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Voit, August von

Full Name: Voit, August von

Gender: male

Date Born: 1801

Date Died: 1870

Home Country/ies: Germany

Institution(s): Neue Pinakothek


Overview

Voit began the Denkmäler der Kunst as an atlas to the Handbuch der kunstgeschichte by Franz Kugler. The Denkmaler was continued by E. K. Guhl and J. Caspar, and later edited by Wilhelm Lübke and Karl F. A. von Lützow, with explanatory text.


Selected Bibliography

and Guhl, Ernst, and Caspar, J., eds. Denkmäler der Kunst zur übersicht ihres Entwickelungsganges von den ersten künstlerischen Versuchen bis zu den Standpunkten der Gegenwart. 6 vols. Stuttgart : Ebner & Seubert, 1845-1853.




Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Voit, August von." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/voita/.


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Voit began the Denkmäler der Kunst as an atlas to the Handbuch der kunstgeschichte by Franz Kugler. The Denkmaler was continued by E. K. Guhl and J. Caspar, and later edited by Wilhelm Lüb

Volbach, Fritz

Full Name: Volbach, Fritz

Other Names:

  • Fritz Volbach

Gender: male

Date Born: 28 August 1892

Date Died: 23 December 1988

Place Born: Mainz, Rhineland Palatinate, Germany

Place Died: Mainz, Rhineland Palatinate, Germany

Home Country/ies: Germany

Subject Area(s): museums (institutions)

Career(s): directors (administrators) and museum directors


Overview

Kaiser-Friedrich Museum in Berlin director, professor and scholar of early Christian art. Volbach’s father was Friedrich (“Fritz”) Volbach, a professor and orchestra conductor. The younger Volbach attended school in Mainz and Bensheim, receiving his abitur in 1911. After graduation, he volunteered at the Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmusem (Roman antiquities museum) in Mainz 1911 and 1915. He further volunteered at the Landesmuseum in Wiesbaden, reinstalling the collection when the director was killed in World War I. During this same period, Volbach studied archaeology, art history and medieval history at the universities of Munich, Berlin (under Adolph Goldschmidt), Tübingen (under Konrad von Lange) and finally Gießen (Giessen) under Christian Rauch. He wrote his dissertation in 1916 under Rauch at Giessen on the topic of the figure of St. George in medieval German art. The Kaiser-Friedrich Museum director Wilhelm Bode hired him for his museum in 1917. With Georg Vitzthum von Eckstädt he authored the Handbuch der Kunstwissenschaft volume on Italian medieval art. At the Museum he collaborated with Ernst F. Bange (1893-?) and Theodor Demmler on the catalog for the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. During this time he became a founding member and lecturer at the Volkshochschule in Berlin. Volbach was interested in the contemporary art scene in Berlin and knew many of Die Brücke German Expressionists. He married Maria Luise Adelung (d. 1936) in 1928. The same year he met the Byzantinist Georges Duthuit. In 1929 he was raised to curator (Kustos) and in 1930 head of the Early Christian and medieval Italian collection. He, Duthuit and Georges Salles collaborated on a book on Byzantine art in 1933. He was named professor in 1933 at the Volkshochschule but the same year determined to be “non-Aryan” (Volbach’s mother was of Jewish extraction) by the new Nazi government. He and his wife, both practicing Roman Catholics, immigrated to the Vatican City in 1934. There he worked in the Vatican library and as a professor at the Papal Institute for Christian Archaeology. Volbach participated on anti-fascist committees with C. B. Todd and Ludwig Muckermann. He returned to Germany after the War in 1946. In 1948 he married a second time to Australian writer Vivyan Eyles (b. 1910), only recently divorced the writer and art historian Mario Praz. He was appointed the director of the antiquities museum in Mainz. He retired in 1958, mounting a show on Coptic Christian art at the Villa Hügel in Essen in 1963. He collaborated with Jean Hubert and Jean Porcher in the important L’Univers des formes art-history series, L’Europe des invasions in 1967 and and volume three of the Propyläen Kunstgeschichte series.


