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Rapp, Franz

Full Name: Rapp, Franz

Gender: male

Date Born: 1885

Date Died: 1951

Place Born: Erfurt, Thuringia, Germany

Place Died: Washington, DC, USA


Overview

Art historian and theater scholar. Rapp led the Munich Theater Museum beginning in 1920. Among those who worked under was Martin Weinberger. When the Nazi racial laws prohibiting Jews in positions of authority, Rapp was dismissed. He emigrated in 1935 first to Great Britain and then the United States. In 1945 he was appointed Professor of Art History at Howard University, Washgington, D. C.


Selected Bibliography

Hirmer Verlag Author Profiles https://www.hirmerverlag.de/us/person-1-1/franz_rapp-1113/




Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Rapp, Franz." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/rappf/.


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Art historian and theater scholar. Rapp led the Munich Theater Museum beginning in 1920. Among those who worked under was Martin Weinberger. When the Nazi racial laws prohibiting Jews in positions of authority,

Reiche, Richard

Full Name: Reiche, Richard Ekkehard

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Germany


Overview

Wrote a 1903 dissertation at Strassburg, Das Portal des Paradieses am Dom zu Paderborn. Together with  Ernst Gosebuch, Fritz Wichert, Karl Ernst Osthaus, Alfred Hagelstange, and Walter Cohen helped mount the Sonderbund exhibition exhibition in Cologne, the first major exhibition of German Expressionism.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Das Portal des Paradieses am Dom zu Paderborn: ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der deutschen Bildhauerkunst des dreizehnten Jahrhunderts. Strassburg, 1903, published, Münster: Regenberg, 1905;  Internationale Kunstausstellung des Sonderbundes Westdeutscher Kunstfreunde und Künstler zu Cöln 1912:  Städtische Ausstellungshalle am Aachener Tor, vom 25. Mai bis 30. Sept.
 Cologne: DuMont Schauberg 1912.




Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Reiche, Richard." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/reicher/.


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Wrote a 1903 dissertation at Strassburg, Das Portal des Paradieses am Dom zu Paderborn. Together with  Ernst Gosebuch, Fritz Wichert, Karl Ernst Osthaus, Alfred Hagelstange, and Wal

Rumohr, Karl Friedrich von

Full Name: Rumohr, Karl Friedrich von

Other Names:

  • Karl Friedrich von Rumohr

Gender: male

Date Born: 1785

Date Died: 1843

Place Born: Reinhardsgrimma, Saxony, Germany

Place Died: Dresden, Saxony, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): documentaries (documents), documentary (general concept), and Modern (style or period)


