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Kinkel, Gottfried

Full Name: Kinkel, Gottfried

Other Names:

  • Gottfried Kinkel

Gender: male

Date Born: 1815

Date Died: 1882

Place Born: Oberkassel, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

Place Died: Unterstrass, Switzerland

Home Country/ies: Germany


Overview

Political reformer and early art historian at Bonn. Kinkel was the son of Johann Gottfried Kinkel, a minister, and Sibylla Marie Beckmann (Kinkel). Kinkel studied theology at Bonn and Berlin, where and Jacob Burckhardt became friends. After completion of his Ph. D. (at Heidelberg) on Hesiod, he became a privatdozent of theology at Bonn in 1836. During an 1837 trip to Italy, Kinkel became deeply interested in art history. He returned to teach as a headmaster at the gymnasium there in 1839 and, in 1840, as an assistant minister at a congregation in Cologne. Kinkel married Johanna Mockel Matthieux (1810-1858) a talented musician, author and proto-feminist (who had left her first husband) in 1843. The same year his Gedichte (Poems) appeared, a work which would go through several editions. Controversy over his wife’s beliefs caused him to leave theology teaching altogether. In 1845, Kinkel published the lectures from his history of art course, Geschichte der bildenden Künste bei den christichen Völkern, which he conceived of as a textbook for his students and the general public. He lectured in art and, in 1846, was appointed extraordinarius professor of the history of art at Bonn. The same year he published his verse romance, Otto der Schütz, eine rheinische Geschichte in zwölf Abenteuern, and extremely popular novel. Kinkel participated in the 1848 Revolution in Germany (including the storming of the armory in Siegeburg) and was forced to flee. He continued to published under the assumed name Fenner von Fenneberg. In a coup at Durlach in 1849, Kinkel was arrested and sentenced to penal servitude for life at Spandau prison, Berlin. Johanna and fellow revolutationary (and later American statesman) Carl Schurz (1829-1906) organized Kinkel’s escape to England in 1850. Kinkel went to the United States to collect donations for an army, believing a new revolution would break out in Germany. He returned to London in 1853, where he lectured on German literature and the language at the College for Women in Bedford Square. In 1858 Kinkel founded the German-language paper, Hermann. The same year his wife, Johanna, fell from a window (likely a suicide) at age of 48. Kinkel was hired in 1861 to lecture on art at the Crystal Palace and South Kensington Museum. His lectures brought the principles of art history as a discipline to the British public. In 1866 he accepted a professorship of archaeology and the history of art at the Polytechnikum in Zürich. In 1869 he was the first to identify the Dresden Meyer Madonna purportedly by Hans Holbein as a work of a much later date. In Switzerland he published a collection of his earlier essays, Mozaik zur Kunstgeschichte in 1876. He died in Unterstrass, near Zürich in 1882. In 1906 a monument was unveiled to him in Oberkassel. Kinkel worked, by his own admission, to popularize the somewhat dry foundational art history of Franz Kugler and write a less particularized one than that of Karl Julius Ferdinand Schnaase. Like Burckhardt, Kinkel was interesting in appealing to the greater reading public as his audience. He denied a simple history-of-objects approach in favor of a history focusing on the conditions of artistic production, based on the subject matter of the works. Kinkel’s Die brüsseler Rathausbilder des Rogier van der Weyden, a study of the secularization themes in the fifteenth century, is the clearest example (Kultermann).


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] De codicibus Hesiodeis nonnullis in anglia asservatis. Heidelberg: E. Tenner, 1866; Kessel, Eberhard, editor. Die Briefe von Carl Schurz an Gottfried Kinkel. Heidelberg: C. Winter, 1965; Sander, Richard, editor. Gottfried Kinkels Selbstbiographie, 1838-1848. Bonn: Friedrich Cohen, 1931; Mosaik zur Kunstgeschichte. Berlin: R. Oppenheim, 1876; Die brüsseler Rathausbilder des Rogier van der Weyden und deren Copien in den burgundischen Tapeten zu Bern. Zürich: Polytechnischen Schule für das Schuljahr (1867/68), 1867; and Kinkel, Johanna. Erzählungen. Stuttgart: J.G. Cotta, 1849; Gedichte. Stuttgart: J. G. Cotta, 1843; Geschichte der bildenden Künste bei den christlichen Völkern: vom Anfang unserer Zeitrechnung bis zur Gegenwart. Bonn: Henry & Cohen, 1845, [and plates volume] Vierundzwanzig Tafeln architektonischer Zeichnungen zu Vorträgen über die Geschichte der bildenden Künste bei den christlichen Völkern. Bonn: s. n., 1844; Die Malerei der Gegenwart. Basel: Schweighauserische Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1871; Otto der Schütz: eine rheinische Geschichte in zwölf Abenteuern. Stuttgart: J. G. Cotta, 1846.


