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Mosnier, Pierre

Full Name: Mosnier, Pierre

Other Names:

  • Pierre Meunier

Gender: male

Date Born: 1641

Date Died: 1703

Place Born: Blois, Centre-Val de Loire, France

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

Home Country/ies: France

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

Career(s): art historians and painters (artists)


Overview

First person to write a book entitled “History of Art;” member of the French Academy; painter. Mosnier’s father, Jean Mosnier (1600-1656), was the principal painter of the Blois region. The young Mosnier received his early training from his father, and subsequently from Sébastien Bourdon (1616-1671) in Paris. At the Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture he was the first, in 1664, to win the “Prix Royal” with his painting “Jason Capturing the Golden Fleece”. This award enabled him to continue his study in Italy. He became a student at the Académie de France in Rome, which had been opened in 1666. He had a special interest in the works of Raphael and the Carracci. When he returned to Paris, he was granted membership in the Royal Academy, in 1674. In 1676 he began his teaching career at the Académie Royale, first as assistant professor, and from 1686, as professor. He taught design, drawing, perspective, anatomy, as well as the history of art. Between 1693 and 1698, he delivered seven lectures on the history of what he called “les arts du dessein”. These lectures became the subject of his 1698 treatise, Histoire des arts qui ont raport au dessein, the first published work to be called an art history. Mosnier dedicated his work to the powerful Édouard Colbert, Marquis de Vilacerf, who then was the superintendent of the buildings, the arts, and the factories of the King of France (Louis XIV). Mosnier himself served as a royal painter. It was Mosnier’s intent to write another volume on the seventeenth century, but his death in 1703 precluded this. Mosnier’s education as a painter and his position as an Académicien may have contributed to his uncompromising judgments on what he regarded as good and bad art. Particularly striking is his low appreciation of early Christian and mediaeval art. Although biographical information is incorporated in his work, mostly in footnotes, the primary focus of this well documented and informative treatise is on the origin, rise, fall, and revival of the arts during distinctive periods throughout history. With his pioneering work Mosnier ranks among the earliest art historians. Histoire des arts covers the history of painting, sculpture, architecture, and engraving throughout history, from the reign of the Assyrian Kings until the seventeenth century. It consists of three parts: (1) the origin and flowering of the arts up to the reign of the Roman emperor Constantine; (2) the subsequent decline in the ages following the fall of the Roman Empire; and (3) the revival of the arts since the eleventh century in Tuscany, when the classically inspired architecture of the San Miniato in Florence, and the Dome of Pisa contributed to the recovery from the bad “Gothic” style of the previous centuries. Much attention is paid to the Renaissance in Italy, while some chapters are dedicated to the highlights of French and Flemish art, as well as to the art of engraving in Italy, the Low Countries, France and Germany.


Selected Bibliography

[list of Mosnier’s lectures:] Teyssèdre, Bernard. Roger de Piles et les débats sur le coloris au siècle de Louis XIV. Paris, 1957, pp. 604-605; Histoire des arts qui ont raport au dessein divisée en trois livres oú il est traité de son Origine, de son Progrès, de sa Chute, & de son Rétablissement. Ouvrage utile au public pour savoir ce qui s’est fait de plus considerable en tous les âges, dans la Peinture, la Sculture, l’Architecture & la Gravure; & pour distinguer les bonnes manieres des mauvaises. Paris: Pierre Giffart, 1698.


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. 25 n. 50; Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art: de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, p. 75; Miedema, Hessel. Kunst historisch. Maarssen: Gary Schwartz/SDU, 1989, p. 27; Bajou, Thierry. “Mosnier: (2) Pierre Mosnier” Dictionnary of Art 22: 190-191; “France, XVII. Historiography” Dictionary of Art 11: 674; Bénézit, E. Dictionary of Artists 9: 1386.



Contributors: Monique Daniels


Citation

Monique Daniels. "Mosnier, Pierre." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/mosnierp/.


