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Pollock, Griselda

Full Name: Pollock, Griselda

Other Names:

  • Griselda Pollock

Gender: female

Date Born: 11 March 1949

Place Born: Bloemfontein, Free State, South Africa

Home Country/ies: Canada

Subject Area(s): feminism


Overview

Early and prominent feminist art historian in the revision of art history of the late 20th century. Pollock’s parents were Alan Winston Seten Pollock and Kathleen Alexandra Sinclair Pollock. She grew up in South Africa until she was seven when her family moved to Canada in 1956. As a teenager her family relocated again Britain in 1962. In 1967, Pollock entered Oxford University, graduating with honors in modern history in 1970. She continued at the Courtauld Institute between 1970 and 1972. Pollock embraced activist feminism, becoming active in the Women’s Art History Collective. Pollock taught as a lecturer at Manchester University, 1974-1977. She moved to Leeds in 1977 with the appointment of “Lecturer in History of Art and Film.” The same year, 1977, Pollock wrote the article, “What’s Wrong with Images of Women?” a piece which definitively established, along with Carol Duncan’s article of the same year, the disparities of meanings between images of male and females (Gouma-Peterson/Mathews). She received her Ph.D., in 1980, writing a dissertation on the approaches to modernism thought the art of Vincent van Gogh. She married Antony Bryant and co-authored Old Mistresses: Women, Art and Ideology the following year. Pollock remained at Leeds, rising to senior lecturer in 1987. The following year she published the second in her triumvirate of feminist theory, Vision and Difference. Pollock was appointed chair in Social and Critical Histories of Art in 1990. Differencing the Canon appeared in 1999. In 2001 she accepted the appointment of Director of Centre for Cultural Analysis, Theory and History as Professor of Social and Critical Histories of Art. Pollock formed the strand of feminist art history scholarship employing the Marxist-socialist approach (Broud/Garrard). She adopted an activist-feminist scholar role, referring, for example, to other female artists and art historians as “sisters”. In this she contrasted other feminist scholars, for example, Ann Southerland Harris (most publicly with Lawrence Alloway, also a pro-women’s-issue scholar). Alloway, as did other art historians, took issue with her call for the rejecting of all previously written art history to efface ideology and embrace female standards.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Vincent van Gogh and Dutch Art: a Study of the Development of Van Gogh’s Notion of Modern Art with Special Reference to the Critical and Artistic Revival of Seventeenth Century Dutch Art in Holland and France in the Nineteenth Century. Courtauld Institute, University of London, 1980; and Parker, Rozsika. Old Mistresses: Women, Art, and Ideology. New York: Pantheon Books, 1981; Vision and Difference: Femininity, Feminism, and Histories of Art. New York: Routledge, 1988; Differencing the Canon: Feminist Desire and the Writing of Art’s Histories. New York: Routledge, 1999; [Alloway debate:] Alloway, Lawrence. “[review of] Old Mistresses: Women, Art and Ideology.” Woman’s Art Journal 3, no. 2 (Autumn 1982/Winter 1983): 60-61; and Harris, Ann Sutherland. “Women, Art and Ideology: Questions for Feminist Art Historians.” Woman’s Art Journal 4, no. 2 (Autumn 1983/Winter 1984): 53-54; “Women, Art, and Ideology: Questions for Feminist Art Historians.” Women’s Studies Quarterly 15, no. 1/2 (Spring/ Summer, 1987): 2-9;


Sources

Broude, Norma, and Garrard, Mary D. “Feminist Art History and the Academy: Where Are We Now?” Women’s Studies Quarterly 15, no. 1/2 (Spring – Summer, 1987): 10-16; Gouma-Peterson, Thalia, and Mathews, Patricia. “The Feminist Critique of Art History.” Art Bulletin 69, no. 3 (September 1987): 326-357; [interview] Yefimov, Alla. “Feminist Interventions, Shifting Terrains.” Afterimage 17 (March 1990): 8-11; [transcript] Griselda Pollock. Interviews with Art Historians, 1991-2002. Getty Research Institute, Malibu, CA.; Encyclopedia of Feminist Theories. New York: Routledge, 2000; Who’s Who in the World 2009. 26th edition, 2008, p. 2150;




Citation

"Pollock, Griselda." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/pollockg/.