Sources

Metzler Kunsthistoriker Lexikon: zweihundert Porträts deutschsprachiger Autoren aus vier Jahrhunderten. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1999, pp. 215-17; Berg, Angelika. Gottfried Kinkel: Kunstgeschichte und soziales Engagement. Bonn: Röhrscheid, 1985; Bebler, Emil. Conrad Ferdinand Meyer und Gottfried Kinkel: ihre persönlichen Beziehungen auf Grund ihres Briefwechsels. Zürich: Rascher 1949; Beyrodt, Wolfgang. Gottfried Kinkel als Kunsthistoriker: Darstellungen und Briefwechsel. Bonn: Röhrscheid, 1979; DeJonge, Alfred Robert Willy. Gottfried Kinkel as political and social Thinker. New York: Columbia University Press, 1926; Strodtmann, Adolf. Gottfried Kinkel: Wahrheit ohne Dichtung: Biographisches Skizzenbuch. 2 vols. Hamburg: Hoffmann und Campe, 1850-51; Rösch-Sondermann, Hermann. Gottfried Kinkel als ästhetiker, Politiker und Dichter. Bonn: Röhrscheid, 1982; Kinkel, Gottfried. Encyclopedia Britannica. 11th edition; Kultermann, Udo. The History of Art History. New York: Abaris, 1993, pp. 115-16; Beyrodt, Wolfgang. Gottfried Kinkel als Kunsthistoriker: Darstellung und Briefwechsel. Bonn: L. Röhrscheid, 1979; Henne am Rhyn, Otto. G. Kinkel: ein Lebensbild. Zürich: s. n., 1883; Kultermann, Udo. The History of Art History. New York: Abaris, 1993, p. 147.




Citation

"Kinkel, Gottfried." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kinkelg/.


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Political reformer and early art historian at Bonn. Kinkel was the son of Johann Gottfried Kinkel, a minister, and Sibylla Marie Beckmann (Kinkel). Kinkel studied theology at Bonn and Berlin, where and Jacob Burckhardt b

Kirschbaum, Engelbert

Full Name: Kirschbaum, Engelbert

Gender: male

Date Born: 1902

Date Died: 1970

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): iconography

Institution(s): Pontifical Gregorian University


Overview

compiler of iconographic encyclopedia


Selected Bibliography

ed., Der Lexikon der christlichen Ikonographie. 1968-


Sources

KMP, 57 mentioned; EWA 7: 769ff “Iconography”



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Kirschbaum, Engelbert." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kirschbaume/.


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compiler of iconographic encyclopedia

Kisa, Anton

Full Name: Kisa, Anton

Other Names:

  • Kisa Anton Karl

Gender: male

Date Born: 1857

Date Died: 1907

Home Country/ies: Austria

Subject Area(s): ancient and glass (material)

Institution(s): Suermondt-Museums


Overview

Scholar of ancient glass.


Selected Bibliography

and Bassermann-Jordan, Ernst von, and Almgren, Oscar. Das Glas im Altertume. 3 vols. Leipzig: K. W. Hiersemann, 1908.




Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Kisa, Anton." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kisaa/.


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Scholar of ancient glass.

Kitson, Michael

Full Name: Kitson, Michael

Other Names:

  • Michael Kitson

Gender: male

Date Born: 1926

Date Died: 1998

Place Born: Sutton, Southend-on-Sea, England, UK

Place Died: London, Greater London, England, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): European, painting (visual works), and seventeenth century (dates CE)


Overview

Art historian of the 17th-century, specialist in Claude and Turner. Kitson was the son of clergy, Bernard Meredith Kitson, and Helen May Lely, a descendant from the court portrait painter to King Charles II, Peter Lely. He studied at English literature at Kings College, which was interrupted 1945-8 for military service with the Royal Engineers and Security Intelligence in Egypt. In 1950 he married Annabella Leslie Cloudsley. After study at the Courtauld Institute he was appointed lecturer at the Slade School of Art, London in 1952, where his first teaching appointment was under the professorship of William Coldstream (1908-1987). In 1955 he was appointed lecturer at the Courtauld Institute where he remained for 30 years. He became a Reader there in 1967. During this era Kitson researched on French and British landscape painting, particulaly on Claude (Gellée) Le Lorrain. He was also commissioned to write the volume in the prestigious Pelican History of Art series on British 19th-century painting, but eventually abandoned the project. In the 1960s Marcel Georges Roethlisberger published books on Claude Le Lorrain whose research many though was built on the work of more diffident and slower-to-publish Kitson. Kitson did organized the first British exhibition on Claude in 1969, which was both a popular success and a scholarly triumph. Kitson’s 1973 exhibition catalog on Salvator Rosa, perhaps Claude’s opposite, demonstrated Kitson as a scholar of breadth as a baroque scholar. In 1978 he rose to full professor at the Courtauld, serving between 1980-1985 as Deputy Director. Kitson taught at the Courtauld under Anthony Blunt during the years in which it produced scholars on which its current reputation is based. In 1985 he left the Courtauld to become, in 1986, Director of the Paul Mellon Center for British Art, London, Yale University. He was also adjunct professor at Yale and there he met the art historian of French 17th-century art, Judith Colton, with whom he shared a relationship his remaining years. He retired from the Mellon Center in 1992. A lifelong cigarette smoker, he died of lung cancer at his home in Islington (London). Kitson was first and foremost a scholar of Claude and J. W. M. Turner. His publications on Rembrandt and Carravaggio are still considered mainstream to the scholarship in those areas. His personality marked a departure from the aloofness of the rest of the Courtauld Institute, which distanced itself even from the University of London. His training as a literary scholar is reflected in his sensitivity, for example, to Goethe’s judgment of Rembrandt. He did not approach the history of art from a literary standpoint, however. His particular method of art history, personal and attendant to picture composition, has somewhat fallen from favor (Penny). His sensitively written reference entries (on Anthony Blunt and Claude) are of much as note as his monographs. His students include Michael Rosenthal, whose Constable scholarship owes much to Kitson’s initial work in the 1950s.