Overview

Founder of modern art history (history based on documentary study); key member of the Berlin school of art history. Rumohr was born to Henning von Rumohr (1722-1804) and belonged to a noble Holstein family. His inheritance enabled him to pursue his art-historical interests without the constraints of employment. After attending the Gymnasium in Holzminden, Rumohr entered the university in Göttingen, focusing on foreign-languages and studying under Johann Dominico Fiorillo. Rumohr’s dedication to documentary sources likely derived from the influence of another scholar, the historian Barthold Georg Niebuhr (1776-1831). He made his first journey to Italy by 1804 with artists Franz and Johannes Riepenhausen and Ludwig Tieck Ludwig Tieck (1773-1853). He returned to Hamburg in 1806 studying art and learning painting. In 1815, Rumohr returned to the notion of a society of art scholars. He met Goethe during an extended visit to Weimar. A second trip, lasting the years 1816 to 1821, was influential for the prominent expatriate German community he met there, including the Nazarene artists, and the art historian Gustav Friedrich Waagen. He scoured Italian archives during his stay in the country, pouring through the archives of Rome, Florence, Milan, Siena, Perugia and Mantua. Like many art authors, Rumohr began his critical analysis of Italian art with Giorgio Vasari. He initially planned only to produce a German translation (and commentary) of the Vite, but his ever-increasing familiarity with the documentary sources of Italian art made him realize how little of Vasari could be accepted. He returned to Hamburg via Munich in 1821 where he was active in the artistic community there and publishing a book on cooking. In 1825 moved to Berlin where he published the results of his art-historical research, his Italienischen Forschungen, (Italian Investigations) in 1827. The Forschungen focus on medieval Italian painting and Raphael, because he viewed the era after 1530 as a period of decline in renaissance painting. It was probably Rumohr’s attitude that influenced both the Nazarenes and the English Pre-Raphaelites to come to the same conclusions. In Berlin, Rumohr was tapped by the Prussian government to advise them on a comprehensive public museum of art. The return of art work from Napoleon’s museum had re-ignited the notion of an art museum in Berlin akin to the great institutions in Munich, Dresden and Vienna. For years, Aloys Hirt then a curator of the Kaiser’s pictures had pressed for such a museum. But Hirt was a bureaucrat, not an historian. His vision for the museum was little more than a warehouse of the collection (though he did press for hanging pictures by school and era rather than subject). Rumohr and Waagen understood that the impetus for a public collection of art was first esthetic and then historic. Rumohr disagreed bitterly with Hirt and their rivalry eventually forced Hirt’s resignation. Rumohr was considered to lead the new museum, but was turned down by the crown in favor of Waagen. However, Rumohr may have in fact preferred the decision. He returned to Italy for the years 1828-1829, and then again in 1837, increasingly devoting time to agricultural studies and cooking. He moved to Gut Rothenhausen in 1835. In 1838 the young Giovanni Morelli, the establisher of connoisseurship, met Rumohr, greatly influencing Morelli’s work. After a final trip to Italy in 1841, Rumohr retired to another of his estates in Lübeck, Rothenhausen, in 1842. He died the following year, his friend Gottfried Semper designed a monument for him. His art collection was auctioned in 1846. Rumohr’s Italienische Forschungen was among the first art histories to be constructed through the use of written primary source documents, culled from Italian archives, the hallmark of modern art-historical scholarship. Eschewing the classical-art centered view of art history, Rumohr strove for a more objective art history. The twentieth-century documentary scholar Julius Alwin von Schlosser described him as the founder of modern art research. An anti-romantic (and anti-Hegelian), Rumohr’s way of thinking developed a critical opposition with that of Johann Joachim Winckelmann (he early on disagreed with Winckelmann’s analysis of Castor and Pollux statue). He asserted that nature was the primary source for the analysis of art history, attempting to free art history from the prevailing romantic-era literary/aesthetic ties. During his lifetime, Rumohr was not primarily known for his art writing. An eccentric and noted gourmet, his 1822 cookbook on simplified cuisine, Geist der Kochkunst (Spirit of the Cooking Arts) was written under the pseudonym of his servant. An 1834 book on etiquette, Schule der Höflichkeit, and his rhymed fable verses the following year, Kynalopekomachia: Der Hunde Fuchsenstreit were both popular successes. A witty raconteur, sketches of him show up in the memoirs of Count Adolf von Schack (1815-1894), Pauline Gotter Schelling (1786-1854), and Karl von Lorck. Goethe characterized him as a profound cognoscenti of Italian art. Hegel mentioned him in his work ästhetik of 1835. Wilhelm von Humboldt argued that Italienischen Forschungen was the first art historical work written in a historical and spiritual sense. Historians who were directly affected by Rumohr’s methodology, in addition to Waagen, included Heinrich Gustav Hotho, Karl Julius Ferdinand Schnaase, Friedrich Kugler, (the “Berlin School”) and in the twentieth century, Viennese scholar, Schlosser. Beyond those 19th-century scholars and literati, it is unclear how far his influence carried during his time. Rumohr and the other members of the Berlin school of art history made the greatest contribution to the writing of art history in the next century.