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First person to write a book entitled “History of Art;” member of the French Academy; painter. Mosnier’s father, Jean Mosnier (1600-1656), was the principal painter of the Blois region. The young Mosnier received his early training from his father

Mras, George P.

Full Name: Mras, George P.

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: United States


Overview


Selected Bibliography

Eugene Delacroix’s Theory of Art. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1966.


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. 4.




Citation

"Mras, George P.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/mrasg/.


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Mühlmann, Kajetan

Full Name: Mühlmann, Kajetan

Other Names:

  • "Kai"

Gender: male

Date Born: 1898

Date Died: 1958

Place Born: Uttendorf bei Zell am See, Salzburg, Austria

Place Died: Munich, Bavaria, Germany

Home Country/ies: Austria


Overview

Art historian who headed of the Nazi SS unit which procured looted art from persecuted families and institutions for disbursal to the Reich. Mühlmann’s father died when Mühlmann was a child and his mother remarried his father’s cousin. Raised on a farm in Austria, he attended school in Salzburg. In 1915, at 17, he joined the infantry to fight in World War I where he was severely wounded in 1918 and decorated. After the armistice, Mühlmann entered the university in Vienna to study studio art in 1922 intending on becoming a painter. He befriended the Salzburg sisters of the future Reichsmarschall of Nazi Germany, Hermann Göring (1893-1946). Mühlmann switched studies to art history, receiving his Ph.D. from Vienna in 1926 with a dissertation topic on Baroque fountains in Salzburg. He returned to Salzburg the same year hoping to find a career in historic preservation of the city. He secured a position as Propogandaleiter (PR director) for the Salzburg festival and wrting art criticism which lead to local prominence. In 1932 Mühlmann published a book on Salzburg historic preservation. He left the festival for a larger role in the promotion of the city, marrying a local artist, Poldi Woyteck, the same year. Mühlmann joined the Nazi party in 1934–secretly as it was illegal in Austria–along with an acquaintance, the attorney Arthur Seyss-Inquart (1892-1946). He apparently became a Nazi informer (Vertrauens-Mann) and an agent of the head of Nazi intelligence the SD (Sicherheitsdienst) Reinhard Heydrich (1904-1942). He met with Hitler shortly before the Anschluss in 1938 and gained his confidence; both Seyss-Inquart and Mühlmann were rewarded with official positions in the new Nazi government in Austria, Mühlmann over state art policy and tourism with Seyss-Inquart as his superior. He was appointed a captain in the SS and his older half-brother, Josef Mühlmann (1886-1972), an art critic and restorer, inducted in the Gestapo. The two donatated paintings drawn from municipal collections to Hitler and Göring. When the Vienna Gestapo created the “Vulgesta” (acronym for Vermoögensumzugsgut Gestapo or Transferred Property of the Gestapo), Mühlmann began assisting in an office across the street from the seized Rothschild palace, now the office of famed deporter/Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann (1906-1962). He toured Hitler in the Neue Burg, the Austrian castle where looted art was initially held in Austria. He moved to a villa outside Salzburg (Salzburg Anif) which had been seized from a Jewish woman, Helena Taussig. Mühlmann attempted to keep much of the looted art in Austria, however, and because of this was dismissed from his position in June, 1939. He moved to Berlin and, at the invasion of Poland, was appointed director of the Sonderbeauftragten