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Early and prominent feminist art historian in the revision of art history of the late 20th century. Pollock’s parents were Alan Winston Seten Pollock and Kathleen Alexandra Sinclair Pollock. She grew up in South Africa until she was seven when her

Pommer, Richard

Full Name: Pommer, Richard

Other Names:

  • Richard Behr Pommer

Gender: male

Date Born: 1930

Place Born: New York, NY, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

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


Overview

Architectural historian. Pommer graduated from Columbia University with a B.S. in 1953 and from New York University with an M.A. in 1957. He was awarded a: Fulbright grant for the 1958-59 year. He completed his Ph.D., in architectural history, also at NYU, in 1961. He joined Vassar College as professor of the history of architecture in 1966. The following year he received the Alice Davis Hitchcock Award, Society of Architectural Historians. Pommer married the art historian Linda Nochlin in 1968. He was a Kress fellow at the Villa I Tatti, Florence, for 1968-69. He was acting as chair of Department of Art at Vassar between 1974-78. He was director of the Society of Architectural Historians between 1982-84. Pommer became director of Urban Studies Program for the 1986-87 year at New York University, Institute of Fine Arts, and left Vassar in 1988 to be Sheldon H. Solow Professor of the History of Architecture.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Some 18th Century Piedmontese Interiors by Juvarra, Alfieri and Vittone. New York University, 1961; Eighteenth-Century Architecture in Piedmont: The Open Structures of Juvarra, Alfieri and Vittone. New York: 1967.


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. 51 mentioned; Dissertation Abstracts International




Citation

"Pommer, Richard." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/pommerr/.


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Architectural historian. Pommer graduated from Columbia University with a B.S. in 1953 and from New York University with an M.A. in 1957. He was awarded a: Fulbright grant for the 1958-59 year. He completed his Ph.D., in architectural history, als

Piper, Otto

Full Name: Piper, Otto

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Germany

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


Overview

standard work on the architectural history of castles


Selected Bibliography

Burgenkunst.


Sources

Bazin 489




Citation

"Piper, Otto." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/pipero/.


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standard work on the architectural history of castles

Piper, Reinhard

Full Name: Piper, Reinhard

Gender: male

Date Born: 1879

Date Died: 1953

Home Country/ies: Germany


Overview

Art historian and founded of the art publishing firm Piper Verlag in Munich in 1904. In May, 1904, the twenty five-year old Piper founded the R. Piper & Co. publishing house in Munich. Piper and his wife, the painter Gertrud Engling had close connections to the “the blue rider” artists, especially Franz Marc, Ernst Barlach and Wassily Kandinsky. Their almanac appeared in 1912 published by Piper, establishing the house as the publishing house of the German artist avant-garde. The press encounter financial difficulties and in 1926, Piper added Robert Freund as a partner. After the seizure of power of Hitler in January 1933 Piper Verlage was forced to separate from Freund, who was Jewish. His son, Klaus Piper (1911-2000) assumed a partnership in 1941. In 1945 the company reorganized to its roots, publishing contemporary and experimental authors in literature and the arts. His papers are located in part in the Schiller-Nationalmuseum.


Selected Bibliography

Das Tier in der Kunst. Munich: R. Piper, 1910; Das Liebespaar in der Kunst. Munich:, R. Piper, 1916; [Alfred Kubin] Abendrot: 45 unveröffentlichte Zeichnungen mit einer Kleinen Plauderei über sich selbst. Munich: R. Piper, 1952.


Sources

Max Beckmann, Briefe an Reinhard Piper. Munich: KulturStiftung der Länder, Hypo-Kulturstiftung, 1994.




Citation

"Piper, Reinhard." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/piperr/.