Selected Bibliography

König, Joseph. [pseudonym] Geist der Kochkunst. Stuttgardt: Cotta, 1822; Italienische Forschungen, 3 vols in 1. Berlin: Nicolai’sche Buchhandlung, 1827-31, updated edition with introduction by Schlosser, Julius. Italienische Forschungen. Frankfurt a.M.: Frankfurter verlags-Anstalt, 1920; Ursprung der Besitzlosigkeit des Colonen im neueren Toscana: aus den Urkunden. Hamburg: Perthes und Besser, 1830; Schule der Höflichkeit: für Alt und Jung. Stuttgart: J.G. Cotta’sche Buchhandlung, 1834; Kynalopekomachia: Der Hunde Fuchsenstreit. Lübeck: v. Rohden, 1835; Untersuchung der Gründe für die Annahme : dass Maso di Finiguerra Erfinder des Handgriffes sei, gestochene Metallplatten auf genetztes Papier abzudrucken. Leipzig: R. Weigel, 1841; introduction, Rio, Alexis-François, and De Boni, Filippo. Della poesia cristiana nelle sue forme. Venice: Co’ tipi del Gondoliere, 1841.


Sources

Schultz, Heinrich Wilhelm. Karl Friedrich von Rumohr: Sein Leben und seine Schriften. Leipzig: 1844; Schlosser, Julius von. “Carl Friedrich von Rumohr als Begründer der neueren Kunstforschung,” In, Schlosser, Julius, ed. Rumohr, Karl Friedrich. Italienische Forschungen. Frankfurt am Main: Frankfurter Verlag-Anstalt, 1920, pp. v-xxxviii; Kultermann, Udo. Geschichte der Kunstgeschichte: Der Weg einer Wissenschaft. Frankfurt am Main and Vienna: Ullstein, 1981, pp. 155, 161-164; 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. 44, 44 n. 87; Waetzoldt, Wilhelm. Deutsche Kunsthistoriker vom Sandrart bis Justi. vol. 2. Leipzig: E. A. Seeman, 1924, pp. 292-318; German Essays on Art History. Gert Schiff, ed. New York: Continuum, 1988, pp. xxvii-xxx, 281; Metzler Kunsthistoriker Lexikon: zweihundert Porträts deutschsprachiger Autoren aus vier Jahrhunderten. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1999, pp. 332-35; Müller-Tamm, Pia. Rumohrs “Haushalt der Kunst” : zu einem kunsttheoretischen Werk der Goethe-Zeit. Hildesheim: G. Olms, 1991; Schwarzer, Mitchell. “Origins of the Art History Survey Text.” Art Journal 54 (Fall 1995): 24.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Rumohr, Karl Friedrich von." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/rumohrk/.


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Founder of modern art history (history based on documentary study); key member of the Berlin school of art history. Rumohr was born to Henning von Rumohr (1722-1804) and belonged to a noble Holstein family. His inheritance enabled him to pursue hi

Rumpf, Andreas

Full Name: Rumpf, Andreas

Gender: male

Date Born: 1890

Date Died: 1966

Place Born: Potsdam, Brandenburg, Germany

Place Died: Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): Ancient Greek (culture or style), Antique, the, ceramic ware (visual works), Classical, mural paintings (visual works), painting (visual works), pottery (visual works), Roman (ancient Italian culture or period), vase, and vase paintings (visual works)


Overview

Specialist in ancient Greek and Roman art, particularly vase painting and Greek wall painting. Rumpf was the son of the artist Fritz Rumpf. Rumpf was editor of the influential Griechische und römische Kunst (1932, part of the Einleitung in der Altertumswissenschaft series). Professor at the University of Cologne (Institut für Klassische Archëologie) (1928-1960). Upon his retirement in 1960 he was succeeded at the University at Cologne by Heinz Kähler.


Selected Bibliography

Classical and Post-Classical Greek Painting, in: JHS 67, 1947, 10 ff.; Griechische und Römische Kunst. 1932; Diligentissime mulieries pinxit, in: JdI 49, 1934, 6 ff.; Malerei und Zeichnung, in: HdArch IV (I) 1953.


Sources

Archäologenbildnisse: Porträts und Kurzbiographien von Klassichen Archäologen deutscher Sprache. Reinhard Lullies, ed. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1988: 252-253.




Citation

"Rumpf, Andreas." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/rumpfa/.


