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Hampe, Roland

Image Credit: Kiell Directory of Scholars

Full Name: Hampe, Roland

Gender: male

Date Born: 1908

Date Died: 1981

Place Born: Heidelberg, Saxony, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): ancient, Ancient Greek (culture or style), ceramic ware (visual works), Classical, Greek pottery styles, pottery (visual works), and Roman (ancient Italian culture or period)


Overview

Classical art historian of Greek and Roman art; specialist in Greek pottery. Hampe was the son of the medieval historian Karl Hampe (1869-1936). Hample was a scientific assistant to Reinhard Herbig at the University of Würzburg, but had difficulty moving up the employment ladder due to a negative recommendation by the Nazi teacher’s union (NS Dozentenbund). He was assigned to the Deutsche Archäologisches Institut during the Nazi era under Walther Wrede where he was a participant in the Olympia excavation 1936-1937. When the Germans evacuated Greece, Hampe, now a Nazi officer, remained behind at the DAI with Ulf Jantzen. After the war, Hampe was appointed ordentliche (full) Professor at the University of Kiel in 1946, remaining there until 1948 when he moved to the university at Mainz (1948-1957) and finally the University of Heidelberg (1957-1975). Together with Erika Simon he authored the Corpus vasorum antiquorum for Mainz, in 1959.Hampe was a specialist in classical Greek and Roman art. He pioneered the study of ceramic artwork production in the ancient world as well as the importance of the form and style.


Selected Bibliography

and Winter, Adam. Bei Töpfer und Töpferinnen in Kreta, Messenian und Zypern. Mainz: Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums,1962; Bei Töpfer und Zieglern in Süditalien, Sizilien und Griechenland. Mainz: Verlag des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums Mainz/Bonn: R. Habelt, 1965; and Simon, Erika. Griechische Sagen in der frühen etruskischen Kunst. Mainz: P. von Zabern, 1964; and Simon, Erika. Antikes und modernes Griechenland. Mainz: P. von Zabern, 1984; and Simon, Erika. Tausend Jahre frühgriechische Kunst. Fribourg: Office du livre, 1980, English, The Birth of Greek Art: from the Mycenaean to the Archaic Period. New York: Oxford University Press, 1981; Corpus vasorum antiquorum. Deutschland. Mainz, Universität. vols. 15, 63, 1959 ff.; Die Gleichnisse Homers und die Bildkunst seiner Zeit. Tübingen: M. Niemeyer, 1952; and Simon, Erika. Griechische Sagen in der frühen etruskischen Kunst. Mainz: P. von Zabern, 1964; Die Stele aus Pharsalos im Louvre. Berlin: W. de Gruyter, 1951; Der Wagenlenker von Delphi. Munich: F. Bruckmann, 1941.


Sources

Archäologenbildnisse: Porträts und Kurzbiographien von Klassichen Archäologen deutscher Sprache. Reinhard Lullies, ed. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1988: 307-308; “German Archaeological Institute — Athens.” Encyclopedia of the History of Classical Archaeology. Nancy Thomson de Grummond, ed. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996, vol. 1, pp. 495.




Citation

"Hampe, Roland." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/hamper/.


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Classical art historian of Greek and Roman art; specialist in Greek pottery. Hampe was the son of the medieval historian Karl Hampe (1869-1936). Hample was a scientific assistant to Reinhard Herbig at the University of Würzb

Hanfmann, George M. A.

Image Credit: Harvard

Full Name: Hanfmann, George M. A.

Other Names:

  • George Maxim Anossov Hanfmann

Gender: male

Date Born: 1911

Date Died: 1986

Place Born: St. Petersburg, Russia

Place Died: Watertown, Middlesex, MA, USA

Home Country/ies: Russia

Subject Area(s): Anatolian (culture or style), Ancient Greek (culture or style), archaeology, Classical, Etruscan (culture or style), Lydian, Near Eastern (Early Western World), and Roman (ancient Italian culture or period)


