Egypt Exploration society (which Henri Frankfort directed, 1925-1926) and then the University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute’s Iraq Expedition in the Diyala River Basin and the Assyrian city of Khorsabad, of which Frankfort was field director, 1929-1937. Groenewegen’s position as Frankfort’s wife resulted in her performing the duties of camp manager on the expeditions. She acquired much of her knowledge of ancient civilizations first hand at these sites, working with her husband and other archaeologists. In October 1931 Frankfort fell ill and was not able to begin the Iraq excavation; Groenewegn started the expedition in his stead, on time, and Frankfort joined it six weeks later. During the off season, Frankfort taught at the Warburg Institute in London. The Frankforts lived in Hampstead (London), the center of the British avant-garde. There they knew artists such as Barbara Hepworth and her husband, the artist Ben Nicholson. The effects of the Depression finally ended the Iraq Expedition in 1937. In 1938 the couple moved to a house overlooking the sea in Kimmeridge near Corfe Castle, Dorset. When World War II was declared in Europe in 1939, Frankfort moved to Chicago to teach, while Groenewegen remained in Europe, volunteering with the Red Cross. In 1941 she rejoined Frankfort and their son in Chicago. Groenewegen suggested a series of speculative talks as part of a public course in the Division of the Humanities of the University of Chicago on ancient human’s worldview. The lectures, delivered by the archaeologists John Albert Wilson (1899-1976), Thorkild Jacobsen (1904-1993) and William A. Irwin (1884-1967), resulted in the book Intellectual Adventure of Ancient Man: An Essay on Speculative Thought in the Ancient Near East. Groenewegen and her husband supplied the introduction, “Myth and Reality,” and a conclusion. At the death of Fritz Saxl, the director of the Warburg, Frankfort accepted a professorship and appointment as director at the University of London. Groenewegen and Frankfort resettled in London. She published Arrest and Movement, an Essay on Space and Time in the Representational Art of the Ancient Near East, perhaps her best known book, in 1951. Groenewegen remained in Dorset rather than inhabit Frankfort’s flat in London. The couple grew apart. In the meantime, Frankfort had fallen in love with a Spanish scholar and photographic archivist of the Warburg, Enriqueta Harris. He divorced Groenewegen and married Harris in 1952. Groenewegen was deeply hurt by the divorce although she and Frankfort collaborated on additional manuscripts. Two years later, Frankfort died. For the final thirty years of her life, she became a recluse, seldom publishing. In 1971 she and Bernard Ashmole wrote an introductory survey of ancient art, Art of the Ancient World, in which Groenewegen authored the sections on ancient middle-eastern art. Arrest and Movement: An Essay on Space and Time in the Representational Art of the Ancient Near East examines the formal representation of space and time in the art of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Crete. Groenewegen charted the differences of spatial rendering through the different regions of the ancient Near East. She theorized the significance as an issue of cultural rather than aesthetic necessity. Her study reflects the methodology of German structuralism employed by Gerhard Krahmer, Friedrich Matz (1890-1974), Guido Kaschnitz von Weinberg, and Bernhard Schweitzer, which “aimed at replacing the concept of style with that of spatial structure and linking the latter to cultural identity” (Suter). Her writing on “Myth and Reality” owes much to Ernst Cassirer and his Philosophie der symbolischen Formen.


Selected Bibliography

[complete bibliography:] Arrest and Movement: an Essay on Space and Time in the Representational Art of the Ancient Near East. London: Faber and Faber, 1951; and Ashmole, Bernard. Art of the Ancient World: Painting, Pottery, Sculpture, Architecture from Egypt, Mesopotamia, Crete, Greece and Rome. New York, H. N. Abrams, 1971; and Wilson, John A., and Jacobsen, Thorkild, and Irwin, William A., and Frankfort, Henri. The Intellectual Adventure of Ancient Man: an Essay on Speculative Thought in the Ancient Near East. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1946 [reprinted as Before Philosophy: The Intellectual Adventure of Ancient Man: An Essay on Speculative Thought in the Ancient Near East. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1949.


Sources

Ground Breaking: Women in Old World Archaeology. Henriette Groenewegen-Frankfort. http://www.brown.edu/Research/Breaking_Ground/results.php?d=1&first=Henriette%20Antonia&last=Groenewegen-Frankfort, and Suter, Claudia E. “Henriette Antonia Groenewegen-Frankfort. http://www.brown.edu/Research/Breaking_Ground/bios/Groenewegen-Frankfort_Henriette%20Antonia.pdf, Brown Institute of Archaeology and the Ancient World; [place of birth verification, Ben Noach, Genealogist of the Frankfort family of Oldenzaal in the Netherlands, correspondence, January 2013]




Citation

"Groenewegen-Frankfort, Henriette." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/groenewegenfrankforth/.


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Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Archaeologist and scholar of ancient art. Groenewegen’s father, Hermanus Ysbrand Groenewegen (b. 1862), was a minister and professor of theology at a seminary in Leiden and later a professor of philosophy of religion and ethics at the University o