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Green, Rosalie B.

Full Name: Green, Rosalie B.

Other Names:

  • Rosalie B. Green

Gender: female

Date Born: 20 August 1917

Date Died: 24 February 2012

Place Born: Yonkers, Westchester, NY, USA

Place Died: Princeton, Mercer, NJ, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

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


Overview

Medievalist and director of the Index of Christian Art, Princeton University, 1951-1982. Green was the daughter of Sidney Green, a businessman, and Freda Braunstein (Green). At 5 she moved with her family to New York City attending public schools and then Pratt Institute intending on a career in industrial design. After graduation she worked for textile designers. She applied to the University of Chicago and entered the art history program in 1938 where she earned all her subsequent degrees, beginning with a BA in 1939 and an AM in 1941. While working on her doctorate, she researched at Dumbarton Oaks Research Library, Harvard University, as a Junior fellow between 1943 and 1946. In 1946, she was made a Reader at the Princeton University Index of Christian Art, the medieval image archive begun by Charles Rufus Morey. Green completed her dissertation under Ulrich Middeldorf with a dissertation on Romaneque symbolic typology, accepted for her Ph.D. in 1948. She secured a job indexing the Art Bulletin for Columbia University, joining Rutgers University, as a Lecturer in 1950. When the Index’s director, William L. M. Burke (1906-1961), developed disagreements with professor E. Baldwin Smith, he resigned; Green was appointed his successor in 1951. She relinquished her lectureship responsibilities at Rutgers in 1958. The Index was the locus for seminars in medieval studies and Green built a close rapport with the scholars. Erwin Panofsky once referred to her as Rosa Virens (Hourihan). Green hired Isa Ragusa (b. 1926) for the ICA who quickly became her “right hand” (Weitzmann). The two published a volume in the Princeton monographs in art and archaeology in 1961, an edited and translated manuscript of Saint Bonaventure, Bibliothèque nationale, Ms. Ital., 115, as Meditations on the Life of Christ: An Illustrated Manuscript of the Fourteenth Century. Her two-volume commentary and reconstruction of the writing of the Abbess of Hohenburg (ca. 1130-1195), Hortus deliciarum, was published with the paleography and historian Thomas Julian Brown (1923-1987) and the musicologist Kenneth Levy (b. 1927). Green retired from the Index in 1982 with the expectation that Ragusa would replace her, but the department instead hired Nigel Morgan. The Princeton Byzantinist Kurt Weitzmann ascribed to Green the international reputation of the Index. “Green attracted capable collaborators to the Index, which became a focal point for iconographical inquiries from all over the world” (Weitzmann).


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Daniel in the Lions’ Den as an Example of Romanesque Typology. University of Chicago, 1948;The Art Bulletin: An Index of Volumes I-XXX. New York: Columbia University Press, 1950; and Ragusa, Isa. Meditations on the Life of Christ: An Illustrated Manuscript of the Fourteenth Century. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1961; edited, Herrad of Hohenbourg. Hortus deliciarum. 2 vols. London: Warburg Institute, 1979; [collected essays] Studies in Ottonian, Romanesque, and Gothic Art. Pindar Press, 1994.


Sources

Who Was Who in American Art. 400 Years of Artists in America. 2nd ed. Edited by Peter Hastings Falk. Madison, CT: Sound View Press, 1999; Contemporary Authors; Weitzmann, Kurt. Sailing with Byzantium from Europ to America: The Memoirs of an Art Historian. Munich: Edito Maris, 1995, p. 99, 177; Hourihan, Colum. “They Stand on His Shoulders: Morey, Iconography and the Index of Christian Art.” in Hourihan, Colum, ed. Insights and Interpretations: Studies in Celebration of the Eighty-fifth Anniversary of the Index of Christian Art. Princeton, NJ: Index of Christian Art/Princeton University Press, 2002, pp.11-12; [obituary:] [Princeton] Town Topics. Thursday, July 19, 2012. http://www.towntopics.com/wordpress/2012/03/07/obituaries-3712/




Citation

"Green, Rosalie B.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/greenr/.