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Art historian and founded of the art publishing firm Piper Verlag in Munich in 1904. In May, 1904, the twenty five-year old Piper founded the R. Piper & Co. publishing house in Munich. Piper and his wife, the painter Gertrud Engling had close conn

Pirri, Pietro S. J.

Full Name: Pirri, Pietro S. J.

Gender: male

Date Born: 1881

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Italy

Subject Area(s): architecture (object genre), Baroque, Jesuit (Christian order), and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Baroque period; particularly the architecture of the Jesuits


Selected Bibliography

Giovanni Tristano e i Primordi della Architettura Gesuitica. Rome, 1955.; Giuseppe Valeriano S.I., architetto e pittore, 1542-1596. Roma : Institutum historicum S.I., 1970.


Sources

Bazin 186




Citation

"Pirri, Pietro S. J.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/pirrip/.


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Baroque period; particularly the architecture of the Jesuits

Pit, Aart

Full Name: Pit, Aart

Other Names:

  • Adriaan Pit

Gender: male

Date Born: 1860

Date Died: 1944

Place Born: The Hague, South Holland, Netherlands

Place Died: Nijmegen, Gelderland, Netherlands

Home Country/ies: Netherlands


Overview

Director Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst. Pit attended the Gymnasium in The Hague, where the future engraver Philip Zilcken (1857-1930) was among his fellow students. Stimulated by Zilcken, Pit felt attracted to etching. In 1879 he began studying Law at Leiden University, but this turned out not to be the right choice. In 1886, without having finished his study, he went to Paris where he was admitted to the école du Louvre. One of his teachers, mainly on mediaeval art, was Louis-Charles-Léon Courajod. Pit admired Courajod’s approach, which was focused on the work of art itself. The topic of his 1891 thesis, supervised by Courajod, was early graphic art in the Netherlands and its influence on European art: L’influence des Pays-Bas sur les arts en Europe. Parts of this study were published in the Revue de l’art chrétien in 1890, 1891, and 1892. In 1894 Pit published Les origines de l’art hollandais. He also was interested in modern graphic art. In 1890, he published a catalog of the etchings of his friend Zilcken: Catalogue descriptif des eaux-fortes originales de Ph. Zilcken mentionnant deux cent et une pièces. In the 1918 edition of this catalog 633 etchings by Zilcken were included. Pit also collected etchings of contemporary French artists. In 1894, he began his career in The Netherlands, as “adjunct-commies” in the Department of Arts and Sciences in the Ministry of Home Affairs. In 1896 he was appointed assistant director and in 1898 director of the Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst (National Museum for History and Art), a museum of decorative arts, sculpture and architecture in the conglomerate of the Amsterdam Rijksmuseum. He was the successor of David van der Kellen (1827-1895). Pit was an innovative art historian with an international orientation and interest. He disliked the architecture and decorations of the museum rooms, which were designed in historical styles. His innovative approach conflicted more than once with the more conservative vision of Cuypers (1827-1921), the architect of the building, and of Victor Eugène Louis de Stuers (1843-1916), the influential former head of the Department of Arts and Sciences and, since 1901, member of the Dutch parliament. Pit wanted to display the objects for their own esthetic qualities and to group them together in series, in order to show the stylistic evolution of the various crafts. In his view objects with a mere historical importance had to be separated from art objects. Between 1901 and 1904, his catalogs of silver- and gold ware and sculpture appeared. His assistants, Jan Kalf, Willem Vogelsang, Marinus van Notten and Elisabeth Neurdenburg published, between 1903 and 1917, the catalogs on textiles, furniture and pottery, as well as a revised edition of Pit’s sculpture catalog. In 1907, the University of Utrecht offered Pit a professorship of Art History, which he declined. It was his assistant director Vogelsang who became the first professor of Art History in Utrecht. On the latter’s initiative, Pit was awarded, in 1909, a doctorate honoris causa for his scholarly and practical work in the field of decorative arts. Pit was convinced that the Dutch collections had to be complemented with foreign acquisitions. His purchases included Italian pottery, Italian and French furniture, Persian rugs, Coptic fabrics, and Italian sculptures. He was a member of the Dutch Antiquarian Association and regularly published in the association’s bulletin. Within this association he was active, between 1911 and 1918, as a member of a special commission for museum reform. The proposals concerning reorganization and management of the Dutch museums were published in the 1918 publication of the Dutch Antiquarian Association: Over hervorming en beheer onzer musea. Pit was a strong proponent of the acquisition of foreign works of art in the national museums. Another important item was the problematic function of the Nederlandsch museum, which served both history and art. In 1917, Pit voluntarily quit his position, in order to devote more time to another important part of his career: his writings on philosophy, esthetics, and methodology. His successor was the above-mentioned Van Notten. Pit moved to Laren and, in 1920, he married the novelist and writer Carry van Bruggen (1881-1932). Already in 1912 he had published Het logische in de ontwikkeling der beeldende kunsten, a collection of articles previously published in Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte, a journal for philosophy. In 1916, he wrote an article on methodology “Over de methode bij de beoefening van de geschiedenis der beeldende kunsten”, in which he reflected on the 1915 publication Kunstgeschichtliche Grundbegriffe of Heinrich Wölfflin. In 1922 Denken en beelden appeared, another collection of articles earlier published in Groot-Nederland, a literary journal. In 1928 Aesthetische ontwikkeling (Aesthetic Development) followed. By that time, Pit was preoccupied with a serious illness of his wife. After her death, in 1932, he left Laren and moved to The Hague. In 1940 he published an essay on the human consciousness, Het bewustzijn. During World War II he had to leave The Hague; he spent his last years in Nijmegen, where he died in 1944. In his study, Les origines de l’art hollandais, Pit argued that the foundation of Dutch Golden Age painting can be traced in fifteenth-century painting and miniatures of the Northern Netherlands, and that Dutch art logically developed between the fifteenth and the seventeenth century. Pit stated that the early Dutch masters, unlike the Flemish Primitives, exhibited a painstaking attention for the plain reality, which later became a distinctive aspect of seventeenth-century Dutch art. The beginnings of Dutch Golden Age painting were to be found, therefore, in the Northern Netherlands long before the political separation of the Northern provinces from the Southern Netherlands in the last quarter of the sixteenth century. This point of view has been questioned by art historians and historians. Edward Grasman (1998) has placed this debate in a broader context.


