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Marceau, Henri

Full Name: Marceau, Henri

Gender: male

Date Born: 1896

Date Died: 1969

Place Born: Richmond, VA, USA

Place Died: Germantown, Adams, PA, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

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


Overview

Marceau graduated from Columbia Architecture School in 1921. A Prix de Rome enabled him to study at the American Academy in Rome for three years. Upon returning to the United States he married Rebecca Alvord. In 1926 he was named an instructor of architectural design at the University of Pennsylvania. In 1929 he left the University to become the curator the magnificent art collection amassed by the Philadelphia lawyer John G. Johnson (1841-1917), which Johnson had left to the city at his death in 1917, succeeding the first curator Edward Hamilton Bell who had died that year. In 1933 the collection was moved to the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Marceau accompanied the donation now with the title assistant director of the Museum. In 1937 he mounted the major exhibition on the major American sculptor William Rush. Marceau was named Associate Director in 1945. He worked closely with the bombastic director of the Museum, Fiske Kimball. Among his acquisitions, Marceau was key in obtaining the studio of Thomas Eakins from the artist’s widow, resulting in the Museum becoming the largest holder of that artist’s work. In 1955 he succeeded Kimball as director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. He retired in 1964 and was succeeded by Evan H. Turner. He died in a Germantown, PA, nursing home.


Selected Bibliography

“Roman Methods of Working and Handling Stones as Exemplified on the Temple of Concord. (Augustan Temple).” in, Rebert, Homer F. The Temple of Concord in the Roman Forum. American Academy in Rome. Memoirs. Bergamo: American Academy in Rome,1925, pp. 53-77; William Rush, 1756-1833, the First Native American Sculptor. Philadelphia: Pennsylvania Museum of Art, 1937; and Cott, Perry Blythe. The Worcester-Philadelphia Exhibition of Flemish Painting. Philadelphia: Worcester Art Museum/Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1939.


Sources

[obituary:] “Henri Marceau. Museum Aid Dies, Ex-Director in Philadelphia Renaissance Authority.” New York Times September 16, 1969. p. 47. “Henri Marceau.” Bulletin of the American Group. International Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works 10 no. 1 (October 1969): 9.




Citation

"Marceau, Henri." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/marceauh/.


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Marceau graduated from Columbia Architecture School in 1921. A Prix de Rome enabled him to study at the American Academy in Rome for three years. Upon returning to the United States he married Rebecca Alvord. In 1926 he was named an instructor of

Marco Dorta, Enrique

Full Name: Marco Dorta, Enrique

Other Names:

  • Enrique Marco Dorta

Gender: male

Date Born: 30 January 1911

Date Died: 21 September 1980

Place Born: Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Tenerife, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain

Place Died: Seville, Andalusia, Spain

Home Country/ies: Spain


Overview

Director of the Art History department at the university in Seville. In 1945. Marco Dorta received his undergraduate degree at the Universidad de La Laguna. He wrote his dissertation under Diego Angulo Iñiguez in Madrid 1940 with a topic of new-world Indian maps. In 1943 he accepted a position with the Catedrático de Arte Hispanico Americano of the Universidades de Sevilla. He and Mario José Buschiazzo from the University of Buenos Aires collaborated with Angulo Iñiguez on the ground-breaking work on the history of Spanish colonial art in South America. Published in 1945, covering architecture, painting, sculpture, decorative arts, from the evolution of these artistic to the assimilation of Spanish art by the colonies. In 1951 he launched the book series Fuentes para la historia del arte hispanoamericano: estudios y documentos under the auspices of the Instituto Diego Velázquez in Seville. He was appointed professor at the University of Madrid in 1965. His volume for the Arte in América y Filipinas, multi-volume set on Spanish art history, Ars Hispaniae; historia universal del arte hispánico appeared in 1973


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Cartagena de Indias: La ciudad y sus monumentos. Madrid, 1940, published, Cartagena, Colombia: A. Amadó, 1960; “La Arquitectura del Renacimiento en Tunja.” Revista de Indias 3 no. 9. 1942, and Angulo Iñiguez, Diego, and Buschiazzo, Mario José. Historia del arte hispanoamericano. 3 vols. Barcelona-Madrid-Buenos Aires: Salvat, 1945-1956; El barroco en la villa imperial de Potosí. Sevilla: Laboratorio de Arte, Universidad de Sevilla, 1949; La arquitectura barroca en el Perú. Madrid: Instituto Diego Velázquez, del Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, 1957; Materiales para la historia de la cultura en Venezuela, 1523-1828. Documentos del Archivo General de Indias de Sevilla. Caracas: Fundación John Boulton, 1967; Arte in América y Filipinas. vol 21 of Ars Hispaniae: historia universal del arte hispánico. Madrid: Editorial Plus-Ultra Year: 1973; and Arquitectura en San Juan de Puerto Rico (siglo XIX). Rio Piedras: Editorial Universitaria, Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1980.