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Medievalist and director of the Index of Christian Art, Princeton University, 1951-1982. Green was the daughter of Sidney Green, a businessman, and Freda Braunstein (Green). At 5 she moved with her family to New York City attending public schools

Greenberg, Clement

Image Credit: Wikipedia

Full Name: Greenberg, Clement

Other Names:

  • Clement Greenberg

Gender: male

Date Born: 1909

Date Died: 1994

Place Born: Bronx, NY, USA

Place Died: New York, NY, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): Modern (style or period) and painting (visual works)

Career(s): art critics


Overview

Early and seminal art critic of the New York School of painting, particularly for the work of Jackson Pollock. Greenberg’s parents were Joseph Greenberg (1884-1977) and Dora Brodwin (Greenberg) (1888-1925), Russian immigrants who successfully operated clothing stores, factories and real estate in the Bronx, NY. He grew up in the Bronx except for the period 1914-1915 when the family lived in Norfolk, VA. In later years, his parents would be the model for what Greenberg saw as philistine American attitudes toward art. After briefly studying art at the Art Students League in New York City in 1925, he entered Syracuse University after his mother’s early death, graduating with a B.A. in literature in 1930. The Depression now in its height, Greenberg worked for clothing stores owned by this father in St. Louis. He taught himself German, which led to a job translating German books. He moved to California to manage stores there. There he met a wealthy 26-year-old divorcee named Edwina “Toady” Ewing (b.1908) whom he married in 1934 in San Francisco. Greenberg joined the U.S. Customs Service in New York and divorced Ewing, both in 1936. He dabbled in writing cultural criticism around 1937, embracing a Marxist approach, and contributing essays to the Partisan Review, the mouthpiece for a group known as the New York Intellectuals. At Lee Krasner’s suggestion, he attended the lectures of Hans Hofmann, the German ex-patriot artist responsible for forming the thought of many of the future Abstract Expressionists. An early article on criticism in the magazine, “Avant-Garde and Kitsch” in 1939 demonstrated an interest in social conditions for creating the art. The following year he became editor of the Partisan Review. Greenberg contributed a regular column on art for the Nation beginning in 1942 (though 1949). He was the foremost spokesperson for modernism during the war years. His art theory was drawn almost exclusively from Hans Hofmann’s notion of the dissolution of subject. As such, he attacked art movements containing subject matter, such as Surrealism (Nation, 1942), as reversing the trend of abstraction. Other artists receiving his animadversion during the 1940’s included Mondrian and Kandinsky. In 1942, Krasner introduced Greenberg to Jackson Pollock, her future husband, and Greenberg thereafter championed the artist’s career. Greenberg joined the Army Air Force at the height of World War II in 1943, but was discharged for psychological reasons, and resumed editing and writing. He entered a year affair with the writer Mary McCarthy (1912-1989). He joined the journal Commentary as associate editor in 1945 (through 1957). Greenberg published a book on Joan Miró in 1948. Around this time, he changed his approach to art criticism, abandoning Trotskyite aesthetics for Kantian (formal) criteria for art. He championed the Abstract Expressionist artists, whom he helped publicize through exhibitions he mounted largely for the Kootz Gallery, under the direction of Samuel M. Kootz, in New York. The first of these was the show, co-curated with Columbia art historian Meyer Schapiro, “Talent” in 1950, featuring Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, Franz Kline, Alfred Leslie, and Larry Rivers. Greenberg taught at Black Mountain College, the progressive North Carolina arts school in 1950, delivering lectures on “The Development of Modernist Painting and Sculpture from Their Origins to the Present Time.” His esthetics deeply affected, among other students, the artist Kenneth Noland. The same year, 1950, he met the painter Helen Frankenthaler and the two lived together for a number of years. A 1952 show on Pollock at Bennington College was the first of a number of shows curated by Greenberg at that college venue. Greenberg, through the journal Artforum, became major vehicle advancing Abstract Expressionism; his authority as a tastemaker, according to the art historian Bob Rosenblum, was “papal” (Newman). Greenberg published a monograph on Matisse in 1953. A show “Emerging Talent” at the Kootz Gallery, featuring Morris Louis, Noland, and Philip Perlstein, was mounted in 1954. He delivered the Ryerson Lecture at Yale University in 1954, “Abstract and Representational.” Another seminal article, “‘American Type’ Painting,” appeared in 1955. Greenberg married Janice Elaine Van Horne in 1956. He formally advised the New York art gallery French and Company between 1958 and 1960. In 1958, too, he delivered the Christian Gauss Seminar in Criticism at Princeton. His next art history book, on Hans Hofmann, appeared in 1961, along with Art and Culture, his collected criticism. Greenberg’s insistence on esthetic standards–rigid categories into which movements like Pop Art and minimalism did not fit, began to estrange him from his public. When it became clear his pronouncements against these art styles was being ignored, he tapered off writing in the early 1960’s. He taught at Bennington College in 1962 (and again in 1971), curated a show at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1964 organized around his term “Post Painterly Abstraction.” By the late 1960’s, however, Greenberg’s formalistic-approach to painting, his evaluative art criticism–not to mention his acerbic style and his distain of newer art forms–increasingly alienated him from the mainstream art world. Art history was adopting a pluralism of art trends and an avoidance of the concept of “style” which Greenberg could not relinquish. His writing was attacked as myopic and elitist. In 1977 and 1980 he served as the executor for the estates of Bush and Smith, executing his duties again controversially. Greenberg died in New York in 1994 from complications of emphysema. A major conference on his writing was held in New York the following year. He never completed a monograph on his primary interest, Jackson Pollock. His papers are held at the Archives of American Art and the Getty Research Center. Greenberg’s formalism (so associated with his writing that it is sometimes referred to as “Greenbergian Formalism”) was a blend of his reading of Kant’s Kritik der Urteilskraft (1790), Hofmann’s theories of painting, the writing of the 19th-century esthete Walter Pater and the work of the British Bloomsbury formalist Roger Fry. Greenberg argued that esthetic judgments are intuitive (“involuntary”) and irrational since they cannot be proven (Complaints of an Art Critic, 1967). His fellow art critic Barbara E. Rose quipped that Greenberg had trouble finding artists exceptional enough to bear the mantle he bestowed. He emphasized that Abstract Expressionism’s flat, two-dimensional quality was the movement’s importance to art history. Modern painting, Greenberg asserted, was evolving toward ridding itself of Renaissance pictorial illusion, adding that the public’s initial revulsion toward Abstract Expressionist art of the 1940’s was a “symptom of cultural and even moral decay.” By likening this work to the old masters, Greenberg argued it was equal to the best European modern art. Anathema to his theory was art with narrative content, which came under his particular derision. Pop art, and that of Roy Lichtenstein in particular, was disparaged by him. Greenberg was fond of employing vague terminology such as “viable essence” to describe the artists whom he appreciated. In addition to promoting the art of William Baziotes, Willem de Kooning, Arshile Gorky, Robert Motherwell, Barnett Newman, and Pollock, he created the term “Post Painterly Abstractionists” to characterize and define the Color-field style of Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, and Jules Olitiski. His criticism was so powerful, some artists (Noland for example) actually admitted changing their directions to fit Greenberg’s approval. A newer generation of art historians, such as T. J. Clark, Michael Fried, and Rosalind E. Krauss incorporated elements of Greenberg’s approach into their own methodology. His writing was lampooned, though not very insightfully, by Tom Wolfe (b. 1930) in his book The Painted Word (1975).