Selected Bibliography

La gravure dans les Pays-Bas au XVe siècle et ses influences sur la gravure en Allemagne, en Italie et en France. Paris: impr. Desclée de Brouwer, 1891-1892 (Extr. de la Revue de l’art chrétien 2, 3, 1891-1892); Les origines de l’art hollandais. Paris: H. Champion, 1894; Het goud- en zilverwerk in het Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst te Amsterdam. Amsterdam: Van Rijkom, 1901; La sculpture hollandaise au Musée National d’Amsterdam. Amsterdam: Van Rijkom, 1903; “Ausstattung von Museumsräumen.” Museumkunde 1 (1905): 67-75; “Oude Noord-Nederlandse Majolika.” Oud Holland 27 (1909): 133-141; “‘s Rijks Kunstnijverheid-Museum.” De Gids 74 (1910) III: 470-482; Het logische in de ontwikkeling der beeldende kunsten. Utrecht: Oosthoek, 1912; “Over de methode bij de beoefening van de geschiedenis der beeldende kunsten n.a.v. H. Wölfflin, Kunstgeschichtliche Grundbegriffe, München 1915.” Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 10 (1916): 237-251; Catalogue descriptif des eaux-fortes originales de Ph. Zilcken mentionnant 633 pièces. Amsterdam: R.W.O. de Vries, 1918; Denken en beelden. Amsterdam: Maatschappij voor Goede en Goedkope Lectuur, 1922; Aesthetische ontwikkeling. Amsterdam: Querido, 1928; Het bewustzijn. s.l.: s.n., 1940.