Sources

Angulo, D. “Presentacion del volumen.” [issued dedication to Marco Dorta] Escuela de Estudios Hispanoamericanos (1983): xvii-xxix; Guimerá, Marcos. “Prólogo.” in Marco Dorta, Enrique. Estampas y recuerdos de Santa Cruz de Tenerife. Santa Cruz de Tenerife: Excmo. Ayuntamiento de Santa Cruz de Tenerife, 1984; Gutiérrez Viñuales, Rodrigo. “Historiografía del arte Iberoamericano en España: pintura, escultura y artes útiles.” Cuadernos de Arte de la Universidad de Granada no. 30 (1999): 181-186; Diccionario de historiadores españoles del arte. Borrás Gualis, Gonzalo M., and Reyes Pacios Lozano, Ana, eds. Madrid: Cátedra, 2006, pp. 215-216.




Citation

"Marco Dorta, Enrique." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/marcodortae/.


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Director of the Art History department at the university in Seville. In 1945. Marco Dorta received his undergraduate degree at the Universidad de La Laguna. He wrote his dissertation under Diego Angulo Iñiguez in Madr

Marguillier, Auguste

Full Name: Marguillier, Auguste

Other Names:

  • Auguste Marguillier

Gender: male

Date Born: 1862

Date Died: 1945

Place Born: Brienne-la-Vieille, Grand Est, France

Home Country/ies: France

Career(s): art critics


Overview

Art critic and editor of the Bibliothèque d’histoire de l’art (series).


Selected Bibliography

La destruction des monuments sur le front occidental: réponse aux plaidoyers allemands. ; Albert Dürer: biographie critique. ; contributor, L’oeuvre complet de Rembrandt. ; Le Musée de Vienne : Musée Impérial d’Histoire de l’Art. ; and Charbonneaux, Jean. L’Art égéen.





Citation

"Marguillier, Auguste." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/marguilliera/.


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Art critic and editor of the Bibliothèque d’histoire de l’art (series).

Mariani, Valerio

Full Name: Mariani, Valerio

Gender: male

Date Born: 1899

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Italy

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


Overview

Scholar of the Italian renaissance. Notes about Mariani’s opinions of Giotto appear in Richard Offner‘s annotated catalog of the 1937 Mostra Giottesca.


Selected Bibliography

“Gli arazzi delle corporazioni.” Dedalo 13 (May 1933): 304-21; “Una scultura in legno del museo di palazzo Venezia.” Dedalo 12 (June 1932):. 429-39; “Dal taccuino di Baldassarre Peruzzi.” L’Arte 32 (September 1929): 256-65; “Ancora un dipinto del Bernini.” L’Arte 32 (January 1929): 22-6; “Note michelangiolesche.” L’Arte ns2 (May 1931): 267-77.


Sources

Ladis, Andrew. “The Unmaking of a Connoisseur.” in, Offner, Richard. A Discerning Eye: Essays on Early Italian Painting. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1998, p,19, note 1;




Citation

"Mariani, Valerio." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/marianiv/.


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Scholar of the Italian renaissance. Notes about Mariani’s opinions of Giotto appear in Richard Offner’s annotated catalog of the 1937 Mostra Giottesca.

Mariette, Pierre-Jean

Full Name: Mariette, Pierre-Jean

Gender: male

Date Born: 1694

Date Died: 1774

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

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

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): prints (visual works)

Career(s): art collectors


Overview

Print collector and early art historian. Mariette was born to a family of Parisian engravers and print dealers. These familial connections created friendships early on for Mariette with antiquarians such as Anne Claude Philippe Caylus, whom he met at age 22. After attending the Collège des Jésuites in Paris, Mariette’s father sent him to Germany and the Netherlands in 1717 to further his artistic and business ambitions. In Vienna he cataloged the art collection of Prince Eugene of Savoy. Throughout his travels and work, Mariette made the acquaintance and maintained contact with most of the scholarly and artistic community in Europe. One of these was Pierre Crozat (1665-1740) whom he met in Paris in 1720. He married Angélique-Catherine Doyen in 1724. For Caylus, Mariette wrote Lettre sur Leonardo da Vinci in 1730, a preface to the Count’s book on Leonardo caricatures. Through his artistic connections, Mariette was named a member of the Academy of Drawing in Florence in 1733. His knowledge of prints and his now close friendship with Caylus and artist Charles-Antoine Coypel secured a position reorganizing the print collection of the Bibliothèque Royale. In 1741 Mariette was asked to catalog Crozat’s considerable collection of paintings and antiquities. At the death of his father in 1742, Mariette had already been running the family print business. However, by 1750 he sold it in order to buy office of Contrôleur Général de la Grande Chancellerie, allowing him to research art for the rest of his life. In 1750 he published Traité des pierres gravées, his treatise on graphics. He was made an associate member of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture, acceding to honorary member in 1757. Although he left numerous annotations to Abecedario pittorico (1704) of Pellegrino Antonio Orlandi, his major ambition was to write a history of engraving and a dictionary of artists. His father’s notes on artists, used to further the art trade, and his own correspondence with the eighteenth-century art world, were the basis of these projects, none of which, however, ever came to fruition. He amassed a fabulous art collection, mostly prints and drawings, which were sold at auction after his death. Caylus used Mariette’s notes on Varsari’s Lives for his manuscript Vies d’artistes du XVIIIe siècle. In 1851 Mariette’s Abecedario notes were assembled into a book by Philippe de Chennevières and Anatole de Montaiglon. Mariette is the founder of the modern discipline of print connoisseurship and collecting.