Selected Bibliography

[collected writings:] Art and Culture: Critical Essays. Boston: Beacon Press, 1961; Morgan, Robert C., ed. Clement Greenberg: Late Writings. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003; Homemade Esthetics: Observations on Art and Taste. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999; [original publications:] Joan Miró. New York: Quadrangle Press, 1948 [actually, 1949]; Post Painterly Abstraction: An Exhibition Organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and sponsored by the Contemporary Art Council. Los Angeles: LACMA, 1964.


Sources

Kramer, Hilton. “A Critic on the Side of History.” Arts Magazine 37 no. 1 (1962): 60-63; Ziv, Peter G. “Clement Greenberg: A Critic’s Forty-Year Challenge to the Art World.” Art and Antiques September 1987; Chastain, Catherine McNickle, and O’Brian, John. “Greenberg, Clement.” American National Biography; Carpenter, Kenneth. “Greenberg, Clement.” Dictionary of Art; Kuspit, Donald B. Clement Greenberg, Art Critic. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1979; Duve, Thierry de. Clement Greenberg Between the Lines. Paris: Dis Voir, 1996; Rubenfeld, Florence. Clement Greenberg: a Life. New York: Scribner, 1997; Jones, Caroline A. Eyesight Alone: Clement Greenberg’s Modernism and the Bureaucratization of the Senses. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005; Marquis, Alice Goldfarb. Art Czar: the Rise and Fall of Clement Greenberg: a Biography. Boston: MFA Publications, 2006; [art collection:] Wilken, Karen, and Guenther, Bruce. Clement Greenberg: a Critic’s Collection. Portland, OR: Portland Art Museum/Princeton University Press, 2001; Harris, Jonathan. Writing Back to Modern Art: After Greenberg, Fried, and Clark. New York: Routledge, 2005; [obituary:] Hernandez, Raymond. “Clement Greenberg Dies at 85, Art Critic Championed Pollock.” New York Times May 8, 1994, p. 38 [contains factual errors].




Citation

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Early and seminal art critic of the New York School of painting, particularly for the work of Jackson Pollock. Greenberg’s parents were Joseph Greenberg (1884-1977) and Dora Brodwin (Greenberg) (1888-1925), Russian immigrants who successfully oper

Grier, Harry D. M.