Selected Bibliography

[dissertation:] Die Darstellung des hl. Georg zu Pferd in der deutschen Kunst des Mittelalters. Giessen, 1916, published, Strassburg, 1917;and Vitzthum, Georg, Graf. Handbuch der Kunstwissenschaft Die malerei und plastik des mittelalters in Italien. Wildpark-Potsdam: Akademische verlagsgesellschaft Athenaion, 1924;and Bange, Ernst F., and Demmler, Theodor. Die Bildwerke des deutschen Museums. 4 vols. Berlin: W. De Gruyter, 1923-1930;and Wulff, Oskar. Spätantike und koptische Stoffe aus ägyptischen Grabfunden in den Staatlichen Museen, Kaiser-Friedrich-museum, Àgyptisches Museum, Schliemann-Sammlung. Berlin: E. Wasmuth, 1926;and Duthuit, Georges, and Salles, Georges. Art byzantin; cent planches reproduisant un grand nombre de pièces choisies parmi les plus représentatives des diverses. Paris: A. Lévy, 1933;Elfenbeinarbeiten der Spätantike und des frühen Mittelalters. Mainz: Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum: Mainz, 1952;and Hubert, Jean, and Porcher, Jean. L’Europe des invasions. L’Univers des formes 12. Paris: Gallimard, 1967, English, Europe of the Invasions. New York: G. Braziller, 1969 (British title, Europe in the Dark Ages);Byzanz und der christliche Osten. Propyläen Kunstgeschichte 3. Berlin: Propyläen Verlag, 1968; and Hubert, Jean, and Porcher, Jean. L’Empire carolingien. L’Univers des formes 13. Paris: Gallimard, 1968, English, The Carolingian Renaissance. New York: G. Braziller, 1970;


Sources

Metzler Kunsthistoriker Lexikon: zweihundert Porträts deutschsprachiger Autoren aus vier Jahrhunderten. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1999, pp. 431-33; 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.716-723.




Citation

"Volbach, Fritz." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/volbachw/.


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Kaiser-Friedrich Museum in Berlin director, professor and scholar of early Christian art. Volbach’s father was Friedrich (“Fritz”) Volbach, a professor and orchestra conductor. The younger Volbach attended school in Mainz and Bensheim, receiving h

Veth, Jan

Full Name: Veth, Jan

Other Names:

  • Jan Pieter Veth

Gender: male

Date Born: 1864

Date Died: 1925

Place Born: Dordrecht, Gemeente, South Holland, Netherlands

Place Died: Amsterdam, North Holland, Netherlands

Home Country/ies: Netherlands

Subject Area(s): painting (visual works)