Selected Bibliography

Chennevières, Philippe de, and Montaiglon, Anatole de, editors. Abecedario de P.J. Mariette et autres notes inédites de cet amateur sur les arts et les artistes. Ouvrage publié d’après les manuscrits autographes conservés au cabinet des estampes de la Bibliothèque impériale. 6 vols. Paris: J.B. Dumoulin, 1851-60; écoles d’Italie: notices biographiques et catalogues des oeuvres reproduites par la gravure, XVIe-XVIIIe siècle. Paris: Les Beaux-arts, 1969; Les grandes peintres. Paris: Les Beaux-Arts, éditions d’études et Documents, 1969 ff.


Sources

Tassie, J. S. “Mariette, Pierre-Jean.” Encyclopedia of the History of Classical Archaeology. Nancy Thomson de Grummond, ed. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996, vol. 2, pp. 725; Walsh, Amy. Dictionary of Art.




Citation

"Mariette, Pierre-Jean." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/mariettej/.


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Print collector and early art historian. Mariette was born to a family of Parisian engravers and print dealers. These familial connections created friendships early on for Mariette with antiquarians such as Anne Claude Philipp

Marignan, Albert

Full Name: Marignan, Albert

Gender: male

Date Born: 1858

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): Medieval (European)


Overview

Medievalist art historian. Marignan encountered the young Wilhelm Vöge while Vöge was in France researching his book on medieval sculpture.


Selected Bibliography

Études sur l’histoire de l’art italien du XIe-XIIIe siècle: le Paliotto de St.-Ambroise de Milan, la porte de bronze. Strasbourg: J.H.E. Heitz/Heitz & Mündel, 1911; Les fresques des églises de Reichenau [and] Les bronzes de la cathédrale de Hildesheim. Strasbourg: J.H.E. Heitz, 1914.


Sources

[Vöge reference] Panofsky, Erwin. “Wilhelm Vöge: A Biographical Memoir.” Art Journal 28 no. 1 (Fall 1968): 30.




Citation

"Marignan, Albert." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/marignana/.


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Medievalist art historian. Marignan encountered the young Wilhelm Vöge while Vöge was in France researching his book on medieval sculpture.

Mâle, Émile

Full Name: Mâle, Émile

Other Names:

  • Émile Mâle

Gender: male

Date Born: 02 June 1862

Date Died: 06 October 1954

Place Born: Commentry, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France