Sources

Heijbroek, J.F. “Adriaan Pit, directeur van het Nederlandsch Museum. Een vergeten episode uit de geschiedenis van het Rijksmuseum.” Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum 33 (1985): 233-265; Heijbroek, J. F. in J. Charité and A.J.C.M. Gabriëls (eds.) Biografisch Woordenboek van Nederland 4, The Hague: Instituut voor Nederlandse Geschiedenis, 1994: 390-392; Grasman, Edward, “De ontdekking van de Hollandse primitieven” Oud Holland 112 (1998): 169-180; Van der Ham, Gijs. 200 jaar Rijksmuseum. Geschiedenis van een nationaal symbool. Zwolle: Waanders, 2000, pp. 200-269; Marcus-De Groot, Yvette. Kunsthistorische vrouwen van weleer: De eerste generatie in Nederland vóór 1921. Hilversum: Verloren, 2003: 129-141.



Contributors: Monique Daniels


Citation

Monique Daniels. "Pit, Aart." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/pita/.


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Director Nederlandsch Museum voor Geschiedenis en Kunst. Pit attended the Gymnasium in The Hague, where the future engraver Philip Zilcken (1857-1930) was among his fellow students. Stimulated by Zilcken, Pit felt attracted to etching. In 1879 he

Pittaluga, Mary

Full Name: Pittaluga, Mary

Gender: female

Date Born: 1891

Date Died: 1977

Place Born: Milan, Lombardy, Italy

Place Died: Florence, Tuscany, Italy

Home Country/ies: Italy

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

Career(s): art historians


Overview

Connoisseur-style historian of Italian renaissance art; popular textbook writer. Pittaluga was the daughter of an Italian General, though her forbearers were Austrian. She attended the State Secondary School in Cuneo, where she was the only female student. When Lionello Venturi was appointed the new chair of art history at the university in Turin at an extremely young age, Pittaluga was one of his first students. She went on to write her ground-breaking thesis under him on Eugène Fromentin. Venturi’s father, the art historian Adolfo Venturi, quickly published her thesis in his magazine, L’Arte in 1917. Pittaluga continued study under Adolfo, where was training scholars to help write his Storia dell’ Arte Italiana. He also assigned her to compile the texts for secondary curriculum in art history for the Liceo Classico. She began teaching in Florence in the 1920s. She published actively in her field, La Pittura Italiana del 400 and the first serious study of Italian engravings by an Italian, L’incisione Italia del 500, both in 1929. L’Architettura Italiana del 400 followed in 1934. In 1938 she produced both La Scultura Italiana del 400 and the first volume of La Pittura Italiana del 500 (the second volume in 1946). She wrote a three-volume survey on world art, from Minoan to twentieth-century, a landmark textbook including plans and glossaries. After the war her family fortune declined and she relied on this text for a part of her income. In 1948 she continued her research on French Salon criticism, publishing in the Biblioteca di Critica d’arte. By the 1950s her interest had moved to nineteenth-century Italian art. She did, however, provide the text for the English-language volume of Raphael’s panel paintings for the Abrams series. Pittaluga retired before the standard pension age in order to devote her last years to publishing in nineteenth-century art. A book on De Nittis appeared in 1963 and another on Ippolito Caffi in 1971, with articles interspersed in the Florentine Antichita Viva. Pittaluga employed connoisseurship as her major approach to art. Bernard Berenson, who generally despised female art historians and academics alike, made an exception for Pittaluga. He characterized her worth as equal to all other Italian colleages. The painter and author A. Derek Hill (1916-2000) described her as the female, twentieth-century Voltaire.