Career(s): art critics


Overview

Painter and art critic. In 1880 Veth began studying painting at the Amsterdam Rijksacademie voor Beeldende Kunsten, under August Allebé (1838-1927). After having left the academy, in 1885, he moved to Laren, along with the painter Anton Mauve (1838-1888). In addition to painting, Veth began his career as an art critic. He regularly wrote articles on contemporary artists in De Nieuwe Gids, a periodical founded by a circle of young writers known as the Tachtigers. He also contributed to De Amsterdammer. Weekblad voor Nederland. In 1888 he married Anna Dorothea Dirks. The couple settled in Bussum. Veth made a career of portraiture, working in different techniques: painting, drawing, etching and lithography. In the course of the 1890s he produced a series of 60 lithographs of portraits of famous contemporaries, published in De Amsterdammer, and subsequently in De Kroniek. He regularly traveled abroad to carry out commissions in Germany, England, and the USA. His likenesses, both in painting and drawing, included the artist Adolf von Menzel and the art historian and museum director Wilhelm Bode. His paintings are owned by the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam (portraits of the baritone Johannes M. Messchaert, 1857-1922, and the director of the Amsterdam Rijksprentenkabinet, Johan Philip van der Kellen, and at the Stedelijk Museum (the painter Jozef Israëls). In 1892 he published an important study on a recent wall painting in the Den Bosch Town hall by Antoon Derkinderen (1859-1925). Sympathetic to the social ideals of fin-de-siecle artists, Veth translated Walter Crane’s Claims of Decorative Art (1892) into Dutch. In 1906, the three hundredth anniversary of Rembrandt’s birthday, his monograph on Rembrandt, Rembrandt’s leven en kunst (Rembrandt’s Life and Art) appeared, which was also translated into German. In the same year, Veth received a doctorate honoris causa from the University of Amsterdam, along with Abraham Bredius, Cornelis Hofstede de Groot, ode, and Émile Michel. In 1914, he joined the editorial board of De Gids. In 1917 Veth was appointed professor of art history and esthetics at the Amsterdam Rijksacademie voor Beeldende Kunsten. With the Utrecht archivist Samuel Muller Fz (1848-1922) he was the coauthor of the two-volume 1918 publication, Albrecht Dürers niederländische Reise. This remarkable study, written in German, documents Dürer’s year-long travels (1520-21) in the Low Countries (present day Belgium and the Netherlands). The first volume includes a critical illustrated catalog of Dürer’s sketchbook drawings and other works produced during his trip, while the second part is an analysis of Dürer as an artist, followed by a comprehensive account of the journey in its broader cultural and historical context. Between 1919 and 1921 Veth was actively involved in the reorganization of museums in the Netherlands, as a member of the Rijkscommissie voor het museumwezen (State Commission for Museum Affairs). Veth moved to Amsterdam in 1924. Being in poor health, he retired from his position at the academy. He died a year later, in 1925. Johan Huizinga published a monograph on Veth in 1927, Leven en werk van Jan Veth. He also wrote the introduction to the 1928 posthumous publication of Veth’s work, Een veronachtzaamd hoofdstuk uit onze beschavingsgeschiedenis der zeventiende eeuw. Veth, as artist and writer on art, is known for his skepticism about esthetical judgments by art historians and archivists. In his view true artists have more art critical insight. As a participant in the debate on museum reform he, along with F. Schmidt-Degener, was an advocate of the idea that a museum primarily should be a place to enjoy art. Veth’s books and articles on contemporary artists still are considered important contributions to Dutch modern art history.


Selected Bibliography

Jozef Israëls. Haarlem: Tjeenk Willink, 1890; Jean François Millet. Haarlem: Tjeenk Willink, 1891; Derkinderen’s wandbeschildering in het Bossche stadhuis. Amsterdam: Van Looy, 1892; Kunstbeschouwingen: algemeene onderwerpen, reisbrieven, monumenten, oude Nederlandsche kunst. Amsterdam: Van Looy, 1904. Rembrandt’s leven en kunst: geschreven in opdracht van de algemeene commissie ter herdenking van Rembrandt op zijn 300sten geboortedag. Amsterdam: Scheltema & Holkema, 1906; Hollandsche teekenaars van dezen tijd. Amsterdam: S.L. van Looy, 1905; and Muller, Samuel. Albrecht Dürers niederländische Reise. 2 vols. Berlin: Grote, 1918; introduction, Huizinga, Johannes. Een veronachtzaamd hoofdstuk uit onze beschavingsgeschiedenis der zeventiende eeuw. Haarlem: Tjeenk Willink, 1928.