Overview

Scholar of classical Greek, Roman and Near Eastern art; renowned archaeologist. Hanfmann’s family migrated from Russia to Germany when was 10. In Germany he studied first at the University in Jena, and then at Munich where he studied under Ernst Buschor and Hans Diepolder. His degree was finally granted at the Friedrich Wilhelms Universität in Berlin. At Berlin he studied under the classicist Werner Jaeger (1888-1961), who would later also be his colleague at Harvard, Eduard Norden (1868-1941) and Gerhart Rodenwaldt. His dissertation, written under Rodenwaldt, on Etruscan sculpture, was granted in 1934 and published in 1936 as Altetruskische Plastik I. The same year, 1934, he married Ilse. The two were forced to immigrate to the United States because of his distant Jewish background (he was Russian Orthodox by faith and Lithuanian by citizenship). Thanks to a recommendation from Rodenwaldt, he found a position as an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University under the classical archaeologist and art historian David Moore Robinson. Robinson offered positions to both the Hanfmanns, and George was granted a second Ph. D. in 1935 for his assessment of the metal finds of the Olynthus excavations which Robinson and Hopkins were sponsoring. In 1935 Harvard’s Society of Fellows elected Hanfmann a junior fellow, bringing him to Harvard and Dumbarton Oaks for the years 1935-38. He traveled to Italy in 1937 to study Etruscan art first hand. Back at Harvard, he established a rapport with Paul J. Sachs and the museology course Sachs and Edward Waldo Forbes ran. He also assumed the publication of Lydian pottery begun by George Henry Chase at Princeton from the Sardis expeditions. He was naturalized an American citizen in 1940. During World War II Hanfmann served the U.S. Office of War Information in London as radio editor (where his knowledge of languages was useful) between 1943-45. Returning to Harvard after the war, the Hanfmann’s assisted the Tarsus excavations (under Hetty Goldman, 1881-1972), 1947-48. He became curator of Ancient Art at the Fogg art museum under John P. Coolidge. Hanfmann’s 1951 book, The Season Sarcophogus secured his reputation as a classical scholar. He progressed at Harvard from Fellow to full professor in 1956. His important “Ancient Art in American Private Collections” was also held that year. At the Fogg, he established the Department of Ancient Art and, with Cornelius C. Vermeule III the coin room. In 1958 he helped divide Robinson’s larger personal collection of ancient art between Harvard and Oxford, Mississippi. The same year he embarked on his own excavational examination of Sardis, reevaluating the strata in order to establish the urban development of the city. He continued these personally until 1976, resulting in the restoration of the gymnasium-bath of the site and a book of his personal correspondence, Letters from Sardis. (1972). Hanfmann’s issued Roman Art in 1964, an introductory text when highlighted his strong, clear writing skills. As a curator, he added many excellent pieces of Greek pottery, including a named piece by the Kleophrades painter (Watkins Collection). In 1971 he was named John E. Hudson Professor for Archaeology. His “Art and Technology: A Symposium on Classical Bronzes” also appeared that year. He retired emeritus in 1982. He founded the curatorial department of ancient objects at the Fogg museum, of which he was the first curator. He led a long-term archaeological dig at Sardis from 1958 to 1974, and his interested were wide-ranging, influenced by his position as Director of the antiquities collection a the Fogg Museum at Harvard. His students include Cornelius C. Vermeule III and Emeline Hurd Hill Richardson.


Selected Bibliography

[complete bibliographies:] “Bibliography of George M. A. Hanfmann, 1935-71.” Studies Presented to George M.A. Hanfmann. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971, pp. xii-xx, and Bloom, Joanne. “Bibliography of George M. A. Hanfmann, 1971-86.” American Journal of Archaeology 91 no. 2 (April 1987): 264-266; Ancient Art in Private American Collections: A Loan Exhibition at the Fogg Art Museum of Harvard University. Cambridge, MA: Fogg Art Museum, 1954; From Croesus to Constantine. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975; The Season Sarcophagus in Dumbarton Oaks. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1951 [actually 1952]; and Mierse, William E., and Foss, Clive. Sardis from Prehistoric to Roman Times: Results of the Archaeological Exploration of Sardis, 1958-1975. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1983; Altetruskische Plastik I: Die menschliche Gestalt in der Rundplastik bis zum Ausgang der orientalisierenden Kunst. Wurzburg: Buchdruckerei Konrad Triltsch, 1936; Classical Sculpture. The History of Western Sculpture 1. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society,1967; Observations on Roman Portraiture. Collection Latomus 11. Brussels: revue d’études latines, 1953; Roman Art: a Modern Survey of the Art of Imperial Rome. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society, 1964.