Place Died: Château Chaalis Fontaine-Chaalis, Oise, France

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): architecture (object genre), French Gothic, Gothic (Medieval), iconography, Medieval (European), and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Major medievalist of French Gothic art and architecture, developed iconographic method. Mâle was the son of a miner raised in a small French village of Bézenet, Bourbonnais, and later Monthieux, near St.-Etienne, Loire. Among his childhood memories was that of his father reading the romantic version of the middle ages contained in Notre Dame de Paris by Victor Hugo. His secondary schooling, 1872-1878 was at the lycée de Saint-Étienne where he received a background in the classics. In 1883 he enrolled at the école Normale Supérieure, Paris, initially hoping to be a painter. He studied literature, graduating in 1886. His friends included Joseph Bédier (1864-1938), whose philologic theories on the chansons de geste would greatly affect Mâle’s own view of art. Intending to be an archaeologist, he continued his studies in ancient art and history at he école d’Athènes. While traveling with cousins in Italy during the summer, he came upon the fourteenth-century frescos by Andrea di Firenze in Santa Maria Novella in Florence and his enthusiasm for ancient art disappeared in favor of the medieval. Renouncing his fellowship in Athens, he returned to France and accepted a position as professor of rhetoric at St.-Etienne. He taught there three years, moving to Toulouse and then Paris to pursue his graduate degree. After an initial article on the iconography of the liberal arts in 1891, he began lecturing in art history in 1892 and publishing on Romanesque capitals at the Musée des Augustins, Toulouse, the same year. Mâle wrote an 1894 article arguing for the teaching of the archeology of the Middle Ages in schools. In 1895 he published the first article in what would be his consuming interests, the origin of French medieval sculpture. Mâle completed writing his two required dissertations (one in Latin and one in French) between 1898 and 1899. The first, appeared in print in 1898 as L’Art religieux du XIIIe siècle en France. This study of 13th-century French iconography, drawn from the major cathedrals of France, was a great success. Based in part upon the work theories of Adolphe Napoléon Didron and his Iconographie chrétienne, 1843, Mâle asserted that the Gothic cathedral was a pictorial encyclopedia to be read visually by the medieval worshipper. In the final chapter, Mâle protested the secular interpretation of Gothic architecture, a remark which would be famously later quoted by Marcel Proust. Mâle himself appeared to have misgivings about the book’s reception (Harvey). The pair of works appeared together in 1902. In 1906 he taught a course in Christian medieval archaeology at the Sorbonne which the study of medieval architecture was then called. The same year he also published, L’Art religieux de la fin du moyen âge en France. In this book, Mâle argued that although styles among French art between thirteenth and fifteenth-century charged, it was largely due to matters of taste. He was appointed to a new chair in medieval art at the Sorbonne in 1912. Mâle continued to publish, research and revise his writings into new editions. Unlike his colleagues, such as Henri Focillon, Mâle refrained from contributing to newspapers. In 1917, with World War I I still ranging, he issued a book, L’art allemand et l’art français du moyen âge, which was harshly criticized for its contradictory view of German art. In 1922, L’Art religieux du XIIe siècle en France appeared, a synthetic treatment medieval art overall, tracing Gothic elements back to Romanesque forms. In 1923 he succeeded Mgr. Louis Duchesne (1843-1922) as the honorary director of the École française de Rome. While director, Mâle wrote on later religious art (through the baroque era and including Italy, Flanders and Spain), L’art réligieux après le Concile de Trente. In 1927 he coined the term “iconography” (though Aby M. Warburg, had used it as an adjective), the hallmark of his method. He retired from the école in 1937. After World War II, he was the curator at the Musée Jacquemard-André of the Château Chaalis. In his late years, he wrote books on individual churches and an important book, La Fin du paganisme en Gaule. Mâle died in Chaalis at age 92. Mâle was one a of group of pioneering art historians, who, along with the German-speaking (but methodologically different) Adolph Goldschmidt, Aloïs Riegl, and Wilhelm Vöge, were responsible for transforming art history from a fledging discipline into an internationally respected field of study. His books were widely appreciated during his lifetime, inspiring generations of art historians to study French iconography as a core explication of medieval art. He was among the first to recognize eastern influences in medieval art. Principally an iconographer, Mâle was responsible for “rediscovering” the baroque iconographic manual, Iconologia (1593) by Cesare Ripa in the late 1920s. Methodologically, Mâle was 19th-century in his outlook and remained aloof from approaches to art history outside his interest. He viewed religious architecture as the Gesamtkunstwerk (total work of art), a notion he borrowed from Didron. L’art réligieux de XIIIe siècle en France, his first, most famous and most readible book (Sauerländer) begins with the aphorism “Le Moyen Âge eut la passion de l’ordre” (“The Middle Ages had a passion for order”). He employed the medieval treatise Speculum Majus of Vincent of Beauvais (c. 1190 – 1264?) to organize his own approach to medieval art. His approach, however, was and is frequently criticized by other art historians as being too narrow and nationalistic. His thesis that art of twelfth-century sculpture was born in French regional schools (Toulouse and Languedoc) was denied by the American scholar A. Kingsley Porter who argued instead that Pilgrimage routes provided a fluid transmission of iconography. Porter’s “Spain or Toulouse?” review of Mâle’s book established the poles of scholarship for two subsequent generations of medievalists (Seidel). André Grabar believed Mâle’s conception of the “encyclopedic cathedral” as overstated and ignored secular thought. Even fellow iconographer Erwin Panofsky distanced himself from Mâle, considering his iconography too simplistic for true insight. Indeed, Mâle appears to not have known of the Bibliothek Warburg, the other great iconographic research center at the time. Mâle’s blatant anti-German view of medieval art, L’art allemand et l’art français du moyen âge, written in part to counter Die deutsche Plastik vom ausgehenden Mittelalter bis zum Ende der Renaissance by the German nationalist Wilhelm Pinder, appeared during World War I. It, like Pinder’s, was derided in reviews. Michael Camille added to these criticisms in 1989, citing Mâle’s interpretation of medieval art as relying too exclusively through literary sources and less on how the art functioned. Recent new translations of his work, have affirmed that, though narrow in their outlook, his interpretation of form is correct. Willibald Sauerländer characterized Mâle’s approach as “a wonderful vindication of the old Catholic France,” and termed his late book, L’art réligieux après le Concile de Trente, in terms of its sweep of vision, “unmatched to this day.” He included Mâle among the “pantheon of great [early] art historians” of medieval art whose numbers included Adolphe Napoléon Didron, Charles Cahier, Camille Martin, Ferdinand Piper and Franz Xaver Kraus.