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Specialist in ancient Greek and Roman art, particularly vase painting and Greek wall painting. Rumpf was the son of the artist Fritz Rumpf. Rumpf was editor of the influential Griechische und römische Kunst (1932, part of the Einleitu

Rupprecht, Bernhard

Full Name: Rupprecht, Bernhard

Gender: male

Date Born: 1928

Date Died: 2017

Home Country/ies: Germany

Institution(s): Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz


Overview


Selected Bibliography

with Hermann Bauer: Corpus der Barocken Deckenmalerei in Deutschland. II. Bayern. Munich: Süddeutschen Verlag, 1982.; Corpus der Mittelalterlischen Wandmalerei Osterreichs. edited by Bunderdenkmal und der Osterreiches Akademie der Wissenschaften. vol 1, 1983


Sources

Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986 p. 534



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Rupprecht, Bernhard." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/rupprechtb/.


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Ruprich-Robert, Victor Marie Charles

Full Name: Ruprich-Robert, Victor Marie Charles

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: France

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


Overview

architect; architectural history


Selected Bibliography

L’Architecture normande aux XIe et XIIe siècles en Normandie et en Angleterre. 1887.


Sources

Bazin 289




Citation

"Ruprich-Robert, Victor Marie Charles." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/ruprichrobertv/.


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architect; architectural history