Sources

Archäologenbildnisse: Porträts und Kurzbiographien von Klassichen Archäologen deutscher Sprache. Reinhard Lullies, ed. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1988: 313-314; Medwid, Linda M. The Makers of Classical Archaeology: A Reference Work. New York: Humanity Books, 2000 pp. 138-140; Hanfmann, George M.A. Letters from Sardis. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1972; Mitten, David Gordon, and Bloom, Joanne. “George Maxim Anossov Hanfmann 1911-1986.” American Journal of Archaeology 91 no. 2 (April 1987): 259-266.




Citation

"Hanfmann, George M. A.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/hanfmanng/.


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Scholar of classical Greek, Roman and Near Eastern art; renowned archaeologist. Hanfmann’s family migrated from Russia to Germany when was 10. In Germany he studied first at the University in Jena, and then at Munich where he studied under

Hanfstaengl, Eberhard

Image Credit: Ebay

Full Name: Hanfstaengl, Eberhard

Gender: male

Date Born: 1886

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Germany


Overview

Director of the National Gallery, Berlin, 1933-37. Hanfstaengl became director after the Nazi dismissal of Ludwig Justi. Hanfstaengl himself was dismissed in 1937 and succeeded by Paul O. Rave.


Selected Bibliography

Erasmus Grasser: Die Moriskentänzer in München. Berlin: Mann 1943; Hans Stethaimer: eine Studie zur spätgotischen Architektur Altbayerns. Leipzig: Hiersemann, 1911; Leibl: das bäuerliche Antlitz. Magdeburg: Hopfer, 1938; Meisterwerke der Alteren Pinakothek in München. 3rd edition. Munich: Franz Hanfstaengl, 1922; Rembrandt Harmensz van Rijn. Munich: Münchner Verlag und graphische Kunstanstalten 1947.





Citation

"Hanfstaengl, Eberhard." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/hanfstaengle/.


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Director of the National Gallery, Berlin, 1933-37. Hanfstaengl became director after the Nazi dismissal of Ludwig Justi. Hanfstaengl himself was dismissed in 1937 and succeeded by Paul O. Rave.

Hannema, Dirk

Image Credit: Wikipedia

Full Name: Hannema, Dirk

Gender: male

Date Born: 1895

Date Died: 1984

Place Born: Jakarta, Indonesia

Place Died: Wijhe, Overijssel, Netherlands

Home Country/ies: Netherlands

Subject Area(s): museums (institutions)

Career(s): art collectors, directors (administrators), and museum directors


Overview

Museum director; art collector. Hannema was born in Batavia, Indonesia which is present-day Jakarta. After having spent the first five years of his life in the Dutch East Indies, Hannema was raised in The Hague, where his parents had settled. His mother, Hermine Elise de Stuers, brought him in contact with persons who belonged to the artistic circles in The Hague, including Abraham Bredius. After his high school education at the Gymnasium and his military service he studied law at Leiden University, between 1917 and 1919, and subsequently art history at Utrecht University under Willem Vogelsang. He did not, however, graduate in either of these fields. He began his museum career as assistant in the Rotterdam Museum Boymans under F. Schmidt-Degener, whom he soon succeeded as director in 1921. Like Schmidt-Degener, Hannema advocated an esthetic display of works of art. He was successful in broadening the collection with works of the old masters, including Hieronymus Bosch and Rembrandt. In 1935 the Haarlem based banker Franz Koenigs (1881-1941) gave his renowned private collection of drawings on loan to the museum. In the same year, the museum opened its new building, which was designed in modern style by the architect A. van der Steur (1893-1953). In his capacity as director, Hannema closely collaborated with Van der Steur, and was particularly interested in aspects of illumination. The opening exhibition was on Vermeer, oorsprong en invloed (Vermeer, Origins and Influence). In 1938 Hannema organized Meesterwerken uit vier eeuwen: 1400-1800 (Masterworks from Four Centuries), in which the recently purchased Emmausgangers was proudly shown as a masterwork of Vermeer (in 1945 Han van Meegeren declared that he himself had faked it, a confession which, incredibly, never convinced Hannema). In 1939 Hannema received a doctorate honoris causa from Utrecht University. During World War II, Hannema collaborated with the German occupiers of the Netherlands. In 1940 he was instrumental in the illegal sale to the Nazis of part of the Koenigs Collection, which by that time had come in the possession of the port magnate D. G. van Beuningen (1877-1955). Under German occupation he became a member of the Kultuurraad (Culture Council), on invitation of Reichskommissar A. Seyss-Inquart, and accepted the position of supervisor of the Dutch museums under Anton Adriaan Mussert (1894-1946), the head of the Dutch Nazi party. In May 1945, following the liberation of Holland, Hannema was arrested by the Dutch Military Authority and interned for eight months. He was dismissed from his position by Museum Boymans, succeeded by Alphonsus Petrus Antonius Vorenkamp. Following his release, in 1947, Hannema continued to work as an art collector and as the curator of his private collection, which he opened for the public in Weldom Castle in Goor. In 1958 he relocated the collection to Castle Het Nijenhuis in Heino, after having created, in 1957, the foundation Hannema-de Stuers Fundatie, named in honor of his parents. Hannema continued broadening his collection and serving as its curator until his death in 1984. Hannema’s pre-war directorship contributed to the international importance of Museum Boymans. His controversial activities during the war, however, overshadowed his career in the art world. In several cases, especially in attributions to Vermeer, his connoisseurship was improbable.