Selected Bibliography

“Anthony Blunt” Dictionary of Nation Biography; “Claude, le Lorraine.” Dictionary of Art; The Complete Paintings of Caravaggio. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1969; Claude to Corot : the Development of Landscape Painting in France. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1990; The Art of Claude Lorrain. London: Arts Council, 1969; Claude Lorrain, Liber veritatis. London: British Museum Publications Ltd., 1978; Rembrandt. London: Phaidon, 1969, 3rd ed. 1982; All the Paintings of Jan Vermeer. London: Oldbourne 1963; and Finaldi, Gabriele, and Mahon, Denis. Discovering the Italian Baroque: the Denis Mahon Collection. London: National Gallery Publications, 1997; Salvator Rosa. London: Hayward Gallery and the Arts Council, 1973; J. M. W. Turner. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1964; Studies on Claude and Poussin. London: Pindar, 2000.


Sources

Macgregor, Neil. Memorial Service Address, St. Clement Dane’s, 23 October 1998 (http://www.courtauld.ac.uk/newsletter/spring_1999/06kitsonmemorialSP99.shtml); Tomes, Jason. “Kitson, Michael William Lely (1926-1998).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography; personal correspondence, Nick Kitson, July 2008; [obituaries:] New York Times, August 30, 1998, p. 37; Penny, Nicholas. The Guardian. August 11, 1998, p. 14; Gage, John. The Independent (London), August 11, 1998, p. 6; Vaughn, William. Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 64:1 (2001): 144-47.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Kitson, Michael." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kitsonm/.


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Art historian of the 17th-century, specialist in Claude and Turner. Kitson was the son of clergy, Bernard Meredith Kitson, and Helen May Lely, a descendant from the court portrait painter to King Charles II, Peter Lely. He studied at English liter