Ruskin, John

Full Name: Ruskin, John

Gender: male

Date Born: 1819

Date Died: 1900

Place Born: London, Greater London, England, UK

Place Died: Lake Coniston, Cumbria, UK

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Subject Area(s): architecture (object genre), biography (general genre), painting (visual works), and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Britain’s most influential art critic of the nineteenth century; author of widely-read books on artists and architecture. Ruskin was the only son of an affluent Scottish wine importer living in London, of John James Ruskin (1785-1864). His mother, Margaret Cox [née Cock] (1781-1871), a first cousin to his father, was doting and over protective, which likely contributed to his psychological afflictions and (presumed) homosexuality. Ruskin was exposed to the arts at an early age, tutored privately and by his father. The family made several trips to France, Italy and Switzerland. Ruskin had already published articles on geography (his father’s interest), before entering at Christ’s Church, Oxford, in 1837. His school friends included the future classical archaeologist Charles T. Newton. The marriage of his love, Adèle Domecq, resulted in a mental breakdown requiring a visit to Italy in 1840, where he embraced Venetian painting and architecture and deplored St. Peter’s in Rome. He graduated from Christ Church, Oxford in 1842. When he read a caustic newspaper review of a Turner exhibition, Ruskin penned a defense of the painter, whom he knew personally. This resulted in his first important art book, Modern Painters: their Superiority in the Art of Landscape Painting to the Ancient Masters, 1843, eventually running to five volumes by1860. The initial volumes appeared under the pseudonym “a Graduate of Oxford.” Beginning as an encomium to J. M. W. Turner, the series evolved into a study of the principles of art. Ruskin traveled to France and Italy in 1845 where he studied the masters. He also had become influenced by De la poésie chétienne, 1836, by Alexis-François Rio, one of the first to write on the Italian “Primitives.” Ruskin’s interest turned to architecture by 1846, having read Remarks on the Architecture of the Middle Ages, especially of Italy (1835) by Robert Willis. In 1848 Ruskin married Euphemia “Effie” Chalmers Gray (1828-1897) whom he had known as a child and for whom he had written The King of the Golden River. The first book to which Ruskin used his name, The Seven Lamps of Architecture, appeared in 1849. Like Modern Painters, Ruskin devised moral categories–the ‘lamps’–to evaluate the medium: sacrifice, truth, power, beauty, life, memory, and obedience. Ruskin hoped his work would rescue the Gothic revival away from Roman Catholic exponents such as Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin. Ruskin and Effie spent the winters in Venice where he began creating a typology of Venetian architecture. The result was a larger work on architecture, the three-volume The Stones of Venice (1851-1853). The book raised the appreciation of Byzantine and Gothic architecture, at the expense of the Renaissance, inspiring Victorian architects to employ Romanesque and Venetian styles and decorative features in their designs. The Ruskins were friends with Charles Lock Eastlake, president of the Royal Academy and director of the National Gallery, and his wife, Elizabeth Rigby Eastlake, and Lady Eastlake became close with Effie. Ruskin delivered Edinburgh lectures, Lectures on Architecture and Painting, in 1853. Ruskin supported the painters known as the Pre-Raphaelites, including John Everett Millais. After six years of an unhappy, unconsummated marriage, Effie had the union annulled in 1854; she married Millais the following year. He was also instrumental in the career of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. In 1855 he first met the Harvard Professor of Fine Arts Charles Eliot Norton in Switzerland, who spread Ruskin’s ideas in America. The third and fourth volumes of Modern Painters appeared in 1856. Ruskin was asked to catalog the more than 20,000 works of art left to the nation by Turner, who had died in 1851. He and National Gallery keeper Ralph Nicholson Wornum burned an unspecified number of sketchbooks in 1858 which the two deemed “grossly obscene” and could not “lawfully be in anyone’s possession.” Ruskin did save the two surviving sketchbooks, which he left in a paper bag with a note saying they were kept “only as evidence of a failing mind.” After a rift with Rosetti, Ruskin promoted the work of Edward Burne-Jones in the 1860s. He delivered the Rede lecture at Cambridge, “The Relation of National Ethics to National Arts,” in 1866, receiving an honorary doctorate from the University. Ruskin experienced a middle age crisis, his faith in religion permanently eroded and he proposed marriage to an eighteen-year-old, Rose La Touche (1848-1875), a girl suffering from a debilitating illness (possibly anorexia nervosa) whom he had fallen in love with when she was 10. Ruskin was appointed the first Slade Professor of art at Oxford in 1869, which held until 1879; he held the post again, 1883-1884. Intermittent additional mental breakdowns followed. His later writings, e.g., Sesame and Lillies (1865), The Crown Of Wild Olives (1866) and Fors Clavigera (1871-1874), are devoted to social reform which consumed him his last years. In 1874, Ruskin was in Italy with the architect and social reformer Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo (1851-1942). Rose’s death led to another mental breakdown and his utilizing séances to speak with her. The final twenty years of his life were ever-increasing mental decline, the last ten years of his life secluded at his estate, Brantwood, on Lake Coniston. There he wrote a highly unreliable autobiography of his early years, Praeterita (1886-1888), which was unfinished at the time of his death. Ruskin caught the flu in early 1900 and died on his family estate. He is buried in Coniston churchyard. He left his estate to the Guild of St. George, a charity he founded for social welfare. Norton became one of his literary executors. Ruskin was a taste-making as much as an historian of art; his writings were influential for the art historians, architects and artists of his generation. His early work, Modern Painters, used Turner’s work as an example of the primary virtue of art: an adherence to truth, but a truth that included “moral as well as material [i.e., factual] truth.” Subsequent volumes insisted an absolute, divine basis for art, denying that custom or subjective experience defined great art. The Stones of Venice champions the Gothic era as a time when spiritualism was pervasive in all aspects of society, including art. Likewise, the Classical and Renaissance ages represented pagan corruption, a tendency he saw in his own Victorian era with the use of cast iron in architecture and the increasing importance of function in architectural design. Ruskin’s division of the Italian renaissance into a “pre-Renaissance” (i.e., the early Renaissance of artists such as Botticelli and Fra Angelico) filled with religiosity, and (high) Renaissance artists, too influenced by classicism, is taken directly from the writings of Alexis-François Rio. The political implication is staunchly anti-Roman Catholic: Venice’s resistance to Roman Papal authority were akin (in Ruskin’s mind) to his Tory resistance to the 1850 Catholic church’s reassertion of episcopal hierarchy. A second political theme was anti-industrialization. Mass production destroyed creative and moral spirit to Ruskin, a theme which would be more fully be acted upon my William Morris. Ruskin’s art theory led to a long-time friendship with the Harvard humanist Charles Eliot Norton. To Ruskin the relationship of art, morality and social justice formed a holy triangle. This interest increasingly lead to his preoccupation in later years with social reform. Ruskin founded the Working Men’ s college in 1854 and financially backed the experiments of the social reformer Octavia Hill (1838-1912) in the management of house property. His social reforms were later integrated by the government into old age pensions, universal free education, and improved housing. Ruskin’s writings inspired Morris, and Arnold Toynbee and were favorably reviewed by Charlotte Brontë and William Wordsworth. His anti-Renaissance views were criticized in his lifetime by Bernard Berenson and posthumously by the architectural historian Geoffrey Scott. As a reformer, his book Unto This Last (1860) is said to have influenced Mahatma Gandhi. The National Trust, established by Ruskin-inspired acquaintances, bears his stamp.