Selected Bibliography

and Hind, A. M. awings and Etchings. Commemorative Catalogue of the Exhibition of Dutch Art held in the Galleries of the Royal Academy, Burlington House, London, January-March, 1929. London: Oxford University Press, 1930; Nederlandsche teekeningen uit de 15de, 16e, en 17de eeuw: verzameling F. Koenigs. Rotterdam: Museum Boymans, 1934; Jeroen Bosch en de Noord-Nederlandsche primitieven. Rotterdam: Museum Boymans, 1936; Catalogue of the D. G. van Beuningen Collection. Rotterdam: A. Donker, 1949; Catalogue of the Pictures in the Collection of Willem van der Vorm. Rotterdam: A. Donker, 1950; An Essay on Johannes Vermeer of Delft. Deventer: Hannema-DeSteurs Foundation, 1972.


Sources

Ebbinge Wubben, J. C. Rotterdams jaarboekje 1985 (1985): 249-258; Van Adrichem, J. Directoraat D. Hannema. Beeldende kunst en kunstbeleid in Rotterdam, 1945-1985. Rotterdam: Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, 1987, pp.: 43-50; De Jong, A. A. M. Biografisch Woordenboek van Nederland 4 (1994): …. Halbertsma, Marlite. ” ‘Het bezoek aan Boymans. Is het groter te maken?’ Plek, gebouw en beleid van het museum Boymans in de periode 1900-1945.” Bevers, Ton, et al. De Kunstwereld. Hilversum: Verloren, 1993, pp. 203-242; Mosler, Mireille. Dirk Hannema de geboren verzamelaar. Rotterdam, 1995; Mulder, Hans. Kunst in crisis en Bezetting. Utrecht/Antwerpen, 1978.



Contributors: Monique Daniels


Citation

Monique Daniels. "Hannema, Dirk." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/hannemad/.


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Museum director; art collector. Hannema was born in Batavia, Indonesia which is present-day Jakarta. After having spent the first five years of his life in the Dutch East Indies, Hannema was raised in The Hague, where his parents had settled. His

Hannover, Emil

Full Name: Hannover, Emil

Gender: male

Date Born: 1864

Date Died: 1923

Home Country/ies: Denmark

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


Overview

Historian of Danish art. In 1925 Bernard Rackham translated his Keramisk haandbog into English.


Selected Bibliography

Dänische Kunst des 19. Jahrhunderts. Geschichte der modernen Kunst 7. Leipzig: Seemann, 1907; Svensk kunst, nogle gruntræk av dens karakter. Copenhagen: Guldendalske Boghandel, 1916; Det nittende aarhundredes kunst, skikkelser og strømninger. Copenhagen: Gyldendal, Nordisk forlag, 1918; Keramisk haandbog. 2 vols in 3. Copenhagen: H. Koppels Forlag, 1919-1924, English, Pottery & Porcelain: a Handbook for Collectors. 3 vols. London: E. Benn, limited, 1925.





Citation

"Hannover, Emil." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/hannovere/.


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Historian of Danish art. In 1925 Bernard Rackham translated his Keramisk haandbog into English.