Kitzinger, Ernst

Full Name: Kitzinger, Ernst

Gender: male

Date Born: 1912

Date Died: 2003

Place Born: Munich, Bavaria, Germany

Place Died: Poughkeepsie, Dutchess, NY, USA

Home Country/ies: Germany

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

Career(s): educators


Overview

Influential Harvard Byzantinist and medievalist art historian. Kitzinger’s father, Wilhelm Nathan Kitzinger (1870-1945) was a Munich lawyer and his mother Elisabeth Rahel Merzbacher (1881-1966), a woman devoted to social causes connected with Judaism. Kitzinger’s cousin, Richard Krautheimer would also become a distinguished medievalist in Europe and the United States. Kitzinger attended the Max-Gymnasium in Munich, graduating in 1931. Between 1931-34 he studied art history, archaeology, and philosophy at the universities in Munich where his professors included Ernst Buschor and Wilhelm Pinder. Pinder’s ideological thrust emphasized the “Germanness” of medieval art, a characteristic Kitzinger never adopted. His dissertation, written under Pinder, was on the topic of Roman painting between the 7th and 8th centuries A.D. The tiny forty-plus page thesis, completed when Kitzinger was only 21, persuasively argued against the prevailing notion of a hegemonic “Alexandrian” style in favor of eastern Mediterranean influences. Kitzinger left Germany in 1935 when it became ever clearer that academic careers would be barred to Jews by the Nazis. He first went to Rome, where did post-doctorate studies with Pietro Toesca, and then to England where accepted a position at the British Museum under the brilliant Keeper, T. D. Kendrick. Kitzinger’s research on Anglo-Saxon arts of northern England and southern Scotland in the Department of British and Mediaeval Antiquities resulted in one of his most enduring books, the 1940 Early Medieval Art at the British Museum. It is still a standard introduction to medieval art. While at the museum, the great 7th-century ship burial site at Sutton Hoo was excavated in 1939 and Kitzinger was responsible for the first assessment of this extraordinary late-Roman and early Byzantine silver plate discovery. When England entered the war against Germany, Kitzinger was interned as an enemy alien and evacuated to Australia. After his release in 1941, he emigrated to the United States where he was appointed a junior fellow at the newly founded Center for Byzantine Studies, Dumbarton Oaks, Harvard’s medieval research center in Washgington, D. C., whose director was the great Carolingian manuscript scholar Wilhelm Reinhold Walter Koehler. His security clearance reinstated, Kitzinger served as a research analyst for the Office of Strategic Services in Washington and London between 1943 and 1945. He married [Margaret] Susan Theobald Ranby (1915-2000), a devoted Quaker and painter in 1944. Kitzinger returned to Harvard and Dumbarton Oaks in 1946 where he was named assistant professor of Byzantine art and archaeology. As a 1950-1951 Fulbright Scholar, he was engaged in research on the Byzantine mosaics of the Norman kingdom of Sicily, a topic concomitantly investigated by fellow Byzantinist Otto Demus. Kitzinger’s review of Demus’s The Mosaics of Norman Sicily (1950) was itself a work of scholarship and fairness on the topic. His own monograph on the topic, The Mosaics of Monreale appeared in 1960. He was appointed associate professor at Harvard in 1951. As a Guggenheim Fellow, 1953-1954, he continued his field research, traveling to Italy, Greece, Yugoslavia and Turkey. Between 1955 and 1966 Kitzinger was Director of Byzantine Studies at Dumbarton Oaks, transforming that institution into the world’s premiere Byzantine studies center. He was appointed full professor at Harvard in 1956. In 1966, he accepted an appointment at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N. J. Wishing to devote more time to teaching, he returned to Harvard in 1967, this time the campus in Cambridge, MA, as the first A. Kingsley Porter University Professor. A series of lectures Kitzinger gave as Slade Professor at Cambridge University between 1974 and 1975 resulted in the 1977 book, Byzantine Art in the Making. His collected articles appeared in 1976 as The Art of Byzantium and the Medieval West: Selected Studies. In 1979 he retired from Harvard and moved to Oxford, a city he had developed an affinity for during his first stay in England. In the 1980s, Kitzinger researched and wrote a six-volume survey of the Norman mosaics of Sicily. Surprising to many, however, Oxford failed to make use of Kitzinger’s presence and expertise. During his final years, he divided his retirement time between Princeton and Oxford. Kitzinger’s many distinguished students included Irving Lavin. His papers are held at the Getty Research Center.

Kitzinger was among the generation of German art historians who fled Nazi persecution and brought to the United States a methodologically rigorous and intellectually ambitious brand of art scholarship. The virtue of Kitzinger’s work was its ability “to connect what was happening visually to what was happening conceptually; the history of art [of Kitzinger] became a history of ideas” (Lavin). Kitzinger rejected the conventional term “Early Christian” for the area of his research, insisting that it failed to encompass monuments as different as the Hagia Sophia or the encaustic icons preserved at St. Catherine’s monastery of Mount Sinai. He also pioneered the concept of “modes” of artistic representation. These modes or distinct styles linked to specific subject matter were first used by Kitzinger to characterize the differing appearances of angels at Santa Maria Antiqua, Rome. Likewise, the 1958 paper “Byzantine Art in the Period Between Justinian and Iconoclasm,” presented in Munich, remains the most perceptive construct of the arts of the Mediterranean before the destruction of images. Kitzinger’s reliance on style as an element of analysis had detractors. Some voiced concern that his reliance on formal structure was employed even when the object’s provenance and date were under question. Among medievalists, it has been noted that he practiced his craft in research institutions more than in the field. Kitzinger was a skilled promoter of budding art historical talent without imposing a particular school of thought.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Römische Malerei vom Beginn des 7. bis zur Mitte 8. Jahrhunderts. Munich, 1936; [collected essays:] The Art of Byzantium and the Medieval West: Selected Studies. Edited by W. Eugene Kleinbauer. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1976; [papers] Ernst Kitzinger papers, 1931-1995, Getty Research Institute linkEarly Medieval Art in the British Museum. London: The British Museum, 1940; and Senior, Elizabeth. Portraits of Christ. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1940; “A Survey of the Early Christian Town of Stobi.” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 3 (1946): 81-162; “The Horse and Lion Tapestry at Dumbarton Oaks” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 3 (1946):1-72; The Coffin of Saint Cuthbert. Oxford: Printed for the Dean and Chapter of Durham Cathedral at the University Press, 1950; “Studies on Late Antique and Early Byzantine Floor Mosaics: I. Mosaics at Nikopolis.” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 6 (1951); “The Cult of Images in the Age Before Iconoclasm.” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 8 (1954); “The Cult of Images in the Age before Iconoclasm.” Dumbarton Oaks Papers 8 (1954): 83-150; “On Some Icons of the Seventh Century.” Late Classical and Medieval Studies in Honor of Albert Mathias Friend, Jr. Edited by Kurt Weitzmann. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1955: 132-50; I mosaici di Monreale. 6 vols. Palermo: S. F. Flaccovio,1960; English: The Mosaics of Monreale. Palermo: 1960; Israeli Mosaics of the Byzantine Period. New York: New American Library/UNESCO, 1965; “On the Interpretation of Stylistic Changes in Antique Art.” Bucknell Review 15 (December, 1967): ; Byzantine Art in the Making: Main Lines of Stylistic Development in Mediterranean Art, 3rd-7th Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1977; The Mosaics of St. Mary’s of the Admiral in Palermo. Dumbarton Oaks Papers 27 (1990); I mosaici del periodo normanno in Sicilia. Palermo: Istituto siciliano di studi bizantini e neoellenici, 1992-2000.