Sources

Bijl de Vroe, Fusien. De schilder Jan Veth 1864-1925. Chroniqueur van een bewogen tijdperk. Amsterdam: T. Rap, 1987; “Veth, Jan Pieter.” Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart 34. Leipzig: W. Engelmann, p. 314; Huizinga, Johan. Leven en werk van Jan Veth. Haarlem: Tjeenk Willink, 1927; Ekkart, R. E. O. Biografisch Woordenboek van Nederland 3. The Hague, 1989: 621-622; Blotkamp, Carel “Kunstgeschiedenis en moderne kunst: een lange aanloop.” in Hecht, Peter, and Stolwijk, Chris, and Hoogenboom, Annemieke, eds., Kunstgeschiedenis in Nederland. Negen opstellen. Amsterdam: Prometheus, 1998, pp. 91-93; Haveman, Mariëtte and others “Jan Veth 1864-1925 ‘het is geen genot te werken, het is een drift …'”. Kunstschrift 49,1 (February-March 2005); [obituary:] Der Kinderen, A. J. Handelingen van de Maatschappij der Nederlandse Letterkunde te Leiden en Levensberichten harer afgestorven medeleden 1925-1926. pp. 1-16.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen and Monique Daniels


Citation

Lee Sorensen and Monique Daniels. "Veth, Jan." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/vethj/.


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Painter and art critic. In 1880 Veth began studying painting at the Amsterdam Rijksacademie voor Beeldende Kunsten, under August Allebé (1838-1927). After having left the academy, in 1885, he moved to Laren, along with the painter Anton Mauve (183

Visconti, G. B.

Full Name: Visconti, G. B.

Other Names:

  • G. B. Visconti

Gender: male

Date Born: 1722

Date Died: 1784

Place Born: Vernazza, La Spezia, Liguria, Italy

Place Died: Rome, Lazio, Italy

Home Country/ies: Italy

Subject Area(s): catalogues raisonnés and Classical


Overview

Classical art historian, administrator; developer of the illustrated museum catalog. Visconti was born to a scholarly family. At 14 he moved to Rome where he met Johann Joachim Winckelmann. Visconti succeeded Winckelmann at his death in 1768 as Commissioner of Antiquities. Pope Clement XIV and particularly Giovanni Angelo Braschi, the papal treasurer, encouraged him in founding the Vatican Museo Clementino in 1770. When Braschi succeeded Clement as Pius VI, Braschi through Visconti expanded the museum, renaming it as the Museo Pio-Clementino. Through Visconti, Braschi authorized acquisitons, excavations, and installations for the new museum, building on the burgeoning antiquities discovery and marketing in Rome. Visconti purchased important pieces from the Mattei, Barberini, Verospi, Altemps and other collections, as much to keep them in Rome as aNew York Timeshing. Visconti published an illustrated catalog of the collections in 1782, one of the first illustrated museum catalogs of its kind. His son, Ennio Guirino Visconti, assisted in the project, completing the series when he succeeded his father as Commissioner of Antiquities. A second son, Filippo Aurelio Visconti, worked with Ennio Quirino at the Louvre museum and later succeeded him as Commissioner. Visconti’s scholarly approch the classical archeology, his reliance on facts instead of anecdote and his interested in illustrations as a legitimate part of intellectual publication form the basis of modern archaeology and museology.


Selected Bibliography

and Visconti, Ennio Quirino. Il museo Pio-Clementino. 7 vols. Rome: Luigi Mirri, 1782-1807.


Sources

Howard, Seymour. “Visconti, Giovanni Battista.” Dictionary of Art.




Citation

"Visconti, G. B.." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/viscontig/.


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Classical art historian, administrator; developer of the illustrated museum catalog. Visconti was born to a scholarly family. At 14 he moved to Rome where he met Johann Joachim Winckelmann. Visconti succeeded Winckelman

Visconti, Filippo Aurelio

Full Name: Visconti, Filippo Aurelio

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Italy

Subject Area(s): ancient, Antique, the, and Roman (ancient Italian culture or period)


Overview

Commissioner of Antiquities in Rome in Rome. Visconti was born to a scholarly family, the son of G. B. Visconti, the Commissioner of Antiquities in Rome in Rome after Johann Joachim Winckelmann. He worked with his brother, Ennio Guirino Visconti at the Louvre museum and succeed him as Commissioner of Antiquities in Rome. In 1808 he published the Vatican Chiaramonti antiquities with Giuseppe Antonio Guattàni.