Selected Bibliography

Acquafortisti veneziani del Settecento. Florence: Le Monnier, 1953; La pittura italiana del Cinquecento. Florence: Novissima enciclopedia monografica illustrata, 1936; L’architettura italiana del Quattrocento. Florence: Novissima enciclopedia monografica illustrata, 1934; Arte italiana. 3 vols. Florence: F. Le Monnier, 1937-1938; Filippo Lippi. Florence: Del Turco, 1949; Il pittore Ippolito Caffi. Vicenza: N. Pozza, 1971; Raphael: Panel Paintings. New York: H. N. Abrams, 1955; Cappella sistina. English, The Sistine Chapel. Rome: Del Turco, 1953; “Eug’ne Fromentin e le origine della moderne critica d’arte.” L’Arte 20, fascicule 1, (February 28, 1917), and 21, fascicule 5 (October 31, 1918); Arti e Studi in Italia nel 900. Gli Storici dell’Arte. Florence: Editrice La Nuova Italia, 1930; Masaccio. Florence: Le Monnier, 1935; Pura Visibilità della Critica d’Arte. Florence: Felice Le Monnier, 1933.


Sources

[obituary:] Vertova, Luisa. “Mary Pittaluga.” Burlington Magazine 120 (February 1978): 97.




Citation

"Pittaluga, Mary." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/pittalugam/.


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Connoisseur-style historian of Italian renaissance art; popular textbook writer. Pittaluga was the daughter of an Italian General, though her forbearers were Austrian. She attended the State Secondary School in Cuneo, where she was the only female

Planiscig, Leo

Full Name: Planiscig, Leo

Gender: male

Date Born: 1887

Date Died: 1952

Place Born: Gorizia, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy

Place Died: Florence, Tuscany, Italy

Home Country/ies: Austria

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


Overview

Historian of Italian Renaissance sculpture. He was born in Görz, Italy, which is present day Gorizia, Italy. Planiscig studied art history in Vienna with Max Dvořák and Julius Alwin von Schlosser. After receiving his degree in 1912, Planiscig became the artistic advisor to Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria-Este. Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated in 1914, and Planiscig was ordered to move the Este collection to the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. He became the Director of sculpture and decorative arts in 1933. Planiscig survived a bombing raid on his house, but suffered mental problems afterward. In 1938, he moved to Florence to pursue private research, where he wrote monographs on Italian sculptors and published books about 15th century Italian Renaissance bronze sculptures.



Sources

The Dictionary of Art; Wendland, Ulrike. Biographisches Handbuch deutschsprachiger Kunsthistoriker im Exil: Leben und Werk der unter dem Nationalsozialismus verfolgten und vertriebenen Wissenschaftler. Munich: Saur, 1999, vol. 2, pp.521-525.



Contributors: LaNitra Michele Walker


Citation

LaNitra Michele Walker. "Planiscig, Leo." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/planiscigl/.


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Historian of Italian Renaissance sculpture. He was born in Görz, Italy, which is present day Gorizia, Italy. Planiscig studied art history in Vienna with Max Dvořák and Julius Alwin von Schlosser. A

Plaut, James S.

Full Name: Plaut, James S.

Other Names:

  • James S. Plaut

Gender: male

Date Born: 1912

Date Died: 1996

Place Born: Cincinnati, Hamilton, OH, USA

Place Died: Boston, Suffolk, MA, USA

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): American (North American) and Contemporary (style of art)