Image Credit: Monuments Men and Women

Full Name: Grier, Harry D. M.

Other Names:

  • Harry Dobson Miller Grier

Gender: male

Date Born: 1914

Date Died: 1972

Place Born: Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USA

Place Died: New York, NY, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): museums (institutions)

Career(s): directors (administrators) and museum directors


Overview

Frick Collection director, 1964-1972. Grier studied architecture at Pennsylvania State University, graduating in 1935. His experience with art encouraged him to study art history. He continued study at Princeton University, Department of Art and Archeology the same year, taking courses at New York University and working as a field assistant in the Princeton excavation at Antioch (modern Turkey). In 1936 he studied at the Institut d’Art et d’Archeologie, University of Paris. In 1938, Grier left studies at Princeton to join the Department of Education at the Metropolitan Museum of Art as Dean of Education; the Museum’s first television programs were part of his accomplishment. When World War II was declared, Grier joined the army, participating in the landing at Normandy and serving in intelligence. Assigned to the now famous “monuments men” division of the Army Counter Intelligence Corps (ACIC), Monuments, Fine Arts, and Archives (MFAA), 1945-1946, he obtained the first agreement among the four Allied powers for monuments restitution. He rose to the rank of captain. After service, he was hired assistant director at the Minneapolis Museum of Art where he again was an advocate for museum-sponsored television programing. He joined the Frick Collection in New York as assistant director under Franklin M. Biebel (1908-1966) in 1951. He succeeded Biebel as director in 1964. During his tenure, Grier acquired for the Frick “The Three Soldiers” by Pieter Brueghel in 1965, Gentile da Fabriano’s “Madonna and Child, with Saints Lawrence and Julian” in 1966 and Hans Memling’s “Portrait of a Man”, 1967. He oversaw the first two volumes of the Frick permanent holdings catalog in 1968. Grier was struck and killed by a truck in 1972. He was succeeded at the Frick by Everett Fahy, Jr., in 1973.


Selected Bibliography

Introduction. Masterpieces of the Frick Collection. New York: Frick Collection, 1970.


Sources

Shirey, David L. “Everett Fahy of the Met Is Named Frick Director.” New York Times May 20, 1973, p. 63; “Harry Grier Is Appointed Frick Collection’s Director.” New York Times June 5, 1964, p. 28, [recorded interview] Oral History Interview with Harry Dobson Miller Grier, 1970 Apr. 21-June 11. Archives of American Art; Harry D. M. Grier Loan Exhibition Paintings and Drawings related to Works in the Frick Collection.New York: The Frick Collection, 1972; [obituary:] “Harry D. M. Grier, of Frick Museum, Collection’s Director Since ’64 Tracked Art in War.” New York Times June 1, 1972. p. 47.




Citation

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Frick Collection director, 1964-1972. Grier studied architecture at Pennsylvania State University, graduating in 1935. His experience with art encouraged him to study art history. He continued study at Princeton University, Department of Art and A

Grimal, Pierre

Full Name: Grimal, Pierre

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: France


Overview


Selected Bibliography

Les Jardins romains à la fin de la République et aux deux premiers siècles de l’Empire. Paris, 1973; Dictionnaire de mythologie grecque et romaine. Paris, 1951.


Sources

Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986 p. 433




Citation

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Grimm, Claus

Full Name: Grimm, Claus

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): Dutch (culture or style), Dutch Golden Age, Northern Renaissance, and painting (visual works)


Overview

Frans Hals authority and historian of picture frames. Grimm wrote much of his book in the Ashmolean museum, Oxford, having studied the frames collection of Karl Theodore Parker.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Frans Hals: Entwicklung, Werkanalyse, Gesamtkatalog. Munich, 1969, published, Berlin: Mann, 1972; Frans Hals, das Gesamtwerk. Stuttgart: Belser, 1989, English, Frans Hals: the Complete Work. New York: H. N. Abrams, 1990; Rembrandt selbst: eine Neubewertung seiner Porträtkunst. Stuttgart: Belser, 1991; Stilleben: die niederländischen und deutschen Meister. Stuttgart: Belser Verlag, 1988; Alte Bilderrahmen: Epochen, Typen, Material. Munich: Callwey, 1977, English, The Book of Picture Frames. New York: Abaris Books, 1981.





Citation

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Frans Hals authority and historian of picture frames. Grimm wrote much of his book in the Ashmolean museum, Oxford, having studied the frames collection of Karl Theodore Parker.