Citation

"Visconti, Filippo Aurelio." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/viscontif/.


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Commissioner of Antiquities in Rome in Rome. Visconti was born to a scholarly family, the son of G. B. Visconti, the Commissioner of Antiquities in Rome in Rome after Johann Joachim Winckelmann.

Visconti, Ennio Quirino

Full Name: Visconti, Ennio Quirino

Gender: male

Date Born: unknown

Date Died: unknown

Home Country/ies: Italy

Subject Area(s): Ancient Greek (culture or style), Greek sculpture styles, museums (institutions), and sculpture (visual works)

Career(s): directors (administrators) and museum directors


Overview

Museum director, wrote early history of Greek sculpture. Together with T.-B. Éméric-David he collaborated to further alter the assumption that Greek sculpture of the 5th and 4th centuries was an era of decline, as Johann Joachim Winckelmann had written.


Selected Bibliography

and Croze-Magnan, S. C., and Robillard-Pe´ronville, and E´me´ric-David, Toussaint-Bernard, and. Laurent, Henri. Le Muse´e francçais: recueil complet des tableaux, statues et bas-reliefs, qui composent la collection nationale: avec l’explication des sujets, et des discours historiques sur la peinture, la sculpture et la gravure. Paris: Imprimerie de L.-E. Herhan, 1803-1809.


Sources

Potts, Alex. “Visconti, Ennio Quirino .” Encyclopedia of the History of Classical Archaeology. Nancy Thomson de Grummond, ed. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996, vol. 2, pp. 1173-1176.




Citation

"Visconti, Ennio Quirino." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/viscontie/.


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Museum director, wrote early history of Greek sculpture. Together with T.-B. Éméric-David he collaborated to further alter the assumption that Greek sculpture of the 5th and 4th centuries was an era of decline, as

Vischer, Robert

Full Name: Vischer, Robert

Gender: male

Date Born: 1847

Date Died: 1933

Place Born: Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

Place Died: Vienna, Vienna state, Austria

Home Country/ies: Germany


Overview

Vischer was the son of the philosopher Friedrich Theodor Vischer (1807-87). Growing up, Vischer was influenced by the frequent presence of scholars such as Eduard Mörike and his godfathers, the author Ludwig Uhland and theologian David F. Strauss (whom Nietzsche so strongly denounced). Vischer completed his dissertation at Tübingen in 1872 with the topic über das optische Formgefühl. Between 1875 and 1879 he was an instructor (Scriptor) at the Vienna Academy. In 1880 he was appointed privatdozent at the university in Munich, but by 1882 received his associate professorship at the university in Breslau. Beginning in 1885 he taught at the Technische Hochschule in Aachen. The following year his Studien zur Kunstgeschichte appeared. The essay “Zur Kritik mittelalterlicher Kunst,” was a methodical, Impressionist-inspired diatribe against the more modern art forms which he considered decadent. Conversely, Vischer saw a number of art epochs, including Byzantine art, thought by many art historians to be the nadir of art, worthy of study. In 1892 he moved to Göttingen (as a full professor) where he remained until 1911. Vischer wrote an art history addressed to the laity on Rubens in 1904. The book most clearly shows his “Impressionistic” approach to art history: addressing the emotion he saw imbued in Rubens’ painting style, color and composition. The book set a standard for introductory texts: well-researched, readable and without condescension. The monograph appeared at the same time as the Rubens book by Jacob Burckhardt, another recent convert to baroque art. Vischer used his father’s theories on empathy, taking them to new conclusions. In articles such as “Der ästhetische Akt und die reine Form” and über ästhetische Naturbetrachtng” he employed concrete examples in art history to examine esthetic issues. This melting of the disciplines of art history and philosophy resulted in many detractors in his lifetime, but the strongest admirers among subsequent generations, such as Benedetto Croce and Carl Koch. His students included Werner Weisbach and Gustav Hartlaub. His essay “Kunstgesichte und Humanismus: Beiträge zur Klärung,” is a plea for the melding of art and esthetics into a unified discipline. Vischer’s contribution to the development of art history is still underrated. He approached the analysis of a work of art through disciplined esthetic theory. Using the philosophy of Wilhelm Wundt (1832-1920), Vischer used psychology and esthetics to create an interdisciplinary art history. The esthetician Glockner, in his book on Vischer, ascribed to Vischer the modern direction that esthetics would take. The art historiographer Wilhelm Waetzoldt referred to Vischer as “one of the most brilliant Impressionists of art historiography,” meaning Vischer’s attention to the impressions the painting made to the viewer. Vischer’s first book (his dissertation) über das optische Formgefühl broke perception into nuanced and untranslatable components of feeling. Kulterman cites Vischer’s categories as the basis for the work of Heinrich Wölfflin. Some of Vischer’s work received harsh criticism when it appeared because he blurred the lines of traditional art history and philosophy. He abhorred the north German (Prussian) mentality, connoisseurs and the haughty professional-style of art historian. These historians, such as Wilhelm Bode and others returned their distain by patronizing him and attacking his multi-disciplinary articles. His championing of the “low” areas of art history, such as Byzantine and the baroque, anticipated the work of Aloïs Riegl and the (first) Vienna School. Together with the work of the art theorist Theodor Lipps (1851-1914), he formed an important of modern art theory.