Selected Bibliography

[complete bibliography] Lambert, Elie. Bibliographie de émile Mâle. Poitiers: Cahiers de civilisation médiévale, 1959; [dissertation:] Latin-language, Quomodo Sybillas recentiores artifices repraesentaverint, French-language, L’art réligieux de XIIIe siècle en France: étude sur l’iconographie de moyen âge et sur ses sources d’inspiration, published under the same title, Paris: E. Leroux, 1898, English, Religious art in France, XIII century: a study of medieval iconography and its sources. London: Dent, 1913; [issued as a set as] L’art réligieux. 4 vols. issued and reissued as a series, Paris: Colin, 1902-32, specifically: a) L’art réligieux du XIIIe siècle en France, 1902, b) L’art réligieux de la fin du moyen âge en France: Etude sur l’iconographie du moyen âge et sur les sources d’inspiration. 1908, c) L’art réligieux du XIIe siècle en France: Etude sur du moyen âge les origines de l’iconographie. 1922, d) L’art réligieux après le Concile de Trente: Etude sur l’iconographie de la fin du XVIe siècle du XVIIIe siècle en Italie, France Espagne et Flanders. 1932, issued as a set in English, edited by Bober, Harry, as a) Religious Art in France: the Thirteenth Century: a Study of Medieval Iconography and its Sources. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1984, b) Religious Art in France: the Late Middle Ages: a Study of Medieval Iconography and its Sources. Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press, 1986, c) Religious Art in France: the Twelfth Century: a Study of the Origins of Medieval Iconography. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1978, e) Religious Art from the Twelfth to the Eighteenth Century. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1982, L’art et les artistes du moyen âge. Paris: Colin, 1927; L’art allemand et l’art français du moyen âge. Paris: Colin, 1917; La cathédrale de Reims. Paris: Bloud & Gay, 1915; L’histoire de l’art. Paris: Larousse, 1915; Rome et ses vieilles églises. Paris: Flammarion, 1942, English, The Early Churches of Rome. Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1960; L’art religieux après le Concile de Trente: étude sur l’iconographie de la fin du XVIe siècle, du XVIIe, du XVIIIe siècle, Italie, France, Espagne, Flanders. Paris: A. Colin, 1932; La fin du paganisme en Gaule et les plus anciennes basiliques chretiennes. Paris: Flammarion, 1950.


Sources

Proust, Marcel. “La Mort des cathedrales: une consequence du projet Briand” Le Figaro (August 16, 1904); Porter, A. Kingsley. “Spain or Toulouse? and Other Questions.” Art Bulletin 7 (1924): 4; Salerno, Luigi. “Iconography.” Encyclopedia of World Art (1959) 7: 769ff; Dvorák, Max. Idealism and Naturalism in Gothic Art. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1967, p. 212-13; 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. 56; Bober, Harry. “Editor’s Foreward.” in, Mâle, émile. Religious Art in France: the Twelfth Century: a Study of the Origins of Medieval Iconography. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1978, pp. v-xxiv; 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. 60; Emile Mâle: le symbolisme chrétien: exposition. Vichy: La Bibliothèque, 1983; Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, pp. 208, 210-212, 469; Havey, Jacqueline Colliss. “Mâle, Emile.” Dictionary of Art; Mann, Janice. “Romantic Identity, Nationalism, and the Understanding of the Advent of Romanesque Art in Christian Spain.” Gesta 36 no. 2 (1997): 156-64; Seidel, Linda. “Arthur Kingsley Porter (1883-1933)” in Medieval Scholarship: Biographical Studies on the Formation of a Discipline. Volume 3. New York: Garland, 2000, pp. 281, 283; Luxford, Julian M. “émile Mâle.” in Key Writers on Art. Chris Murray, ed. London/New York: Routledge, 2003, vol 2, pp. 204-211; Sauerländer, Willibald. “Émile Mâle.” Dictionnaire critique des historiens de l’art actifs en France de la Révolution à la Première Guerre mondiale [website] http://www.inha.fr/spip.php?article2433; [obituaries:] “M. Emile Mâle.” Times (London) October 7, 1954, p. 11; “Emile Male Dies, An Art Authority, Expert on French Religious Works.” New York Times October 7, 1954, p. 23.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Mâle, Émile." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/malea/.