Overview

Founder and first director of the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston. Plaut’s parents were Jacob M. Plaut and Alice Sachs (Plaut). Plaut attended a variety of prestigious private grammar schools, including the Auteuil Day School, Paris, 1925-1926 and then the Taft School in Watertown, CT, between 1927 and 1928. He graduated from Harvard university with a B. A. in 1933, marrying Mary E. Friedlander. Plaut continued at Harvard for an A.M., in 1935 teaching art history there while a graduate student. In 1935 he joined the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, as an assistant curator. He left the MFA to found the Institute of Modern Art in Boston in 1939, organizing exhibitions of the work of Frank Lloyd Wright, Georges Rouault and Oscar Kokoschka. During World War II, Plaut joined the U.S. Navy assigned to North Africa in 1942 and then directing the Art Looting Investigation Unit of the Office of Strategic Services in the Office of Naval Intelligence. He was discharged in 1946. In 1949 the Institute altered its name from “Modern Art” to “Contemporary Art,” launching the show, “Milestones of American Painting in Our Century,” under curator Frederick Stallknecht Van Buren Wight. Despite the catalog’s introduction written by Lloyd C. Goodrich, curator of the Whitney and an exponent of modernist art, Life magazine termed the show a salvo against modern art. The Life piece focused in part on the Institute’s name change. The article met with a firestorm of protest by major art museum directors, denying that the Institute’s show was an attempt to revise modernism, though Plaut cautiously supported the magazine’s reporting. He stepped down as director of the Institute in 1956. In 1958 he served as deputy United States Commissioner to the Brussels World’s Fair, followed by a vice presidency of the Old Sturbridge Village, MA 1959-1961. He retired from the Institute in 1961. He was the secretary general to the World Crafts Council, 1967-1976. Plaut received an honorary D.F.A., from Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL, in 1974. In 1976, following his work with the Council, Plaut and his wife began the organization Aid to Artisans, a program to help third-world artisans market their wares. He died at a Boston hospital at age 83.


Selected Bibliography

Steuben Glass, a Monograph. New York: H. Bittner 1948, Oskar Kokoschka. New York: Chanticleer Press for the Institute of Contemporary Art, 1948; and Paz, Octavio. In Praise of Hands: Contemporary Crafts of the World. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society, 1974; and Perrot, Paul N. Steuben: Seventy Years of American Glassmaking. New York: Praeger,1974.


Sources

James S. Plaut interview, 1971 June 29. Archives of American Art; [obituary:] “James Plaut, 83, Museum Founder.” New York Times, January 17, 1996, p. 17.




Citation

"Plaut, James S.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/plautj/.


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Founder and first director of the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston. Plaut’s parents were Jacob M. Plaut and Alice Sachs (Plaut). Plaut attended a variety of prestigious private grammar schools, including the Auteuil Day School, Paris, 1925-

Plekhanov, Georgiĭ Valentinovich

Full Name: Plekhanov, Georgiĭ Valentinovich

Other Names:

  • Georgiĭ Plekhanov

Gender: male

Date Born: 1856

Date Died: 1918

Place Born: Gudalovka, Lipetsk Oblast, Russia

Place Died: St. Petersburg, Russia

Home Country/ies: Russia

Subject Area(s): Marxism


Overview

Marxist art theorist, author of a monograph on eighteenth-century French art monograph. He died in “Terioka, Russia near Petrograd, which is in present-day St. Petersburg, Russia.