Selected Bibliography

Studien zur Kunstgeschichte. Stuttgart. 1886.


Sources

Bazin 201; Metzler Kunsthistoriker Lexikon: zweihundert Porträts deutschsprachiger Autoren aus vier Jahrhunderten. Stuttgart: Metzler, 1999, pp. 423-5; Kultermann, Udo. The History of Art History. New York: Abaris, 1993, pp.151-2; Glockner, Hermann. Friedrich Theodor Vischer und das neunzehnte Jahrhundert. Berlin: Junker und Dünnhaupt, 1931.




Citation

"Vischer, Robert." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/vischerr/.


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Vischer was the son of the philosopher Friedrich Theodor Vischer (1807-87). Growing up, Vischer was influenced by the frequent presence of scholars such as Eduard Mörike and his godfathers, the author Ludwig Uhland and theologian David F. Strauss

Viollet-le-Duc, Eugène

Full Name: Viollet-le-Duc, Eugène

Other Names:

  • Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc

Gender: male

Date Born: 27 January 1814

Date Died: 17 September 1879

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

Place Died: Lausanne, Vaud, Switzerland

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): architecture (object genre), art theory, French (culture or style), French Gothic, Gothic (Medieval), nineteenth century (dates CE), restoration (process), and sculpture (visual works)