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Major medievalist of French Gothic art and architecture, developed iconographic method. Mâle was the son of a miner raised in a small French village of Bézenet, Bourbonnais, and later Monthieux, near St.-Etienne, Loire. Among his childhood memorie

Malkiel-Jirmounsky, Myron

Full Name: Malkiel-Jirmounsky, Myron

Other Names:

  • Myron Malkiel-Jirmounsky

Gender: male

Date Born: 1890

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Russia

Subject Area(s): architecture (object genre), Modern (style or period), painting (visual works), Renaissance, and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Historian Renaissance painting and modern architecture. Malkiel-Jirmounsky taught at St. Petersburg and later Sorbonne. Beginning in 1941 he was a lecturer at the National Museum, Lisbon. The art historian Bernard Berenson read Malkiel-Jirmounsky’s Problèmes des primitifs portugais (1941) while Berenson was in forced confinement in his home in Italy in 1942. Berenson commented, “the illustrations suggest all sorts of problems which the writer does not treat at all. On the other hand, he makes elaborate diagrams of diagonals he descries in the pictures, and speaks a good deal of ‘Geistesgeschichte’; he quotes Plotiinus, etc., etc.”


Selected Bibliography

Les tendances de l’architecture contemporaine. Paris: Delagrave, 1930; Problèmes des primitifs portugais. Coimbra: Coimbra editora, limitada, 1941; Escola do Mestre de Sardoal. Lisbon?: Artis, 1959.


Sources

“10 March.” Berenson, Bernard. One Year’s Reading for Fun, 1942. New York: Knopf, 1960, pp. 35-36.




Citation

"Malkiel-Jirmounsky, Myron." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/malkieljirmounskym/.


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Historian Renaissance painting and modern architecture. Malkiel-Jirmounsky taught at St. Petersburg and later Sorbonne. Beginning in 1941 he was a lecturer at the National Museum, Lisbon. The art historian Bernard Berenson

Malraux, André

Full Name: Malraux, André

Other Names:

  • André Malraux

Gender: male

Date Born: 03 November 1901

Date Died: 23 November 1976

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

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

Home Country/ies: France

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

Career(s): art historians, authors, and theorists

Institution(s): Gallimard Publishing and Ministère de la Culture


Overview

Novelist and art historian/theorist; French Minister of Culture, 1960-1969. Malraux was the son of Fernand-Georges Malraux (1879-1930) and Berthe Félicie Lamy (Malraux) (d. 1933). His father, an investment banker, divorced his wife when Malraux was fifteen; Malraux was raised by his mother and grandmother, Adrienne Lamy (d. 1940) in the small town of Bondy (Paris outskirts). He left school at seventeen without graduating, working for the bookseller René-Louis Doyon (1885-1966) and then art department of the publisher Simon Kra (1853 – 1940), in Paris where he oversaw Kra’s art publications Editions du Sagittaire. In 1921 he was in charge of the art Editions de luxe of the art dealer Daniel-Henri Kahnweiler (1884-1979). Malraux’s own contribution to the series, Lunes en papier, was illustrated by Fernand Léger. He also collaborated with Max Jacob (1876-1944) in the art and literary review Action. That year, too, 1921, Malraux married the wealthy German writer Clara Goldschmidt (1897-1982).

Bad investments with his wife’s fortune in the stock market, however, resulted in the couple’s departure to Indochina. The trip to the former French colony, still under French control in 1923, formed an archaeological expedition sponsored by the French Government. There Malraux removed a bas-reliefs from a temple (still considered the property of the colonial government), and then attempted to smuggle them out of the country to sell in France. Caught, tried and sentenced to prison in 1924 he was released upon appeal from a Saigon appeals court. Malraux wrote for the Saigon newspaper L’Indochine, the organ of the nationalist movement “Jeune-Annam” (Young Annam League).

He returned to France to launch two short-lived fine-press series, la Sphère and Aux Aldes, between 1926-1927. In 1927 he became the art editor at Gallimard publishing. His first book on art, Oeuvres gothico-bouddhiques du Pamir, on his experience with southeast Asian art appeared in 1930. After his father’s suicide, Malraux participated on excavations in Iran and Afghanistan and coordinated another book series, “La Galerie de la Pleiade.” In 1933 he published an article on the American author William Faulkner, bringing the (then) obscure southern American writer to the eventual attention of the Nobel Prize committee. The same year his fictionalized account of the defeat of the communists in Shanghai, La condition humaine, was published and awarded the Prix Goncourt. Malraux spoke at both the Moscow Writers’ Congress in 1934 and the Congress of Writers in Defense of Culture, Paris, in 1935. Marxist sympathies led him to membership in several anti-Fascist organizations, including the “Comite mondial antifasciste” and “La Ligue internationale contre l’anti-semitisme.” He began a relationship with another writer, Josette Clotis (d. 1944), with whom he had two sons. His earliest writing on art appeared in the initial issue of the magazine Verve in 1937

During the Spanish civil war, Malraux organized the foreign division of the Spanish Republican air-force, touring the United States in 1938 to raise funds for them. With France’s entry into World War II, he joined a tank division, was captured in 1940, but escaped. He spent three years, 1940-1944 with Josette, quietly writing, until he joined the French resistance. Arrested again by the Gestapo in 1944 in Toulouse, the city was shortly thereafter liberated and Malraux free again. He led the Alsace-Lorraine resistance brigade in 1945, adopting the sobriquet “Colonel Berger.” While engaged in the fighting in Alsace, Josette was killed in a railroad accident in southwest France the same year.