Hanson, Anne Coffin

Image Credit: Yale

Full Name: Hanson, Anne Coffin

Other Names:

  • Anne C. Hanson
  • Anne Coffin
  • Anne Garson

Gender: female

Date Born: 12 December 1921

Date Died: 03 September 2004

Place Born: Larchmont, Westchester, NY, USA

Place Died: New Haven, New Haven, CT, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): French (culture or style) and Futurist

Career(s): educators

Institution(s): Yale University


Overview

Manet and Futurism scholar; first female full-professor in at Yale University. Coffin’s parents were Francis Joseph Coffin, an Episcopal minister and Annie Coffin. She studied at Skidmore College, switching to the University of Southern California, marrying Warfield Garson in 1942 and graduating the following year with a BFA in studio art. She and Warfield began a family. After her children were born, she lectured at Wagner College, Staten Island, NY, for the academic year 1949-1950. She returned to graduate school in art history, receiving an MA in Creative Arts from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, in 1951. Armed with this degree, Coffin taught at Miss Fine’s [preparatory] School in Princeton, N. J. between 1952 and 1955. She divorced Warfield in the late 1950s, continuing graduate work in art history at Bryn Mawr, teaching art history at the University of Buffalo (modern State University of New York at Buffalo) in Buffalo, NY, 1955 through 1958. Her Ph.D. was granted in 1962 with a dissertation topic on the Renaissance sculptor Jacapo della Quercia. The same year she married Bernard Allen Hanson (1922-2009), an art history student at the University of Pennsylvania (and later art historian). She began her tenure-track career at Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA, as an assistant professor of art, 1963, before returning to Bryn Mawr as an assistant professor of art in 1964. She published her dissertation in 1965. Coffin, now Hanson, switched subject areas to French Impressionism, publishing a catalog for a Manet exhibition in Philadelphia in 1966. She joined the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, as director of the International Study Center in 1968. Hanson was appointed a full professor at Yale University in 1970, the first woman to be hired as such from the outside the University. She was chair of the Department of History of Art, beginning in 1974.

A vocal force for women’s issues at Yale, she, along with others, petitioned the all-male eating club known as Mory’s to admit women. The club resisted until they lost their liquor license and finally conceded in 1974. In 1976 she published her most important book, Manet and the Modern Tradition which won the Charles Rufus Morey Award for art history scholarship from the College Art Association. In 1978 Hanson was named John Hay Whitney Professor of the History of Art at Yale. She divorced her second husband. Hanson served as as acting head of the Yale University Art Gallery from 1986 to 1987. After her retirement in 1992, she held a Samuel H. Kress professor at the Center for Advanced Study in Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. was acting curator of European and contemporary art from 1995 to 1996. In her retirement, Hanson branched out to Italian Futurism, publishing a 1995 book Severini Futurista, 1912-1917. She suffered a stroke that year which partially paralyzed her. She died at her home in 2004. Despite her feminist pioneering stance at Yale, Hanson did not have a political agenda within her teaching, according to her students. Her book Manet and the Modern Tradition was a revisionist view of the painter seeking to debunk the notion of Manet as a unique leader of Impressionism, arguing his modernism fit the continuum of French painting and literature.  Her students included the museum curator and academic Richard “Rick” Brettell and Brooklyn Museum of Art curator Elizabeth Wynn Easton (b. 1956).


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Jacapo della Quercia’s “Fonte Gaia.” Bryn Mawr, 1962, published, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1965; Édouard Manet, 1832-1883. Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1966; Manet and the Modern Tradition. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1977; Severini futurista, 1912-1917. New Haven, CT: Yale University Art Gallery, 1995.


Sources

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. 82 and 159, mentioned; [obituaries:] Smith, Roberta. “Anne Coffin Hanson, 82; Yale Professor of Art History.” New York Times, September 4, 2004 p.B 7; Martineau, Kim. “Anne C. Hanson, Ex-Art Historian.” Hartford Courant. September 8, 2004 p. B5.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Hanson, Anne Coffin." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/hansona/.