Selected Bibliography

Modern Painters. 5 vols. London: Smith, Elder, 1843-1860, [1st American edition from the 3rd British:] New York: Wiley and Putnam, 1847-1848; The Seven Lamps of Architecture. London: Smith, Elder, and Co., 1849; The Stones of Venice. 3 vols. London: Smith, Elder, 1851-1853; Pre-Raphaelitism. London: Smith, Elder, 1851; Lectures on Architecture and Painting, delivered at Edinburgh in November 1853. London: Smith, Elder, and Co., 1854; The Art of England: Lectures Given in Oxford. Sunnyside, Orpington, Kent: George Allen, 1884; The Correspondence of John Ruskin and Charles Eliot Norton. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987; Diaries. 3 vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1956-1959


Sources

Kultermann, Udo. Geschichte der Kunstgeschichte: Der Weg einer Wissenschaft. 2nd ed. Frankfurt am Main: Ullstein, 1981, pp. 156-160; 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. 9; Herbert, Robert L. ed., The Art Criticism of John Ruskin. New York: 1964; Stein, Roger B. John Ruskin and Aesthetic Thought in America: 1840-1900. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1967; Ferrara, Paul Albert. “Renaissance, Interpretation of the, ‘John Ruskin'” The Encyclopedia of the Renaissance (1999) 5: 291-92; Hewison, Robert. “‘Ruskin, John (1819-1900).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.




Citation

"Ruskin, John." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/ruskinj/.


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Britain’s most influential art critic of the nineteenth century; author of widely-read books on artists and architecture. Ruskin was the only son of an affluent Scottish wine importer living in London, of John James Ruskin (1785-1864). His mother,

Russack, Hans Hermann

Full Name: Russack, Hans Hermann

Gender: male

Date Born: 1887

Date Died: 1942

Home Country/ies: Germany

Institution(s): Universität Leipzig


Overview

Russack’s dissertation, Der Begriff des Rhythmus bei den deutschen Kunsthistorikern des XIX. Jahrhunderts was one of the early examinations of the historiography in Germany.


Selected Bibliography

Der Begriff des Rhythmus bei den deutschen Kunsthistorikern des XIX. Jahrhunderts. Leipzig, 1910


Sources

Dilly, 27



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Russack, Hans Hermann." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/russackh/.


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Russack’s dissertation, Der Begriff des Rhythmus bei den deutschen Kunsthistorikern des XIX. Jahrhunderts was one of the early examinations of the historiography in Germany.

Russell, John

Full Name: Russell, John

Other Names:

  • John Russell

Gender: male

Date Born: 1919

Date Died: 2008

Place Born: Fleet, Hampshire, England, UK

Place Died: Bronx, NY, USA

Home Country/ies: United Kingdom

Career(s): art critics and journalists


Overview

New York Times art critic, 1974-1990, and author of art history books. Russell was the son of Isaac James Russell and Harriet Elizabeth Atkins (Russell). Raised by his grandparents, he attended St. Paul’s school, London before studying philosophy and economics at Magdalen College, Oxford, receiving a B.A. in 1940. Initially, Russell worked at the Tate Gallery as an unpaid intern until the building was bombed during the Blitzkrieg; he was then evacuated to Worcestershire. He served in the British Admiralty during World War II in Naval Intelligence Division between 1942 until 1945. His first book, Shakespeare’s Country, was published in 1944. The same year he published his first art book (he was 23), British Portrait Painters. Before the War’s end, he was writing for the periodical Cornhill Magazine and Horizon, encouraged by Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946), brother to art historian Mary Berenson. He married Alexandrine Apponyi in 1945 (divorced, 1950). Another author (and future writer of James Bond novels) Ian Fleming (1908-1964) recommended Russell as a book reviewer to the Sunday Times (London) in 1945. When London Times art critic Eric Newton was fired for writing an inflammatory review of a Royal Academy exhibition in 1950, Russell became his replacement as well as corresponding art critic for the New York Times. He married a second time to Vera Poliakoff in 1956. He also acted as London representative for the Art News and Art in America beginning in 1957. During this time he met Rosamond Bernier (b. 1920?), co-founder of the Parisian art journal L’Oeil, who asked him to write for that magazine as well. Russell visited New York as a foreign journalist in 1960, invited by the US State Department. In 1965 Russell wrote an extended book on Seurat, his most durable text. He organized exhibitions for the Arts Council of Great Britain on Modigliani in 1964, Rouault in 1966, the controversial Balthus show in 1968 and Pop Art, the last in concert with his friend Suzi Gablik in 1969. The Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Book of the Month Club hired Russell to survey modern art, publishing in 12 monthly parts by mail subscription between 1974-1975. Bernier returned to the United States in 1971, separated from her husband. Russell divorced his second wife the same year, and in 1973, while in the United States, the chief critic of New York Times, Hilton Kramer, suggested Russell join him. Russell joined the Times in 1974, relinquishing his other journalistic assignments. In 1975 Russell married Bernier, a wedding studded by art and music personalities, taking place in the [New Canaan, CT] Glass House home of Philip Johnson. Bernier, an American who had known French artists after the War, was now a lecturer on fashion at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY. As an art critic, Russell offered a measured approach to criticism in contrast to the often caustic reviews of Kramer. In 1979 he won the Frank Jewett Mather, Jr., award for art criticism from the College Art Association. Russell wrote “American Light: The Luminist Movement” in 1980, a film produced for the National Gallery of Art and narrated by Bernier–Russell himself was a stutterer. In 1981 they collaborated again on the film “An Everlasting France,” an introduction to French art to be shown at the Palace of the Legion of Honor Museum in San Francisco. The same year his subscription-survey book for MoMA was republished as Meanings of Modern Art. He became chief critic for the New York Times in 1982. The Mitchell prize for art criticism was awarded to him in 1984. Russell resigned from the Times in 1990. He won the U. S. Art Critic’s Award in 2006. He died at a Bronx nursing home at age 89. In England, Russell championed the emerging modernist British artists including Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, R. B. Kitaj, David Hockney and Bridget Riley. Russell’s art histories were elegant but not researched to any great degree. His was a pen-for-hire, a literati who could be trusted to write elegantly about art, if not deeply, such as his 1970 volume, The World of Matisse in the mass-appeal Time-Life series. His most perceptive writing were his numerous essays in The New York Review of Books.


Selected Bibliography

British Portrait Painters. London: W. Collins, 1944; Max Ernst: Life and Work. New York: H. N. Abrams, 1967; and Gablik, Suzi. Pop Art Redefined. New York: Praeger, 1969; Francis Bacon. Greenwich, CT: New York Graphic Society, 1971; The World of Matisse: 1869-1954. New York: Time-Life, 1972; The Meanings of Modern Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1974; Matisse: Father & Son. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1999.


Sources

“Rosamond Bernier Is Married To John Russell in Suburbs.” New York Times May 25, 1975, p. 52; Kaufman, Jason Edward. “I Wanted to Teach, in an Almost Subliminal Way but I Did not Want to Preach. That is Still What I Try to Do.” [Interview with Russell] The Art Newspaper, July-August 1999, p. 49; [obituary:] Grimes, William. “John Russell, Art Critic for the Times, Dies at 89.” New York Times August 25, 2008, p. A17; “John Russell.” Times (London), August 25, 2008, p. 43.




Citation

"Russell, John." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/russellj/.


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New York Times art critic, 1974-1990, and author of art history books. Russell was the son of Isaac James Russell and Harriet Elizabeth Atkins (Russell). Raised by his grandparents, he attended St. Paul’s school, London before studying ph

Rossiter, Henry P.

Full Name: Rossiter, Henry P.