Grimm, Herman

Image Credit: Wikipedia

Full Name: Grimm, Herman

Other Names:

  • Herman Grimm

Gender: male

Date Born: 1828

Date Died: 1901

Place Born: Kassel, Hesse, Germany

Place Died: Berlin, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

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


Overview

Gründerzeit art-historian; Raphael and Michelangelo scholar. Grimm’s father was Wilhelm Grimm 1786-1859 and his uncle Jakob Grimm (1785-1863), the philologist compilers of indigenous folk tales (“Brothers Grimm”). His other uncle was the painter engraver Ludwig Emil Grimm (1790-1863). He attended the Gymnasium of Leopold von Ranke. In 1841 he moved to Berlin and the circle of Bettina (1785-1859) and Achim von Arnim (1781-1831) and began publishing drama and novels. He began legal and philological studies at the universities of Berlin and Bonn. In 1857 he visited Rome where the artistic circle of Peter von Cornelius brought his interests to art. In 1859 he married Gisela von Arnim (1827-1889), the von Arnim’s daughter, and published his treatise, Die Akademie der Künste und das Verhältnis der Künstler zum Staate. His short-lived periodical, über Künstler und Kunstwerke, 1864-1867, published many important essays. It also contained some of the first photographic illustrations of art in a magazine. The first volume of his biography of Michelangelo, Das Leben Michelangelos, began appearing in 1868. He wrote his dissertation in 1868 from Leipzig and his habilitation 1870 in Berlin. In 1871 he weighed in on the famous Hans Holbein Meyer Madonna debate concluding against the sound reasoning of the “Holbein convention” of eminent scholars, that the Dresden version was the autograph one. He accepted the chair in the newly created discipline of history of art (Lehrstuhl für Kunstgeschichte) in Berlin in 1872 and remained there the rest of his life. Grimm published the first (though incomplete) edition of his popular Das Leben Raphaels in 1872. Grimm art history writing is characteristic of the period consolidation of standards following unification of Germany, known as the Gründerzeit. When Gustav Friedrich Waagen, for example, criticized in the early issues of the Zeitschrift für bildende Kunst Goethe’s aesthetic taste of some fifty years before, Grimm, the spokesman for the Gründerzeit took it personally, refuting Waagen effectively point by point. Grimm’s Beiträge zur deutschen Culturgeschichte, essays about important cultural personalities, appeared in 1897. Throughout his life his books were popular and his biographies went through numerous editions. At his death he was succeeded by Heinrich Wölfflin. His more famous students included Alfred Lichtwark; Julius Meier-Graefe studied under him but received not degree. Grimm’s reputation is that of the arch-Romantic, Gründerzeit art historian. He viewed himself as the intellectual successor of Goethe. His approach to art history was through the “Great Masters,” and arranging significance of art through a biographical account of art history. His tastes both typified and led German and continental bourgeois taste. Homer, Dante and Shakespeare were the great writers of their age; in art, only Raphael and Michelangelo could compare. The nineteenth century’s adoration of Raphael is in large part Grimm’s doing. Wölfflin wrote that Grimm showed indifference to all but the very great. This approach to art history is shared by other historians of his age, including Carl Nicolaus Heinrich Justi, but was personally savaged in the lectures of Anton Springer. Grimm was one of the first to carefully study reception theory, though he is little acclaimed for it. In the 3rd edition of his life of Raphael (1896) he added a section on Rezeptionsgeschichte. Perhaps because formal analysis and the sanctity of viewing the original work of art mattered so little to him, he was among the first to use lantern slides (reproductive images) in his lectures. Grimm’s writings were gradually supplanted by better scholarship in the twentieth century. His emotional approach to art-historical debate, as evidence in the Holbein Madonna incident, proved his allegiances were usually closer to nationalism than art history. In Germany, his concept of the [German] hero as a mover of history was embraced by the Nazis, who saw to it that new and repackaged versions of his writings, such as Vom geist der Deutschen, 1943, appeared up until the war’s end.