fur die Erfassung der Kunst und Kulturschätze (Special Commission for the disposition of art and cultural treasures) by Göring. His assignment was to plunder artwork belonging to Jews, “enemies of the state,” and the Roman Catholic Church. Looting responsibilities were divided between Wolfram Sievers (1905-1948) and former Berlin University professor Peter Paulsen (1902 [dates of 1892 are wrong]-after 1969), who focused on archaeological artifacts, and Mühlmann for art. Mühlmann organized squads to seize Polish art, mostly from hiding places where it had been hidden prior to the Nai invasion. In 1941 Mühlmann divorced Poldi, marrying his mistress, Hilde Ziegler. When the Reich overran the Netherlands, Mühlmann set up operations there. His staff of art historians in the Netherlands included the Berlin art historian of Dutch art, Eduard Plietzsch, Mühlmann’s his brother, Josef, and two Viennese art historians, Franz Kieslinger (1904-1999) and Bernhard Degenhart who assisted in expertising works of looted art to be sent to the Führermuseum and the art collection of Reichsmarschall. His unit worked until the Reich collapsed in 1945. Mühlmann fled to Vienna and then to the Austrian Alps where he was captured by American forces the same year in the town of Seewalchen am Attersee. He admitted to facilitating the dispursal of looted art, but knowing nothing of the Holocost. He testified in the treason trial of Guido Schmidt in 1947, covered in the United States in a three-part article in the New Yorker written by 1947, Janet Flanner (1892-1978) outlining Nazi art looting. In 1948, still under arrest by the CIC (Counter Intelligence Corps) he escaped from a hospital where he had been committed for illness. He fled to Lake Starnberg, Bavaria, still wanted in Austria for pre-1938 Nazi affiliations. Apparently living off of the sale of artworks stolen and hidden during the Riech years, he sold art work to the same art dealers whom he had worked with during the war years and who had re-established themselves after the war. Mühlmann enjoyed the largess of former Nazis including the film director Leni Riefenstahl, who was also perhaps a lover. He died of stomach cancer in Munich in 1958 and is buried in the family plots at te Maxglan cemetery. Mühlmann organized and headed the art plundering agencies in Poland and the Netherlands as is documented in the U. S. Army’s Consolidated Interrogation Report. He held the title “The Special Commissioner for the Safekeeping of Works of Art in the Occupied Territories” working through art dealers who specialized in the art of plundered nations, most notable Karl Haberstock, but also Walter Andreas Hofer, Bruno Lohse, Maria Almas Dietrich, and Julius Böhler. Flanner called him “arguably the single most prodigious art plunderer in the historyof human civilization.” Tensions persisted between Mühlmann, the Austrian, and his German superiors, whom he resented as heavy-handed (“German” to his view) in their proscriptive art policy. Mühlmann at least in earlier years had allowed exhibitions of Expressionism, outlawed in Germany, and was considered a traitor by some Nazis.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Barock Brunnen und Wasserkunst in Salzburg. Vienna, 1926; Stadterhaltung und Stadterneuerung in Salzburg an Beispielen der Restaurierungen Franz Wagners. Munich: Industrie und Gewerbe Verlag, 1932; and Barthel Gustav.Sichergestellte Kunstwerke im Generalgouvernement [printed by andMühlmann?], 1940?; and Barthel, Gustav. Krakau: Hauptstadt der deutschen Generalgouvernements Polen: Gestalt und künstlerische Leistung einer deutschen Stadt im Osten. Breslau: Korn Verlag, 1940; Sichergestellte Kunstwerke in der besetzten niederländischen Gebieten. The Hague: Reichskommissariat Niederland, 1943.