Selected Bibliography

Art and Society. Translated by Paul S. Leitner et al. New York: Critics Group, 1936. =============================He is generally considered the founder of Russian Marxism.Plekhanov was born to minor Russian nobility of long-standing military tradition. He initially studied at the Konstantinovskoe Military School in St. Petersburg beginning in 1873,but left soon because of ambiguous allegiance to the czar. The Russian revolutionary leaders were fragmented between the peasant commune and the socialist intellectual revolutionaries. The decision to agitate by use of terror resulted in Plekhanov’s founding of the Black Redistribution and his fleeing to Europe in 1880.Plekhanov studied Marxism in Geneva founding the first Russian Marxist revolutionary organization in 1883, the Group for the Emancipation of Labor. He published Socialism and Political Struggle (1883) and Our Differences (1885) major contributions to Russian Marxism political theory. Plekhanov posited a two-stage revolution: a proletariat and bourgeoisie to fight czarist autocracy and second, the proletariat struggle against the bourgeoisie to complete the revolution.Condemned by many non-Marxist socialists in Russian, his writings re-emerged in the 1890s when severe famine and industrialization made Marxism more appealing. Plekhanov published The Development of the Monistic View of History (1894) under the pseudonym Beltov. The book conalscence Russian Marxiam. His 1896 Essays on the History of Materialism coined the term “dialectical materialism.”Vladimir Lenin used Plekhanov’s theories to establish a Marxist party of disciplined and conspiratorial leaders. At the Second Congress of the Russian Social Democrats in 1903 Plekhanov initially supported Lenin and the Bolsheviks, but feared Lenin as a dictator rather than a leader of proletariat. The Russian Revolution of 1905 weakened his authority. In 1909 Plekhanov began writing The History of Russian Social Thought, a theory to apply Marxist theory to the production of products as well as art and literature. Following the collapse of the Russian monarchy in February 1917, Plekhanov insisted that Russia was only in the bourgeois stage of revolution and that it must remain in the war against Germany. This stance alienated him form the militant revolutionaries who favored the popular demand for peace and land. After the Bolsheviks seized power in October, Plekhanov found himself isolated and ill. He died on May 30, 1918. FURTHER READINGS The only complete study of Plekhanov and his times in a Western language is Samuel Baron, Plekhanov: The Father of Russian Marxism (1963). It is both a perceptive study of Plekhanov’s life and writings and a profound analysis of the relationship of Russian Marxism to Russian populism, social democracy, and bolshevism. Another excellent guide to Plekhanov’s relationship to the Russian revolutionary movement is in Leopold H. Haimson, The Russian Marxists and the Origins of Bolshevism (1955). Baron, Samuel H., Plekhanov in Russian history and Soviet historiography, Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1995. ==================== the son of a poor nobleman. After graduating from a military academy in Voronezh, he studied at the Mining Institute in St. Petersburg. As a student he joined the revolutionary movement and became one of the leaders of the revolutionary organization of the Narodniki (Populists), called Zemlia i volia (Soil and freedom). After Zemlia i volia split into the terroristic Narodnaia volia (People’s freedom) and the Bakuninist-anarchist Chernyi peredel (Redistribution of soil) groups, Plekhanov became the leading theoretician of the Chernyi peredel group. In the beginning of 1880, Plekhanov emigrated to France and then settled in Switzerland. Between 1880 and 1882 he turned from Populism to Marxism, and in 1883 he founded in Geneva the first Russian Marxist group, Osvobozhdenie truda (The emancipation of labor). In the summer of 1889 he took part in the founding congress of the Second International. In the late 1890s Plekhanov was one of the first to criticize both the international revisionism of Eduard Bernstein and its Russian variant, “economism.” In 1900, Plekhanov’s group joined forces with a new group headed by V. I. Lenin. The two groups organized the second congress of the Russian Social-Democratic Labor Party in London in 1902 His grasp of Marxist dialectic made his works useful in the ideological battle with enemies both within and outside the Russian Social Democratic Party. This was perfectly understood by Lenin, who maintained a working relationship with Plekhanov from 1895 until 1903. Plekhanov’s disbelief in the victory of the proletariat compelled him to diverge from Lenin, who nevertheless continued to recommend Plekhanov’s works. Plekhanov paid considerable attention to questions of aesthetics. His view was that the scientific theory of aesthetics should develop on the basis of a “materialist understanding of history”. He suggested that art is born of people’s labour and that an aesthetic sense develops out of practical experience in the course of social development. At the same time he criticized all other theories about the origins of art. While not denying the individuality of the artist, mainly expressed in the treatment of form, he suggested that the content of art is the result of the differences in consciousness of distinct social classes. He was critical of contemporary art, considering it to be, with rare exceptions, “bourgeois”. For Plekhanov, quality was a matter of moral and social principles, which led him to divide creative work into the “artistic” and the “intellectual”. WRITINGS Literatura i estetika [Literature and aesthetics], 2 vols (Moscow, 1958)


Sources

KRG, 130-1; KMP, 26 n. 56; Laing, Dave. The Marxist Theory of Art. Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1978; Turchin, V. S. “Plekhanov, Georgy (Valentinovich).” Dictionary of Art; “Plekhanov, Georgi Valentinovich.” Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2nd ed.




Citation

"Plekhanov, Georgiĭ Valentinovich." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/plekhanovg/.


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Marxist art theorist, author of a monograph on eighteenth-century French art monograph. He died in “Terioka, Russia near Petrograd, which is in present-day St. Petersburg, Russia.