Selected Bibliography

Die Cartons von Peter von Cornelius in den Sälen der Königl. Akademie der Künste zu Berlin. Berlin: Hertz, 1859; Leben Michelangelo’s. 2 vols. Hanover: Carl Rümpler, 1860-1863 [and Berlin: Gustav Schade], English, Life of Michael Angelo. Boston: Little, Brown, 1865; “Ist die moderne Kunstgeschichte eine auf solider Grundlage ruhende Wissenschaft?– Gründe warum nicht.– Notwendigkeit einer änderung.” in, über Künstler und Kunstwerke 1 (1864): 4-8; Die Venus von Milo. Rafael und Michel Angelo: Zwei Essays von Herman Grimm. Boston: De Vries, Ibarra & Co., 1864, partially translated into English, The Venus de Milo. Boston: J. J. Hawes, 1868, collected and republished as, Zehn ausgewählte Essays zur Einführung in das Studium der Neuern Kunst. Berlin: Dümmler, 1871; Über Künstler und Kunstwerke. 2 vols. Berlin: F. Dümmler’s Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1865-1867; Albrecht Dürer. Berlin: C. G. Lüderitz, 1866; [Meyer Madonna opinion] “Die Holbein’sche Madonna.” Preussische Jahrbücher 28 (1871): 418-31; Das Leben Raphaels von Urbino: italienischer Text von Vasari übersetzt und Commentar. Berlin: F. Dümmler, 1872, [first complete edition, 2nd, 1886, 3rd ed., 1896 contains the chapter on Rezeptionsgeschichte of Raphael], English, The Life of Raphael. Boston: Cupples and Hurd, 1888; The Destruction of Rome: a Letter. Boston: Cupples, Upham, 1886; Beiträge zur deutschen Culturgeschichte. Berlin: W. Herts, 1897; Fragmente. Berlin: W. Spemann, 1900.


Sources

Schuchhardt, Wolfgang, ed. Vom Geist der Deutschen, Gedanken von Herman Grimm: ein Brevier. Berlin: F. A. Herbig, 1943; Dilly, Heinrich. Kunstgeschichte als Institution: Studien zur Geschichte einer Diziplin. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1979, p. 41 mentioned; Wölfflin, Heinrich. Heinrich Wölfflin, 1864-1945: Autobiographie, Tagebücher und Briefe. Joseph Ganter, ed. 2nd ed. Basel: Schwabe & Co., 1984, p. 492; Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art: de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, pp. 158, 530-531; Kultermann, Udo. The History of Art History. New York: Abaris, 1993, pp. 126-27, 147; Metzler Kunsthistoriker Lexikon: zweihundert Porträts deutschsprachiger Autoren aus vier Jahrhunderten. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1999, pp. 130-133; Schlink, Wilhelm. “Herman Grimm (1828-1901): Epigone und Vorläufer.” in Osinski, Jutta and Saure, Felix, eds. Aspekte der Romantik: zur Verleihung des “Brüder Grimm-Preises” der Philipps-Universität Marburg im Dezember 1999. Kassel: Brüder-Grimm-Gesellschaft, 2001 pp. 73-93.




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Gründerzeit art-historian; Raphael and Michelangelo scholar. Grimm’s father was Wilhelm Grimm 1786-1859 and his uncle Jakob Grimm (1785-1863), the philologist compilers of indigenous folk tales (“Brothers Grimm”). His other uncle was the

Gotch, J. Alfred

Image Credit: ArtUK

Full Name: Gotch, J. Alfred

Other Names:

  • John Alfred Gotch

Gender: male

Date Born: 1852

Date Died: 1942

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

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


Overview

Architectural historian. Margaret Whinney in her dissertation of 1946 reevaluated drawings of John Webb initially ascribed to that architect by Gotch.






Citation

"Gotch, J. Alfred." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/gotchj/.


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Architectural historian. Margaret Whinney in her dissertation of 1946 reevaluated drawings of John Webb initially ascribed to that architect by Gotch.

Gotsmich, Alois

Full Name: Gotsmich, Alois

Gender: male

Date Born: 1895

Date Died: 1974

Place Born: Pilsen, South Bohemia

Place Died: Erlangen, Bavaria, Germany

Home Country/ies: Czechoslovakia

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


Overview

Specialist in ancient Greek and Minoan art, particularly the juncture between the preclassical and classical ages. Maintained in 1935 book that the monumental classical Greek sculpture owed much more to the creativity of the Greeks than to “oriental” precursors. Studied at the German University of Prague (1917-1921). Dozent (tutor/lecturer, 1930-1935) and then Professor of Classical Archaeology (1935-1945) at the German University of Prague. A.o. Professor for Archaeology and Epigraphics at Erlangen University (1954-1963).


Selected Bibliography

Entwicklungsgang der kretischen Ornamentik. Gesellschaft zur Förderung deutscher Wissenschaft, Kunst und Literatur in Böhmen, 1923. Studien zur ältesten griechischen Kunst. Prag, 1930. Probleme der frühgriechischen Plastik. 1935. Venus vom Esquilin, in: FuF 25, 1949, 193 ff. Ein attisches Sittenbild aus kimonischer Zeit, in: FuF 28, 1954, 337 ff.