Sources

Detailed Interrogation Report No. 1: Kajetan Mühlmann and the Dienststelle Mühlmann [typescript manuscript], 1945 Dec. 25. Dutch Restitution Committee [for Fine Arts], 1945; The Goering Collection. Consolidated Interrogation Report No. 2 15 September 1945. The Reports of the Office of Strategic Services Art Looting Investigation Unit. http://www.holocaustassets.gov/goering/goeringtable; Flanner, Janet. “Annals of Crime: The Beautiful Spoils,” New Yorker 23 (Februrary 22, 1947): 31-6ff., (March 1, 1947): 33-38ff., (March 8, 1947): 38-42ff., reprinted, “The Beautiful Spoils.” in Men & Monuments: Profiles of Picasso, Matisse, Braque, & Malraux. New York: Da Capo, 1990; Petropoulous, Jonathan. The Faustian Bargan: The Art World in Nazi Germany. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000, pp. 170-204; Meżyński, Andrzej. Kommando Paulsen: Organiserter Kunstraub in Poland 1942-45. Dittrich Verlag, 2000, pp. 9ff, 50ff.; Yeide, Nancy. Beyond the Dreams of Avarice: The Hermann Goering Collection. Dallas, TX: Laurel Publishing, 2009, p. 12-13.




Citation

"Mühlmann, Kajetan." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/muhlmannk/.


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Art historian who headed of the Nazi SS unit which procured looted art from persecuted families and institutions for disbursal to the Reich. Mühlmann’s father died when Mühlmann was a child and his mother remarried his father’s cousin. Raised on a

Mühsam, Alice

Full Name: Mühsam, Alice

Other Names:

  • Alice Mühsam
  • Alice Muehsam
  • Alice Freymark

Gender: female

Date Born: 22 December 1889

Date Died: 26 February 1968

Place Born: Berlin, Germany

Place Died: Spring Valley, Rockland, NY, USA

Home Country/ies: Germany and United States

Subject Area(s): restoration (process)

Career(s): restorers

Institution(s): Brooklyn Museum and Columbia University


Overview

Tutor and restorer. Mühsam was born 1889 to Isidor Freymark (d. 1912), a banker, and Lina Hirschfeld (d. 1922), who were both Jewish. She attended private school in her youth, and in 1911 married Kurt Mühsam (1882–1931), a lawyer, writer, journalist, editor-in-chief, and film critic. Before college, Mühsam worked as a housewife and mother, giving piano lessons and writing occasional music criticism. From 1929 to 1936, she studied archaeology and art history in Berlin under Gerhart Rodenwaldt, interrupted by the death of her husband in 1931. Mühsam earned her doctorate in 1936 under Rodenwaldt. Until February 1940, Mühsam lived in Berlin with her two younger children, perfecting restoration skills. Desperate to leave Nazi Germany and its persecution of Jews, she was forced to sell all of her property to pay the Reich Flight Tax prior to emigrating with her daughter Gerd in 1940 to live in the USA. Mühsam was assisted by her daughter Ruth (1912–1999), possibly with the help of the author Erich Maria Remarque, with whom Ruth had formed a friendship after earlier emigration to the USA. Until about 1945, Mühsam earned a living by working as a cleaner and nanny in New York, while also continuing her training as a restorer at the Brooklyn Museum. She subsequently fulfilled smaller orders as a restorer. From around 1950, most likely through the mediation of the archaeologist Margarete Bieber, who had also emigrated to the USA, she worked as a tutor for students at Columbia University in New York, preparing master’s and doctoral students for exams in archaeology, art history and German. Her dissertation, Attische Grabdenkmäler aus vorrömischer Zeit (Attic Grave Reliefs from the Roman Period), was published in Berytus in 1953. Mühsam had three children, including Gerd Mühsam (1913–1979), an art librarian and historian.


Selected Bibliography

  • [dissertation:] “Attic Grave Reliefs from the Roman Period.” Berlin, 1936, published, Berytus 10 (1953): 51–114;
  • translated, with Shatan, Norma A.: Heinrich Wölfflin, The Sense of Form in Art: A Comparative Psychological Study. New York: Chelsea Publ. Co., 1958;
  • German Readings II: A Brief Survey of Art from the Middle Ages to the Twentieth Century for Students of German and Fine Arts. New York: Wittenborn, 1959;
  • Coin and Temple: A Study of the Architectural Representation on Ancient Jewish Coins. Leeds: Leeds University Oriental Society, 1966.

Sources

  • [obituary:] “Dr. Alice Muehsam, an Archeologist, 78.” New York Times, February 29, 1968;
  • Bieber, Margarete. “Alice Muehsam, 1890–1968.” Art Journal 27, no. 4 (1968): 398;
  • 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. 447–48.


Contributors: Lee Sorensen and Lindsay Dial


Citation

Lee Sorensen and Lindsay Dial. "Mühsam, Alice." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/muhsama/.