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. 59 mentioned, 85; 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. 125; 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. 365-71; [transcribed interview and CV,] “Style and its Meaning in Early Medieval Art.” Ernst Kitzinger interviewed by Richard Cándida Smith. Interviews with Art Historians, 1991-2002. Getty Research Institute, Santa Monica, CA no. 940109, 1994;  [obituaries:] New York Times, February 9, 2003, p. 44; The Independent (London), February 8, 2003, p. 20; The Times (London), February 7, 2003, p. 41; The Guardian (London), January 29, 2003, p. 26. 




Citation

"Kitzinger, Ernst." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kitzingere/.


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Influential Harvard Byzantinist and medievalist art historian. Kitzinger’s father, Wilhelm Nathan Kitzinger (1870-1945) was a Munich lawyer and his mother Elisabeth Rahel Merzbacher (1881-1966), a woman devoted to social causes connected with Juda

Klauser, Theodor

Full Name: Klauser, Theodor

Gender: male

Date Born: 1894

Date Died: 1984

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): iconography

Institution(s): German Archaeological Institute


Overview

edited iconographic encyclopedia


Selected Bibliography

ed., Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum. Stuttgart: Hiersemann Verlags G.M.B.H., 1950-


Sources

KMP, 56 mentioned



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Klauser, Theodor." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/klausert/.


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edited iconographic encyclopedia

Klein, Jerome

Full Name: Klein, Jerome

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: United States

Career(s): art critics, directors (administrators), and gallerists


Overview

Art writer, owner of the Downtown Gallery in New York; speaker at the 2nd American Artists’ Congress 1937 in New York, N.Y., a symposium held Jan. 13, 1937 at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. The speakers included Walter Quirt, Salvador Dali, Meyer Schapiro, Klein, and Richard Huelsenbeck. Klein was also one of the participants at the famous, informal gathering of art scholars organized by Schapiro around 1935 that included Robert Goldwater, Alfred H. Barr, Jr., Erwin Panofsky, James Johnson Sweeney and occasionally Lewis Mumford.



Sources

Marquis, Alice Goldfarb. Alfred H. Barr, Jr.: Missionary for the Modern. Chicago: Contemporary Books, 1989, p. 125.




Citation

"Klein, Jerome." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kleinj/.


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Art writer, owner of the Downtown Gallery in New York; speaker at the 2nd American Artists’ Congress 1937 in New York, N.Y., a symposium held Jan. 13, 1937 at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. The speakers included Walter Quirt, Salvador Dali, <

Klein, Robert

Full Name: Klein, Robert

Other Names:

  • Robert Klein

Gender: male

Date Born: 1918

Date Died: 1967

Place Born: Timișoara, Timiş, Romania

Place Died: Florence, Tuscany, Italy

Home Country/ies: Romania

Subject Area(s): Renaissance


Overview

Scholar of Renaissance-era art history. Klein was born and raised in Romania. He studied medicine between 1936-1937 in Cluj, Romania, then philosophy at the German University in Prague, returning to science disciplines in Bucharest, 1938-1939. At the outbreak to World War II, Klein served in the Romanian military, initially a neutral country. When Romania joined the Axis, he was identified as a Jew by the Reich-allied government and worked as forced labor. After a coup in 1944 leading to the country’s joining the Allies, Klein was liberated. He subsequently volunteered in the defense of Hungary and Czechoslovakia until the end of the war. In 1947 Klein was awarded his degree (licence) in philosophy at the University of Bucharest, attracting a scholarship for graduate study by the French government to study in Paris. In France, Klein declared himself a political refugee from his Communist homeland but, at the request of the Romanian government, the French withdrew his scholarship. Beginning in 1948, he supported himself marginally by tutoring and menial jobs (including washing dishes). He earned his diplôme d’études supérieures in esthetics in 1953. His thesis was on the Greek concept of techne in arts writings from Plato to Giordano Bruno. The following year he became the secretary for the historian Augustin Renaudet (1880-1958) (through 1958), a professor emeritus at the Collège de France. Klein studied under Renaudet’s student, the art historian André Chastel, developing a life-long friendship with him. Under Chastel, Klein wrote a critical edition of Idea, by Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo. He and Chastel assembled the exhibition “L’Europe humaniste” for the Belgian government in 1954 (catalog published in 1963). In 1958 he worked as technical assistant to the Hispanicist Marcel Bataillon (1895-1977), Administrator of the Collège de France. Klein was awarded his diplôme de l’école pratique des hautes études, IVe section, in 1959 for his work on Lomazzo. He joined the Centre national de la recherche scientifique, engaged in the index of Leonardo’s manuscripts and a critical edition of De Sculptura (1504) by Pomponio Gauricus (1481/2-1528) with members of the l’école pratique des hautes études, IVe. In 1963, Klein published an article, “Considérations sur les fondements de l’iconographie,” considered by many as the most penetrating critique of iconology. For the 1966-1967 academic year, he was professor of the History of Art at the University of Montreal. While a scholar at Villa I Tatti in 1967, he committed suicide in the nearby hills of Settignano, leaving much of his scholarly work unfinished or to be published after his death. His edition of De sculptura appeared in 1969 and his collected papers, in an edition by Gallimard, edited by Chastel, in 1970. Klein was considered the most gifted companion and collaborator of Chastel (Sauerländer). Unfortunately, Klein lost many of his productive years after his defection to the West earning a meager living. As a scholar, his main training was in philosophy and, as Henri Thomas Zerner pointed out, Klein remained most comfortable in that discourse. Klein admired Erwin Panofsky and the interdisciplinary approach to art history as manifested through Jacob Burckhardt. He possessed an intimate knowledge of art theory contemporary to the time of its production.


Selected Bibliography

[Afterward] Burckhardt, Jacob. La civilisation de la Renaissance en Italie: un essai. Paris: Librairie Plon, 1958; “La dernière me´ditation de Savonarole.” Bibliothèque d’humanisme et renaissance 23 (1961): 441-448; and Chastel, André. L’age de l’humanisme: l’Europe de la Renaissance. Paris: éditions des Deux-Mondes, 1963; “Considérations sur les fondements de l’iconographie.” Ermeneutica e tradizione, Atti del III Colloquio internazionale sulla Tematica della demitizzazione. Archivo di Filosofia no. 1-2 (1963): 419-436, English (see Form and Meaning, pp. 143-160); edited, with Zerner, Henri. Italian Art, 1500-1600: Sources and Documents. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1966; [French annotated edition, with Chatel, André, of] Gaurico, Pomponio. De sculptura (1504). Geneva: Droz, 1969; La forme et l’intelligible, écrits sur la Renaissance et l’art moderne. Articles et essais réunis et présentés par André Chastel. Paris: Gallimard, 1970, English, Form and Meaning: Essays on the Renaissance and Modern Art. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1981.


Sources

Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986 p. 229; Sauerländer, Willibald. “André Chastel.” Burlington Magazine 113 (January 1991): 38; Zerner, Henri. “Foreward.” Klein, Robert. Form and Meaning: Essays on the Renaissance and Modern Art. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1980, pp. vii-xi.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Klein, Robert." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kleinr/.


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Scholar of Renaissance-era art history. Klein was born and raised in Romania. He studied medicine between 1936-1937 in Cluj, Romania, then philosophy at the German University in Prague, returning to science disciplines in Bucharest, 1938-1939. At

Keller, Harald

Full Name: Keller, Harald

Gender: male

Date Born: 24 June 1903

Date Died: 05 November 1989

Place Born: Kassel, Hesse, Germany

Place Died: Frankfurt am Main, Hesse, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Institution(s): Universität Frankfurt


Overview

Professor of European art history from the medieval period to the 19th century whose writing placed a greater emphasis on the relationship between place and artistic production. Keller was born in 1903 to Fritz and Magdalene Schellhas (Kellar). After attending gymnasium in Kassal he went on to study art history — in addition to philology, history and archeology — in Leipzig, Heidelberg and Munich between 1923 to 1929 under a number of renowned art historians including Heinrich Wölfflin (Munich).  In 1929, Keller completed his doctorate, which focused on Baroque art, under Wilhelm Pinder (1878-1947) (Leipzig). Keller’s dissertation, Das Treppenhaus im deutschen Schloss- und Klosterbau des Barock, (The Staircase in the German Baroque Palace and Monastery) was the first work to examine the spatial qualities of German architecture of the early eighteenth century. In the dynamism of these works Keller discerned an urge to move away from the forms of representation associated with an absolutist, feudal society.