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Manet and Futurism scholar; first female full-professor in at Yale University. Coffin’s parents were Francis Joseph Coffin, an Episcopal minister and Annie Coffin. She studied at Skidmore College, switching to the University of Southern California, m

Harcourt-Smith, Cecil, Sir

Image Credit: Wikipedia

Full Name: Harcourt-Smith, Cecil, Sir

Other Names:

  • Sir Cecil Harcourt-Smith

Gender: male

Date Born: 1859

Date Died: 1944

Place Born: Staines, Surrey, England, UK

Place Died: Stoatley Bramley, Surrey, England, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): archaeology


Overview

Director of the Victoria and Albert Museum, archaeologist. Early on he encouraged the son of a family friend, Trenchard Cox, then a Cambridge student, to seriously consider art museum work (Cox later became a director of the V&A). He retired in 1924 and was succeeded by Eric Maclagan.



Sources

The Makers of Classical Archaeology: A Reference Work. New York: Humanity Books, 2000 pp. 141-42.




Citation

"Harcourt-Smith, Cecil, Sir." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/harcourtsmithc/.


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Director of the Victoria and Albert Museum, archaeologist. Early on he encouraged the son of a family friend, Trenchard Cox, then a Cambridge student, to seriously consider art museum work (Cox later became a director of the V&

Harden, Donald Benjamin

Image Credit: National Portrait Gallery

Full Name: Harden, Donald Benjamin

Gender: male

Date Born: 1901

Date Died: 1994

Place Born: Dublin, Ireland

Place Died: London, Greater London, England, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): ancient


Overview

Scholar of ancient glass; museum director. Harden’s father was the Reverend John Mason Harden (1871-1931), Bishop of Tuam, Killala and Achonry, Ireland, and his mother Constance Caroline Sparrow. After Kilkenny College (boarding school) and the Westminster School, he entered Trinity College, Cambridge in 1920, where he studied under William Ridgway, Arthur Cook and Donald Robertson. Cook suggested he study terracottas, first at the British Museum and then in Rome at the British School on a Craven grant. He excavated Tunis with Arnold MacKay Duff in 1923-1924. He returned to be the Latin professor at the University in Aberdeen. He spent the summer of 1925 excavating in Carthage, where his interest had changed to Punic urns. He spent the1926-1927 year at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor on a grant. He began cataloging one of the major ancient glass collections, the D. L. Askren collection, in 1927, at a time when almost nothing in English was written on the topic. He again participated in a dig, the Michigan Archaeological Expedition to Egypt of 1928-1929. Harden became an assistant Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, in 1929, under E. Thurlow Leeds (1877-1955), who had just vacated the assistant job himself. Harden contined to work on his Ph.D. thesis. He returned to Carthage in 1933 to complete his study of Punic urns, published in 1937. He married Cecil Harriss in (d. 1963) 1934. His dissertation, from the University of Michigan, appeared in 1936 as the important book, Roman Glass from Karanis. He established the archaeological journal Oxoniensia the same year.After World War II, where he worked in war service as a civil servant, Bernard Ashmole invited Harden to catalog the glass collection at the British Museum. Harden was awarded a Leverhulme Research fellowship to study this glass in greater detail in 1953. He left to Ashmolean to become director of the London Museum in 1956. Harden took over the Museum, now at Kensington Palace, from its previous location at Lancaster House under Robert Eric Mortimer Wheeler. Wheeler’s high standards of research and publication were maintained under Harden. In collaboration with Norman Cook of the Guildhall Museum, the two worked to merge their respective institutions into the new Museum of London. In 1957 he founded a second journal, Medieval Archaeology which he edited for many years. He wrote The Phoenicians in 1962. In 1965 he also became acting director of the new Museum of London. The same year he married Dorothy McDonald. Three papers on Ancient Glass appeared between 1968 and 1971. After his retirement in 1971, Harden returned to the British Museum to continue cataloging the glass there. With Veronica Tatton-Brown, they published the first volume, Core And Rod-formed Vessels In The British Museum in 1981. Another major work, Glass Of The Caesars was published as an exhibition catalog for a show of the same name in 1987. As an archaeologist, artifacts rather than digs were a central focus of his work. Roman Glass From Karanis was a highly original work, a rigorous archaeological approach to the neglected field of ancient glass; the only other major studies were both German, by Anton Kisa and Fritz Fremersdorf, and then more general. His writing approach generally was to focus on an individual vessel, present all the evidence in a way that told a compelling story.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Roman Glass from Karanis found by the University of Michigan Archaeological Expedition in Egypt, 1924-29. Ph.D. University of Michigan, published, Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1936; and Hellenkemper, Hansgerd, and Painter, Kenneth, and Whitehouse, David. Glass of the Caesars. Milan: Olivetti, 1987; The Phoenicians. New York: Praeger, 1962.