Sources

Archäologenbildnisse: Porträts und Kurzbiographien von Klassichen Archäologen deutscher Sprache. Reinhard Lullies, ed. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1988: 266-267.




Citation

"Gotsmich, Alois." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/gotsmicha/.


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Specialist in ancient Greek and Minoan art, particularly the juncture between the preclassical and classical ages. Maintained in 1935 book that the monumental classical Greek sculpture owed much more to the creativity of the Greeks than to “orient

Gould, Cecil

Image Credit: Monuments Men and Women

Full Name: Gould, Cecil

Other Names:

  • Cecil Hilton Monk Gould

Gender: male

Date Born: 1918

Date Died: 1994

Place Born: London, Greater London, England, UK

Place Died: Chard, Somerset, England, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): Renaissance


Overview

Historian of Renaissance art and Deputy Director of the National Gallery, London, 1973-1978. Gould was the son of Admiralty Lieutenant-Commander Rupert Thomas Gould (1890-1948), well-known as a panelist of the BBC “Brains Trust” program during World War II, and Muriel Hilda Estall (Gould) (1894-1980). At age 9 his mother separated permanently from his pathologically compulsive father and Gould was raised by her. He attended Westminster School, learning German in Germany before returning to England to study at the Courtauld Institute in 1939. At the outbreak of Word War II, he joined the Royal Air Force serving in Europe and in the Middle East. He never completed his degree at the Institute. While still in uniform, he authored an article in 1945 with Anthony Blunt. After the War, Philip Hendy the new Director of the National Gallery, London, appointed Gould to Assistant Keeper there in 1946, initially in charge of administrative details. Gould published scholarly articles on French art, moderating toward Renaissance subjects when his museum duties moved him in that direction. His first major work, An Introduction to Italian Renaissance Painting appeared in 1957. Eventually, he was assigned to write the catalog of 16th-century Italian paintings which included entries on Raphael, Titian and Michelangelo, the successive volume to the one by his superior, Martin Davies. The first volume of the catalog appeared in 1959 and the second in 1962. That year, 1962, he was promoted to Deputy Keeper. France remained an interest of his, organizing the Arts Council exhibition on Corot, and writing a brief account of Napoleon’s looting of works of art for the Louvre, Trophy of Conquest, both in 1965. His Charlton Lectures at the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, 1964, were published in 1966 as Michelangelo: Battle of Cascina. He was promoted Keeper and Deputy Director in 1973 when Michael Levey was appointed Director. His Italian Renaissance catalog was updated and reissued in 1975, the same year as his book on Leonardo. He published a catalogue raisonné on the paintings of Correggio in 1976, the first serious treatment in forty years. Gould retired in 1978, retiring to a village in Somerset. A book on Bernini in France of that title appeared in 1981. Gould had a strong affection for opera and frequently attended Covent Garden and Glyndebourne. At the end of his life, with health declining, he was made a correspondant (foreign associate) of the Institut de France. He died at age 75. He completed a monograph on Parmigianino which was published shortly after his death. Gould was a meticulous scholar. His art histories considered the relationships between media, such as painting, sculpture and the other arts. He examined art through the lens of the broader culture, which he knew personally from extensive travel. He was, however, averse to methods much beyond connoisseurship. His major interest was in attribution and subject matter identification. The Dizionario biografico degli Italiani contains numerous entries by him. £7SI


Selected Bibliography

The Sixteenth-century Venetian School [of the National Gallery]. London: National Gallery, 1959; The Sixteenth-century Italian Schools: Excluding the Venetian [of the National Gallery]. London: National Gallery, 1962; Michelangelo: Battle of Cascina. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, 1966; and Davies, Martin. French School: Early 19th Century, Impressionists, Post-Impressionists etc.[of the National Gallery]. London: National Gallery, 1970; Leonardo: the Artist and the Non-artist. London: Wiedenfeld & Nicolson, 1975; The Sixteenth-century Italian Schools [of the National Gallery]. London: National Gallery, 1975; The Paintings of Correggio. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1976; Bernini in France: an Episode in Seventeenth-century History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1982; Parmigianino. New York: Abbeville Press, 1994.


Sources

Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, p. 515; [obituaries:] “Cecil Gould.” Times (London) April 26, 1994; Mullaly, Terrence. “Cecil Gould.” Independent (London), June 3, 1994, p. 28; Levey, Michael. “Cecil Gould (1918-94).” Burlington Magazine 136, no. 1097 (August 1994), p. 554.




Citation

"Gould, Cecil." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/gouldc/.