After a brief period working as Carl Georg Heise‘s assistant at the St. Annen Museum in Lübeck, Keller moved to the Bibliotheca Hertziana in Rome in 1930, becoming an assistant there in 1935. In the same year, Keller completed his habilitation on Giovanni Pisano (1250-1315) under Hans Jantzen (1881-1967) at the University of Frankfurt am Main. Keller credited Pisano — who rejected the medieval workshop and began to focus on creating works of art in the “aesthetic sense” — with leading Tuscan sculpture towards European recognition (Metzler Kunsthistoriker Lexikon). The thesis was ultimately published as Giovanni Pisano in 1942.

From 1937, Keller worked at the University of Munich as a private lecturer in medieval and modern art history. With the rise of the Nazi party the younger generation of private lecturers, of which Keller was a part, came under particular pressure to conform. While some acquiesced, Keller is considered to have operated with “a certain degree of restraint and refusal” in spite of his association with Jantzen and Pinder, who were both affiliated with the party (Fastert). His work at the University of Munich, however, was interrupted by his military service in World War II between 1939 and 1944. Upon his return he was appointed professor.

In 1948 Keller returned to the Art History Institute of the University of Frankfurt am Main as professor of art history. After authoring  a number of books focused on specific geographies in the late 1950s, Keller wrote two of his most well known texts — both about landscapes — in the early 1960s. Die Kunstlandschaften Italiens (The art Landscapes of Italy) was published in 1960 and Die Kunstlandschaften Frankreichs (The Art Landscapes of France) in 1963.

Keller officially retired in 1971 following the publication of Die Kunst des 18. Jahrhunderts, a survey text on 18th century art in the prestigious second edition of the Propyläen Kunstgeschichte, written alongside Jennine Baticle. However he continued to teach and write, focusing initially on the work of Michangelo in the mid-1970s during which time he published two books on the artist. Michelangelo: Zeichnungen und Dichtungen (Michelangelo: Drawings and Seals) (1977), a short commentary focusing on the artist’s more ephemeral works, was followed by Michelangelo. Bildhauer, Maler, Architekt (Michelangelo. Sculptor, Painter, Architect) (1976). In addition, he published Das alte Europa: Die hohe Kunst der Stadtvedute (Old Europe: The High Art of the City Vedute), Blick vom Monte Cavo: Kleine Schriften (View from Monte Cavo) and Dresden in Ansichten von Canaletto (Dresden in Views from Canaletto) between 1983 and 1985. In his final years he turned to the study of Impressionism, focusing on the work of Degas, Renoir, and Monet. Keller died in 1989 and his work on the subject, Französische Impressionisten (French Impressionists), was published posthumously. He supervised fifty-three dissertations, including those of Edward Maser and Hanno Hahn.

Kunstgeographie, whose emphasis on the territorial character of artistic creation can be traced back to Johann Winckelmann, found one of its most important 20th century exponents in Keller. However, Keller employed the methodology with discretion, acknowledging that social factors determine artistic production as much as local traditions.


Selected Bibliography

  • Giovanni Pisano. A. Schroll: München, 1942;
  • Salzburg: Deutsche Lande – Deutsche Kunst. Deutscher Kunstverlag: Berlin 1956;
  • Engelspfeiler im Straßburger Münster. Reclam-Verlag, Stuttgart, 1957;
  • Veit Stoss. Der Bamberger Altar. Reclam-Verlag, Stuttgart: 1959;
  • Die Kunstlandschaften Italiens. Insel Verlag: Frankfurt am Main, 1960;
  • Venezianische Renaissance. German Book Association: Berlin, 1962;
  • Die Kunstlandschaften Frankreichs. Insel Verlag: Frankfurt am Main, 1963;
  • Das Nachleben des antiken Bildnisses von der Karolingerzeit bis zur Gegenwart. Freiburg: Herder, 1970.;
  • and Baticle, Jeannine. Die Kunst des 18. Jahrhunderts. Propyläen Kunstgeschichte 10. Berlin: Propyläen Verlag, 1971;
  • Goethe, Palladio und England. Bavarian Academy of Sciences: Munich, 1971;
  • Michelangelo: Zeichnungen und Dichtungen. Insel Verlag: Frankfurt am Main, 1975;
  • Michelangelo. Bildhauer, Maler, Architekt. German Book Association: Stuttgart, 1976;
  • Das alte Europa: Die hohe Kunst der Stadtvedute. Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1983;
  • Blick vom Monte Cavo: Kleine Schriften. Frankfurt am Main: Insel, 1984;
  • Dresden in Ansichten von Canaletto. Harenberg: Dortmund, 1985;
  • Französische Impressionisten. Insel-Verlag: Frankfurt am Main, 1993.