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Tutor and restorer. Mühsam was born 1889 to Isidor Freymark (d. 1912), a banker, and Lina Hirschfeld (d. 1922), who were both Jewish. She attended private school in her youth, and in 1911 married Kurt Mühsam (1882–1931), a lawyer, writer, journalist,

Müller-Wiener, Wolfgang

Full Name: Müller-Wiener, Wolfgang

Other Names:

  • Wolfgang Karl Heinz Albert Müller-Wiener

Gender: male

Date Born: 1923

Date Died: 1991

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): archaeology, architecture (object genre), Byzantine (culture or style), Medieval (European), and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Archaeologist and architectural historian of the Byzantine era.


Selected Bibliography

Bildlexikon zur Topographie Istanbuls : Byzantion, Konstantinupolis, Istanbul bis zum Beginn d. 17. Jh.. Tubingen: Wasmuth, 1977; and Gerkan, Armin von. Das Theater von Epidauros. Stuttgart: W. Kohlhammer, 1961; Burgen des Kreuzritter. Berlin: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 1966, English, Castles of the Crusaders. London: Thames & Hudson,1966.


Sources

[obituaries:] Schirmer, Wolfgang. “Wolfgang Müller-Wiener.” Architectura 21 no. 1 (1991): 1-2; Koenigs, W. “In Memoriam Wolfgang Müller-Wiener 17.5.1923 – 25.3.1991.” Istanbuler Mitteilungen 41 (1991): 13-16.




Citation

"Müller-Wiener, Wolfgang." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/mullerwienerw/.


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Archaeologist and architectural historian of the Byzantine era.

Müller, Eduard

Full Name: Müller, Eduard

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown


Overview

early historian to search for written sources


Selected Bibliography

Geschichte der theorie der Kunst bei den Alten. 2 vols. Breslau: J. Max, 1834-37.


Sources

KRG, 32




Citation

"Müller, Eduard." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/mullere/.


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early historian to search for written sources

Montaiglon, Anatole de

Full Name: Montaiglon, Anatole de

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): archives (institutions)


Overview

art historian; archival research


Selected Bibliography

Recueil de documents inédits sur l’histoire des arts en France. ed. Philippe de Chennevières. 14 vols. Archives de l’art français, 1851-1852.; Livrets des Salons 1673-1800. 43 vols. 1851-1852.


Sources

Bazin 482




Citation

"Montaiglon, Anatole de." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/montaiglona/.


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art historian; archival research

Montfaucon, Dom Bernard de

Full Name: Montfaucon, Dom Bernard de

Gender: male

Date Born: 1655

Date Died: 1741

Home Country/ies: France

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


Overview

Established the ground for later French historical scholarship with early scientific exploration of ancient and medieval cultures. Thematic treatment of Greek art as opposed to Winckelmann’s historic view.


Selected Bibliography

L’Antiquité expliquée et représentée en figures. 10 vols. 1719; Monumens de la monarchie française. 1729.


Sources

Cauman, Samuel. The Living Museum: Experiences of an Art Historian and Museum Director, Alexander Dorner. New York: New York University Press, 1958, p. 22; Bazin 79




Citation

"Montfaucon, Dom Bernard de." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/montfauconb/.


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Established the ground for later French historical scholarship with early scientific exploration of ancient and medieval cultures. Thematic treatment of Greek art as opposed to Winckelmann’s historic view.

Montferrand, August Richard de

Full Name: Montferrand, August Richard de

Other Names:

  • Henry Louis August Richard de Montferrand

Gender: male

Date Born: 1786

Date Died: 1858

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

Place Died: St. Petersburg, Russia

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): architecture (object genre), Russian (culture or style), and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Russian writer, architect and architectural historian. From 1806-1823, Montferrand studied architecture at the école de Speciale in Paris. After completing his studies, he worked for Charles Percier and Pierre François Leonard Fontaine, who were Napoleon’s architects. In 1814, Montferrand moved to St. Petersburg to accept the position of court architect. He worked with Karl Rossi to redesign St. Petersburg, building structures in the classical style, including St. Isaac’s Cathedral (1818-58), and the Alexander Column (1829-34), which is the world’s tallest column. Both structures were designed to represent Russia’s jubilation over the defeat of Napoleon. Monteferrand drew upon his knowledge of Chinese, Gothic, and Moorish architectural styles, which he incorporated into the design for St. Isaac’s Cathedral. He wrote several illustrated books about the construction of St. Isaac’s and the Alexander Column, where he described the construction process of each building, and provided a history of architecture from antiquity to the Renaissance.