The post-war government appointed Malraux Minister of Information in 1945 (which he held only for a year). He and Clara officially divorced in 1946. In 1947 his art-historical career began in earnest. He issued Le musée imaginaire, the first volume of his most-important art series, La Psychologie de l’art, whose early sections had appeared as the 1937 article. The second volume, La Creation artisque appeared in 1948. That same year he married his half-brother’s widow, the pianist Marie-Madeleine Lioux (1914-2014). Volume three of Le musée imaginaire, La monnaie de l’absolu, was published in 1949. It appeared in English as part of the important Bollingen book series in 1949. In 1951 Malraux expanded and reissued La Psychologie de l’art as the Les Voix du silence, including the new section, “Les Metamorphoses d’Apollon.” A two-volume picture book, Le musée imaginaire de la sculpture mondiale was initially published in 1952. He embarked on a second philosophical narrative on art, La métamorphose des dieux in 1957. While lecturing on art in Venice, de Gaulle appointed him a minister of information in 1958, eventually rising to the position of Minister of Culture, a cabinet level appointment in 1960 (through 1969).

As Minister of Culture, he oversaw the restoration of the Louvre Museum colonnade to its original state. He also built cultural centers (art museums, libraries) in provincial cities throughout France, known as Maisons de la Culture, a vision he shared and assisted with by Sorbonne art historian (and supporter) André Chastel. In 1960 Malraux founded and directed Gallimard’s important art book survey series, L’Univers des formes (some of which were translated into English as the Arts of Mankind series). In 1961, both his sons by his second marriage, Gautier and Vincent Malraux, were killed in an automobile accident. He separated from his third wife, Madeleine, in 1966. He conferred with Richard Nixon in Washgington, D. C., before Nixon’s historic trip to China in 1972. Wracked by asthma as a result of his heavy smoking, he suffered his first (and near fatal) heart attack the same year. Further volumes of La métamorphose appeared in 1974 and 1976. Malraux lived his final years near the small town of Varières, France, in the family chateaux of Louise de Vilmorin, his last companion. He contracted cancer for which he underwent surgery in 1976; a second pulmonary embolism took his life. He was buried in the local cemetery in Varières. In 1996 his ashes were moved to the Panthéon necropolis, Paris.

Malraux’s legacy as an art writer/theorist is uneven. His art books lack hard original scholarship. He denied that he was an art historian, despite his analytical art writing. E. H. Gombrich and Georges Duthuit in particular criticized his lack of scholarship, according to some scholars, unfairly (Allan). Chastel, however, defended him as a synthesizer. Malraux’s ideas on the psychology of art parallel French art historians of the time, largely Élie Faure and Henri Focillon. His reputation in the English-speaking world suffered from poor translations which often gave the impression of vacuity (Harris). However, Malraux counteracted the fashionable notion that Western civilization was in decline, by celebrating the continual personal creativity of the artist. “Art, for Malraux, was essentially the means whereby man affirmed his power to transcend destiny…” (Times obituary). His lasting influence was the concept of “le musée imaginaire” (usually translated into English as “the museum without walls”), which espoused visualizing art without the traditional confines (and constructs) of the museum and art-historical grouping, i.e., by country and periodization. The advent of the internet in the 1990s brought Malraux’s notion of “museum without walls” to a new art museum community who began to define themselves in a web presence, delivering images to a public who never set foot in their museum.

Malraux’s reputation as a man of action is tempered by his periodic acts of unethical behavior and disinformation about himself. He never disputed his removal of the national treasures of Cambodia without permission for his personal gain; his recounting of his war service, though his actions were truly heroic, was exaggerated in subsequent years. His Who’s Who in France entry stated that he attended the Lycée Condorcet and graduated from the École des Langues Orientales, inaccuracies that he never dispelled and of which he may have been the contributor.