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Historian of Renaissance art and Deputy Director of the National Gallery, London, 1973-1978. Gould was the son of Admiralty Lieutenant-Commander Rupert Thomas Gould (1890-1948), well-known as a panelist of the BBC “Brains Trust” program during Wor

Gowing, Lawrence, Sir

Image Credit: National Portrait Gallery

Full Name: Gowing, Lawrence, Sir

Other Names:

  • Sir Lawrence Burnett Gowing

Gender: male

Date Born: 1918

Date Died: 1991

Place Born: Stoke Newington, Hackney, London, England, UK

Place Died: London, Greater London, England, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): Modern (style or period) and painting (visual works)

Career(s): artists (visual artists) and curators


Overview

Artist, curator and historian of modern art history. Gowing was born to Horace Gowing, a successful draper. His early years were spent at the Downs School at Colwall, Herefordshire. He was tutored in art first by Maurice Feild (1905-1988) and later by William Coldstream (1908-1987), the latter frequenting the school because of its unconventional English teacher, W. H. Auden. Gowing further attended Leighton Park School continuing to study under Coldstream and then at Coldstream’s Road School, where his fellow students included the painter/art historians Quentin Bell and Adrian Stokes. Gowing’s study of the literature of art history was largely self-taught. His paintings of the 1940s were subsequently collected in major museums, but like Stokes, his explorations of art would more and more become literary. During World War II, he was a conscientious objector, a product perhaps of his Quaker training. It was during this period as well that he began to write, first anonymously in the Notes of a Painter, published in John Lehmann’s Penguin New Writing. In the late 1940s, Gowing began to write books on art. At 29 he was made professor of Fine Arts at the University of Durham, a remarkable advance for someone without significant training or experiences. He remained at Durham between 1948-1958. While recovering from tuberculosis, Gowing wrote his most influential, Vermeer (1952). The same year he married the writer Julia Frances Strachey (1901-1979). He moved to the Chelsea School of Art, London, England, 1958-65. In 1953 he was appointed Trustee of Tate Gallery, (until 1960) and again 1961-64. Gowing left Chelsea in 1965 for two years as Keeper of British Art at the Tate Gallery (1965-67). He was not the administrator the Tate needed and although he expected to become the next director, the trustees passed him over. Important exhibitions at this time included the New York show “Turner: Imagination and Reality” (1966) one of the first where Turners were lent to America. Gowing was also responsible for the reinstallation of Turner’s work in the Tate in 1967. Unhappy at being passed over at the Tate, Gowing returned to teaching to become Professor of Fine Art at Leeds University. His marriage to Julia Strachey was dissolved in 1967 and the same year he married Jennifer Wallis. During those same years, (1961-91) he was trustee of the National Portrait Gallery, London. In 1975 he took the leadership of the Slade School within University College, London. “He walked into the interview and appointed himself,” one member quipped (Hilton). He presided over the Slade during the meager art funding years of the Thatcher government. In 1978 Gowing edited the three volumes of Adrian Stokes’ collected writings. Gowing was knighted in 1982. In 1985, retired from the Slade professorship, Gowing made a bid for President of the Royal Academy in London. Though recently knighted, he was not an academician and never received the appointment. He was appointed to an honorary curatorship of the Academy’s collections and its exhibition program. Toward the end of his career, was named curator for the Royal Academy of Arts in London and the Phillips Collection in Washgington, D. C. Gowing had a pronounced stutter and accompanying speech impediment about which he was totally unselfconscious. His television appearances and personal style of black leather created an incongruous figure. Gowing’s book on Vermeer is considered his magnum opus. It illustrates best his “artist’s eye” approach to painting analysis. Great art, according to Gowing, was a balance between the human and imaginative experience and the intrinsic elements of observation. Gowing’s writing focuses on what he personally described as ”the pressure exerted by the presence of the real”.


Selected Bibliography

Paul Cézanne: the Basel Sketchbooks. New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1988; Cézanne: the Early Years, 1859-1872. New York: Abrams, 1988; Matisse. New York: Oxford University Press, 1979; Vermeer. London: Faber and Faber, 1952; Turner: Imagination and Reality. New York: Doubleday, 1966.


Sources

[obituaries:] Hilton, Tim. The Guardian [London], February 8, 1991, Morphet, Richard. The Independent [London], February 7, 1991, p. 29, The Times [London], February 7, 1991.




Citation

"Gowing, Lawrence, Sir." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/gowingl/.


More Resources

Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Artist, curator and historian of modern art history. Gowing was born to Horace Gowing, a successful draper. His early years were spent at the Downs School at Colwall, Herefordshire. He was tutored in art first by Maurice Feild (1905-1988) and late