Sources

  • Metzler Kunsthistoriker Lexikon: zweihundert Porträts deutschsprachiger Autoren aus vier Jahrhunderten. Stuttgart: Metzler, 2007: 228-3;
  • Harald Keller papers, 1929-1990. Online Archive of California. https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0c60327c/
  • Fastert, Sabine. Review of Nikola Doll, Christian Fuhrmeister, Michael Sprenger eds., Art history in National Socialism: Contributions to the history of a science between 1930 and 1950 on Arthist.net, June 16, 2005. https://arthist.net/reviews/87 Accessed May 16, 2012.

Archives


Contributors: Lee Sorensen and Shane Morrissy


Citation

Lee Sorensen and Shane Morrissy. "Keller, Harald." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kellerh/.


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Professor of European art history from the medieval period to the 19th century whose writing placed a greater emphasis on the relationship between place and artistic production. Keller was born in 1903 to Fritz and Magdalene Schellhas (Kellar). Af

Kendrick, A. F.

Full Name: Kendrick, A. F.

Other Names:

  • Albert Frank Kendrick

Gender: male

Date Born: 1872

Date Died: 1954

Place Born: Maidstone, Kent, England, UK

Place Died: St. Peter's-in-Thanet, Kent, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): fiberwork (object genre), Medieval (European), and textile art (visual works)

Career(s): curators


Overview

Medievalist and fiberworks authority and Keeper of Department of Textiles, Victoria and Albert Museum. Kendrick was the son of Albert Kendrick. He joined the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1897. The following year he published his first book, The Cathedral Church of Lincoln, an architectural and historical account of the building. Kendrick wrote catalogs for the various exhibits the V&A mounted. He began contributing articles to the Burlington Magazine on tapestries and fiber arts in 1905. The same year he wrote the first of two books on stitchery which would make his reputation, English Embroidery. He soon became an expert on weaving and rugs from around the world, including the middle east, Asia, and South America. Kendrick was put in charge of the reorganization of the new division of Textiles at the V&A, part of a total renovation of the Museum, which reopened in 1909. He built the Museum’s fibers collection into one of the outstanding ones in the world. Together with C. E. T. Tattersall, he authored the standard Handwoven Carpets in 1922. In 1923, when Chequers Court, a country house near Ellesborough, Buckinghamshire, was donated to the nation, Kendrick was assigned to evaluate and write the inventory catalogs. He retired voluntarily from the V&A in 1924, remaining particularly active. The following year, Kendrick wrote the section on Chinese textiles for a primer on Chinese art, a combined effort with other leading British art historians, including Roger Fry, Laurence Binyon, Bernard Rackham, and the Asianists Osvald Sirén, W. Perceval Yetts (1878-1957), and William Wilberforce Winkworth (1897-1991), under the title Chinese Art: an Introductory Handbook. In 1927 he wrote the tapestry entries for the collaborative catalog, with scholars Martin Conway, Tancred Borenius, Campbell Dodgson, and Maurice Brockwell to the Flemish and Belgian art exhibition at Burlington House. He also translated two important German-language books on tapestries. A second book on stitchery, English Needlework, appeared in 1933. He is not related to T. D. Kendrick, keeper and later Director of the British Museum.


Selected Bibliography

The Cathedral Church of Lincoln: a History and Description of its Fabric and a List of the Bishops. London: G. Bell, 1898; English Embroidery. London: G. Newnes,1905; and Tattersall, C. E. C. Hand-woven Carpets, Oriental and European. 2 vols. London: Benn Brothers, 1922; Catalogue of Muhammadan Textiles of the Medieval Period, Victoria and Albert Museum. Dept. of Textiles. London: Board of Education, Victoria and Albert Museum 1924; and Fry, Roger Eliot, and Binyon, Laurence, and Sirén, Osvald, and Rackham, Bernard, et al. Chinese Art: an Introductory Handbook to Painting, Sculpture, Ceramics, Textiles, Bronzes & Minor Arts. London: Burlington Magazine/B. T. Batsford, 1925; and Conway, William Martin, and Borenius, Tancred, and Dodgson, Campbell, and Brockwell, Maurice. Catalogue of the Loan Exhibition of Flemish & Belgian Art, Burlington House, London, 1927. London, Country Life, ltd./The Anglo-Belgian Union, 1927; English Needlework. London: A. & C. Black Ltd., 1933.


Sources

[obituaries:] “Mr. A. F. Kendrick Authority On Textiles.” The Times (London) July 20, 1954, p. 10; addendum, Smith, H. Clifford. “Mr. A. F. Kendrick.” The Times (London) July 24, 1954, p. 8.




Citation

"Kendrick, A. F.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/kendricka/.


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Search for materials by & about this art historian:

Medievalist and fiberworks authority and Keeper of Department of Textiles, Victoria and Albert Museum. Kendrick was the son of Albert Kendrick. He joined the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1897. The following year he published his first book, T