Selected Bibliography

Oeuvres gothico-bouddhiques du Pamir. Paris: Gallimard, 1930; La condition humaine. Paris: Gallimard, 1933, English, Man’s Fate. New York: Modern Library, 1934; La Psychologie de l’art [series] vol. I: Le musée imaginaire. Geneva: Skira, 1947, vol. II: La creation artistique. Geneva: Skira, 1948, vol. III: La monnaie de l’absolu. Geneva: Skira 1949, revised and enlarged as Les voix du silence. Paris: NRF, 1951, English, The Psychology of Art. vol. I: Museum Without Walls. Pantheon, 1949, vol. II: The Creative Act. Pantheon, 1950, vol. III: The Twilight of the Absolute. Pantheon, 1951, [expanded text translated as] The Voices of Silence. New York: Doubleday, 1953; La métamorphose des dieux. vol. I: Le Surnaturel. Paris: Gallimard, 1957, Volume II: L’Ireel. Paris: Gallimard, 1974, vol. III: L’Intemporel. Paris: Gallimard, 1976, English, (volume 1 only), The Metamorphosis of the Gods. New York: Doubleday, 1960; Le musée imaginaire de la sculpture mondiale. 2 vols. Paris: Gallimard, 1952-1954; edited, L’Univers des formes. Paris: Gallimard, 1960 ff.


Sources

[literature on Malraux is legion; works that address his art-historical activity include:]

  • Chastel, Andre. “The Revolt Against Malraux. French Critics Launch A Counter-Attack On His Theory Malraux Arguments Charges of Heresy.” New York Times May 26, 1957, p. X8;
  • Righter, William. The Rhetorical Hero: An Essay on the Aesthetics of André Malraux. New York: Chilmark Press, 1964;
  • Langlois, Walter. André Malraux: the Indochina Adventure. New York: Praeger,1966;
  • Rosenburg, Harold. “Malraux and His Critics.” Art News Annual 31 (1966): 133-7, 147-52;
  • Malraux, Clara Goldschmidt. Memoirs. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1967;
  • 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, pp. 6, 73;
  • Lacouture, Jean. André Malraux. New York: Pantheon Books, 1975;
  • Langlois, Walter. Malraux et l’art. Paris: Minard, 1978;
  • 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. 97, mentioned;
  • Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art: de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, pp. 364-370;
  • Madsen, Axel. Silk Roads: the Asian Adventures of Clara & André Malraux. New York: Pharos Books, 1989;
  • Cate, Curtis. André Malraux: a Biography. London: Hutchinson, 1995;
  • Harris, Geoffrey T. André Malraux: a Reassessment. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996;
  • Todd, Oliver. Malraux. New York: Knopf, 2005;
  • Recht, Roland and Barbillon, Claire.. À quoi sert l’histoire de l’art? Paris: Textuel, 2006, p. 52ff;
  • Allan, Derek, Art and the Human Adventure: André Malraux’s Theory of Art. New York: Rodopi, 2009
  • Doudet, Sophie. Malraux. Paris : Gallimard, [2016];
  • Thürlemann, Felix. “André Malraux, 1947: A Dialogue of Cultures.” More than One Picture: an Art History of the Hyperimage Los Angeles: The Getty Research Institute, 2019, pp. 127-140;


  • [obituaries:] “M. Andre Malraux: Novelist, Statesman and Critic.” Times (London) November 24, 1976, p. 19;
  • “Andre Malraux, 75, Dies in Paris: Writer, War Hero, de Gaulle Aide.” New York Times November 24, 1976, pp. 1, 69;
  • Hargrove, Charles. “André Malraux Buried in Little Country Cemetery.” Times (London) November 25, 1976, p. 8.


Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Malraux, André." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/malrauxa/.


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Novelist and art historian/theorist; French Minister of Culture, 1960-1969. Malraux was the son of Fernand-Georges Malraux (1879-1930) and Berthe Félicie Lamy (Malraux) (d. 1933). His father, an investment banker, divorced his wife when Malraux wa

Malsz, G.

Full Name: Malsz, G.

Gender: unknown

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Germany


Overview

In 1871, Malsz was among the team of art historians (the others including Moritz Thausing, Carl von Lützlow, Adolf von Bayersdorfer, Friedrich Lippmann, Wilhelm Lübke, Bruno Meyer, Karl Woermann, Alfred Woltmann and Wilhelm Bode) who convened in Dresden to determine which of two versions of Hans Holbein the younger’s Meyer Madonna was the autograph work. The so-called “Holbein convention,” one of the important events in nineteenth-century art history when many methodical approaches were employed to determined authenticity, concluded that the Darmstadt version was the original.



Sources

Kultermann, Udo. The History of Art History. New York: Abaris, 1993, p. 145.




Citation

"Malsz, G.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/malszg/.


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Search for materials by & about this art historian:

In 1871, Malsz was among the team of art historians (the others including Moritz Thausing, Carl von Lützlow, Adolf von Bayersdorfer, Friedrich Lippmann, Wilhelm Lübke, Bruno Meyer