Sources

Dictionary of Art



Contributors: LaNitra Michele Walker


Citation

LaNitra Michele Walker. "Montferrand, August Richard de." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/montferranda/.


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Russian writer, architect and architectural historian. From 1806-1823, Montferrand studied architecture at the école de Speciale in Paris. After completing his studies, he worked for Charles Percier and Pierre François Leonard Fontaine, who were N

Montias, Mike

Full Name: Montias, Mike

Other Names:

  • Mike Montias

Gender: male

Date Born: 1928

Date Died: March 1917

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

Place Died: Branford, New Haven, CT, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): art market, Dutch (culture or style), and economics

Career(s): economists


Overview

Vermeer scholar and Yale University economist; pioneer of Dutch art market history. Montias was raised in Paris by parents of Jewish extraction, Santiago Montias and Giselle (“Robin”) de la Maisoneuve (Montias). As Germany invaded France during World War II, he was sent alone to a boarding school in Buffalo, New York. In Buffalo he was baptized Episcopal. He volunteered as a teenager at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery Library in Buffalo where he discovered the sumptuous volume on Rembrandt by Wilhelm Bode. He married wife Marie “Manya” Agnes Urbaniak in 1950. Montias attended Columbia University in New York receiving his B. A. in 1947 and his M.A. in 1950. He served in the U.S. Army, 1954-1956. As a doctoral student in economics, he considered writing his dissertation the historic Dutch art market, but ultimately he wrote on Soviet-block economics. His dissertation was accepted in 1958. Montias was appointed assistant professor of Economics at Yale University the same year. He remained at Yale his entire career. His work as an economist focused on centrally planned Soviet bloc countries such as Poland (1962) and Romania (1967). His Structure of Economic Systems was published in 1976. During this time he renewed his interest in the economics of Dutch Republic of the 17th century and its effects on the art market. Montias had purchased a Goltzius painting of the Magdalen in 1968 at auction (well above his financial means). His research was stimulated by his colleague in the art department of Yale, Egbert Haverkamp Begemann. Montias realized that, A) an enormous amount of art trading was documented in Dutch archives, a small portion of which had been published by Abraham Bredius, and that, B) most of it remained unanalyzed. He initially wrote a comparative study of Dutch painters’ guilds. Although he knew no Dutch, he won a 1975 grant to write a comparative study of Dutch art guilds. He researched the Delft city archives were he found rich primary sources for the city’s artist’s guild system–and less competition for the material than Amsterdam’s (Haverkamp-Begemann). In 1982 this resulted in his book, Artists and Artisans in Delft: A Socio-Economic Study of the Seventeenth Century. Montias continued in this vein, publishing articles on the assembling of private Dutch collections, art dealers, artist’s productivity, and cause/effect of market demands on artistic style. Although he did not intend to study the most well-known Delft artist, Johannes Vermeer, the paucity of information about this artist intrigued him. He examined the documents of Vermeer’s relatives, ultimately publishing a full-length biography of the artist, titled Vermeer and his Milieu: a Web of Social History, in 1989. He retired from Yale in 1995. In 1996 his Le marché de l’art aux Pays Bas, 15ème-17ème siècles, a synopsis of his research written in his native French appeared. Public and Private Spaces: Works of Art in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Houses a work appearing in 2000 was co-written with John Loughman. His study of auctions held by the Amsterdam Orphans’ Court between 1597-1638, Art at Auction in 17th-Century Amsterdam, appeared in 2002, well after his diagnosis of cancer. The database of Amsterdam inventories and auction results he compiled was donated to the Rijksbureau voor Kunsthistorische Documentatie (RKD) in The Hague and transferred to the Frick Art Library in New York. The database designated as “Montias I” is a transcription of each document and can be searched by inventory number, owner name, inventory date, and by single or combined keywords. The database designated as “Montias II” contains a record for each work of art inventoried in the documents. He died of melanoma. In 2010 The Montias Database of 17th Century Dutch Art Inventories was issued as an internet database. Artists and Artisans in Delft: A Socio-Economic Study of the Seventeenth Century was a ground-breaking book in the history of art. Most art-history studies focused on the biography of the artist and the works of art in an historicist context. Studying art as a tradable commodity, Montias analyzed the forces of supply and demand contributing to their production. It examined how artists and crafts workers developed their commission. Like an economics book it was filled with tables and statistical data. Like humanities scholarship, it was augmented with contemporary accounts. This use of surviving documentation on 17th-century Dutch art and society had not previously been mined. His archival research skills were responsible for the discovery of previously unknown information on individual artists, notably Johannes Vermeer, whose documents on the artist were used (often uncited) in the explosion of interest in the artist in the early 21st century by other historians. In Vermeer and his Milieu Montias established that the artist rather unusually had a patron, Pieter Claesz. van Ruijven (1624-1674), who guaranteed him sales, allowing Vermeer to paint slowly and achieve the enamel-like quality his work is known for. Despite this proof, Montias remained reticent to arrive at that kind of stylistic conclusion.