Sources

[obituaries:] Price, Jennifer. “Donald Harden.” Guardian (London) June 3, 1994, p. T17; ” Donald Harden, 92, British Authority On Ancient Glass.” Pace, Eric. New York Times May 2, 1994, p. B9; Painter, Kenneth, and Thompson, Hugh. “Donald Harden.” Independent (London), April 29, 1994, p. 36.




Citation

"Harden, Donald Benjamin." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/hardend/.


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Scholar of ancient glass; museum director. Harden’s father was the Reverend John Mason Harden (1871-1931), Bishop of Tuam, Killala and Achonry, Ireland, and his mother Constance Caroline Sparrow. After Kilkenny College (boarding school) and the We

Hall, James

Full Name: Hall, James

Gender: male

Date Born: 1918

Place Born: Letchworth, Hertfordshire, England, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): iconography, symbolism (artistic concept), and symbols


Overview

Amateur art historian and author of Dictionary of Symbols in Eastern and Western Art. Hall worked in various aspect of book publishing between 1946-72. In 1972 he became a the director of book production services company. His most famous book, a Dictionary of Subject and Symbols in Art first appeared in 1974. The book was subsequently translated into many eastern and western languages. In 2005 he published a biography of Michelangelo.


Selected Bibliography

Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art. New York: Harper & Row, 1974; A History of Ideas and Images in Italian Art. New York: Harper & Row, 1983, revised, Ehresmann, Julia M. The Pocket Dictionary of Art Terms. 2nd ed. London: Murray, 1980; Michelangelo: Slave to the Flesh and Bone. London: Chatto & Windus, 2005


Sources

jacket cover biography




Citation

"Hall, James." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/hallj/.


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Amateur art historian and author of Dictionary of Symbols in Eastern and Western Art. Hall worked in various aspect of book publishing between 1946-72. In 1972 he became a the director of book production services company. His most famous

Hall, Louise

Full Name: Hall, Louise

Gender: male

Date Born: 1905

Date Died: 1990

Place Born: Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK

Place Died: Durham, NC, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

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


Overview

Professor of Art and Architecture, Duke University, 1931-1975. Hall received her B.A., from Wellesley College in 1927, continuing for a second bachelor’s degree (a B.S.) from MIT in 1930. She traveled to Paris for further study at the Institute of Art and Archaeology in 1931. She returned to the United States and joined the faculty at recently founded Duke University. Her appointment was in the Philosophy department because Duke as yet had no art department. Hall was responsible for the establishment of an art-history curriculum at Duke University. During the 1930s she assisted in the federal writers’ project of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), writing a guide to the architecture of North Carolina in 1938. In 1942 a separate Department of Aesthetics, Art and Music was created at Duke with the esthetician Katharine E. Gilbert (1886-1952) as chair and Hall representing art and architectural history. Hall obtained a Ph.D. from Harvard (Radcliffe) in 1954. She continued to promote the idea of a specialized department of art for Duke, and, when one was created in 1959/60, Hall became its first chair. She was also instrumental in planning for the art museum at Duke, later founded by William S. Heckscher. She retired in 1975. Hall was one of the early female architectural historians in the United States.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Artificer to Architect in America. Ph. D., Radcliffe, 1954; North Carolina Architecture: an Essay Contributed to the North Carolina Guide in the American Guide Series. [typescript copy] 1938; Early Books on the Building Arts in Four North Carolina Libraries. Durham, NC: s.n, 1957; “New Threat to Washington Landmark: Design of the Old Patent Office.” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 15 (March 1956): 27-30; “Mills, Strickland, and Walter: their Adventures in a World of Science.” Magazine of Art 40 (November 1947): 266-71; “A Pivotal Group in Architecture: The Fourteen Women of MIT, Class of 1930.” Berkeley, Ellen Perry, ed. Architecture: A Place for Women. Washington, DC: Smithsonian, 1989, pp. 79-86.


Sources

Duke University archives.




Citation

"Hall, Louise." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/halll/.


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Professor of Art and Architecture, Duke University, 1931-1975. Hall received her B.A., from Wellesley College in 1927, continuing for a second bachelor’s degree (a B.S.) from MIT in 1930. She traveled to Paris for further study at the Institute of