Other Names:

  • Henry Preston Rossiter

Gender: male

Date Born: 1885

Date Died: 1977

Home Country/ies: United States

Subject Area(s): connoisseurship and prints (visual works)

Career(s): curators


Overview

Print connoisseur and Curator of Prints and Drawings, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Rossitier graduated from the University of Toronto in 1909. Initially he was engaged as a teacher and then in business. During this time, he developed a personal interest in prints. An aptitude in rifelry made him a platoon leader in the Canadian army in World War I. While deployed in France, Rossiter visited print dealers and formed his own collection and education in the medium. After demobilization–he was a Major–he resolved to become a print curator. He started at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in 1919. Although he returned to Canada to be Curator of Prints at the National Gallery in Ottowa, the resignation of Fitzroy Carrington in 1921, Rossiter returned as acting Curator in Boston. He was appointed curator of Prints in 1923, which he held until 1967. Rossiter took advantage of the great collecting eras of the 1920s and 1930s to amass incunables and other important print specimens. Among other activities as curator, Rossiter was the chief player in a plan to acquire the entire print- and drawing collection of the Archduke Albert–now the Albertina Museum–in Vienna in 1936. Rossiter, together with Paul J. Sachs, a Board member of the Museum and himself at the Fogg Museum, entered into more-or-less secret deliberations with the archduke to sell the most exquisite works-on-paper collection in the world. The collection had recently be repatriated to the Hapsburg monarchy by the Austrian government and the duke was desperate for money to pay for a bid to accession to the emperor of Hungary and support his mistresses. As the deal seemed near completion, the Austrian government learned of the plan to lose what was clearly a national treasure and forbade the event. The “Albertina Affair” was demonstrative of the kind of power and political situation that existed for high-level curators in the United States between the wars. He hired Eleanor Sayre as his prints assistant, one of the few women to work in that capacity at the MFA. In 1951 he acquired proofs of Goya’s “Disasters of War” series from the collection of William Stirling Maxwell, facillitated by the Harvard Library prints authority Philip Hofer. Rossiter retired in 1967 (he was 81) and was succeeded in the department by Sayre. After his death, he was implicated in the 1990s of having bought works of art during the years preceding World War II which had suspicious provenance. He admitted to FBI agents in 1941 that one dealer from whom he routinely purchased prints, Richard Zinser, had been imprisoned in Germany for smuggling art. Rossiter bought prints from Zinser for the Museum, including works by Dürer, despite Zinser’s refusal to reveal the source of his works. The MFA ceased buying prints from Zinser after the FBI’s visit.


Selected Bibliography

and Hipkiss, Edwin J. Eighteenth-century of American Arts: the M. and M. Karolik Collection. Cambridge, MA: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston/Harvard University Press, 1941; An Exhibition of Paintings, Drawings and Prints by J. M. W. Turner, John Constable [and] R. P. Bonington. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 1946; [facsimile edition] Blake, William. [John Milton’s] Paradise Lost. New York: Studio Publications, 1947; “Two Prints by the Master of the Amsterdam Cabinet.” Bulletin [Museum of Fine Arts, Boston] 64 no. 338 (1966): 173-7; “Care of Prints.” Print-Collector’s Quarterly 30 (March 1950): 33-40.


Sources

“Henry Preston Rossiter: Retiring Curator of the Department of Prints and Drawings, Boston Museum.” Bulletin [Museum of Fine Arts, Boston] 65 no. 341 (1967): 92-151; Butler, J. T. “Henry Preston Rossiter Honoured by Boston Museum.” Connoisseur 167 (April 1968): 270; Whitehill, Walter Muir. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston: a Centennial History. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1970, pp. 387-390. 726-244; Rossiter, Henry P. “Albertina for Boston?” Apollo 96 (August 1972): 135-7; Goggin, Maureen, and Robinson, Walter V. “Murky Histories Cloud Some Local Art.” The Boston Globe November 9, 1997, p. A1; [obituaries;] “Necrologie.” Gazette des Beaux-Arts 89 no 1299 (April 1977): 36.




Citation

"Rossiter, Henry P.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/rossiterh/.


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Print connoisseur and Curator of Prints and Drawings, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Rossitier graduated from the University of Toronto in 1909. Initially he was engaged as a teacher and then in business. During this time, he developed a personal in