Selected Bibliography

[complete bibliography:] “Art-Historical Publications by John Michael Montias.” In His Mileau: Essays on Netherlandish Art in Memory of John Michael Montias. Golahny, A., and Mochizuki, M.M., and Vergara, L, eds. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2006, pp.23-28; [dissertation:] Producers: Prices in a Centralized Economy: The Polish Experience. Columbia University, 1958; and Stankiewicz, W. J. Institutional Changes in the Postwar Economy of Poland. New York: Mid-European Studies Center, Free Europe Committee, 1955; Central Planning in Poland. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1962; The Structure of Economic Systems. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1976; Artists and Artisans in Delft: a Socio-economic Study of the Seventeenth Century. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1982; and Aillaud, Gilles, and Blankert, Albert. Vermeer. Paris: Hazan, 1986, English, Aillaud, Gilles, and Blankert, Albert. Vermeer. New York: Rizzoli, 1988; Vermeer and his Milieu: a Web of Social History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989; “Sovereign Consumer: the Adaptation of Works of Art to Demand in the Netherlands in the Early Modern Period.” in, Bevers, Ton, ed. Artists, Dealers, Consumers: on the Social World of Art. Hilversum: Verloren, 1994; and Loughman, John. Public and Private Spaces: Works of Art in Seventeenth-century Dutch Houses. Zwolle: Waanders, 2000; Art at Auction in 17th Century Amsterdam. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2002; The Montias Database of 17th Century Dutch Art Inventories [web database] http://research.frick.org/montias/home.php.


Sources

Haverkamp-Begemann, Egbert, and Naumann, Otto, and Scarf, Herbert E., and Schenker, Alexander M. “Four Remembrances.” in, In His Mileau: Essays on Netherlandish Art in Memory of John Michael Montias. Golahny, A., and Mochizuki, M.M., and Vergara, L, eds. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2006, pp. 13-21; [obituaries:] Times (London) August 16, 2005; Shattuck, Kathryn. “John Montias, 76, Scholar of Economics and of Art.” New York Times August 1, 2005, p. 13; Naumann, Otto. “In Memoriam: John Michael Montias.” HNA Newsletter and Review of Books 22 no.2 (November 2005): 4-5 http://www.hnanews.org/archive/newsletters/nov2005.pdf.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Montias, Mike." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/montiasj/.


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Vermeer scholar and Yale University economist; pioneer of Dutch art market history. Montias was raised in Paris by parents of Jewish extraction, Santiago Montias and Giselle (“Robin”) de la Maisoneuve (Montias). As Germany invaded France during Wo