Overview

Architectural historian/restorer; major theorist of the Gothic in 19th-century France; responsible for the “over-restoration” of many Gothic churches in France. Viollet-le-Duc’s father was Sous-Contrôleur des Services for the Tuileries, a civil servant position, book collector and arts enthusiast. His mother (d. 1832) conducted Friday salons from the family’s home where writers such as Stendahl and Prosper Mérimée (1803-1870)–later commissioner of historic monuments, attended. His bachelor uncle, the painter/scholar E. J. Delécluze, lived upstairs and was put in charge of Viollet-le-Duc’s education. He attended Fontenay, a school known for its anti-clerical republicanism. He participated in the 1830 revolution. Intent on an architectural career and politically liberal, Viollet-le-Duc decided against study at the conservative École des Beaux-Arts in favor of direct experience in the architect’s office of Jean-Jacques-Marie Huvé (1783-1852), and Achille-François-René Leclère (1785-1853). Between 1831 and 1836 he visited the regions of Provence, Normandy, the châteaux of the Loire, as well as the Pyrenees and Languedoc. He married his wife, Elisabeth, in 1834 and secured a professorship of Composition and Ornament at a small independent school, the École de Dessin in Paris. In 1836 he traveled to Italy where he toured Rome, Sicily, Naples and Venice. He returned to Paris in 1837 and studying at the École. Viollet-le-Duc was appointed auditor to the Conseil des Bâtiments Civils in 1838, under his former teacher, Leclère. The Council controlled all buildings belonging to the State, both their construction and renovation. In 1840 Mérimée, as Inspecteur Général des Monuments Historiques, the commission responsible for assigning restoration projects, nominated Viollet-le-Duc for the restoration of the church of the Madeleine, Vézelay. Viollet-le-Duc replaced the later 13th-century pointed vaults with 12th-century semicircular groin vaults in order to give a sense of unity to the nave, but changing the character of the building. He continued to work on other restorations of churches, many of which had been damaged in the French Revolution and needed sculptural replacement to return them to their didactic ambiance. In Sainte-Chapelle and in 1844 Notre-Dame de Paris, a commission with his colleague, Jean-Baptiste Lassus, Viollet-le-Duc substituted new sculpture for the old, often moving the old to museums. Notre-Dame marked the first of Viollet-le-Duc extemist interventions in churches, altering building to fit his romantic vision the middle ages. Notre-Dame’s famous gargoyles (grotesques), for example, are wholely his inventions. Even in his careful reconstructions, such as recutting sculptural molding (Rheims), 19th-century qualities of these works are apparent. The “restoration” of these buildings solidified Viollet-le-Duc’s stature. He began to publish his theories of the Gothic in Annales archéologiques in 1845. In 1846 he worked on Saint-Denis abbey, Avignon between 1860-68, the cathedrals of Amiens (1849-1875), and Rheims (1861-1873) the churches at Poissy (1852-1865) and Sens. In 1854 he published his influential Dictionnaire raisonné de l’architecture. A second important work appeared four years later. His Entretiens sur l’architecture and Dictionnaire du mobilier of 1858 contained discussion on goldsmiths’ work, musical instruments, jewellery and armor in addition to furniture. His own sketches accompanied the text. Although generally hailed in his own time for these restorations, Viollet-le-Duc had his detractors, including the sculptor Auguste Rodin. Viollet-le-Duc assisted on many commissions of the July Monarchy government (1830-1848), and the 1852 imperial court of Napoleon III, introduced by Mérimée. He maintained a personal architectural practice designing houses, churches and chateaux. Student revolts to his teaching of art history and esthetics at the École des Beaux-Arts resulted in his replacement by Hippolyte Taine in 1864. After his death, his likeness was placed as one of the twelve apostles on the bronze roof sculptures at Notre-Dame. John Newenham Summerson called Viollet-le-Duc one of two “supremely eminent theorists in the history of European architecture” along with Leon Battista Alerti. Compared to his contemporaries, Viollet-le-Duc stridently opposed the eclecticism so many historians imagined as Gothic style. In practice, his efforts may appear less than his theory, however. His restoration of the cathedral at Clermont-Ferrand, for example, used the design of rose-window, south transept, of Chartres Cathedral for Clermont-Ferrand’s west window, nave aisles configuration of Amiens Cathedral, and Last Judgment tympanum from St. Urbain, Troyes. Yet he was an outspoken critic of eclecticism, particularly in later years when his interests turned to building new village churches. He devoted a great amount of time to plans for rental housing, the gardener’s house for the Maison Sabatier and his own villa La Vedette at Lausanne (destroyed). As an architectural historian, Dictionnaire raisonné de l’architecture française made a substantial contribution to contemporary knowledge of medieval buildings.


Selected Bibliography

Dictionnaire raisonné de l’architecture française du XIe au XVIe siècle. 10 vols. Paris: Bance, 1854-1868; Entretiens sur l’architecture . 2 vols., 2 albums. Paris: Q. Morel, 1863-72, English, Discourses on Architecture. Boston: Milford House, 1973.


Sources

(Bercé). As a restorer and theorist, Viollet-le-Duc championed the use of new materials both for contemporary architecture and for his restorations. Frequently, he “bettered” the monuments by using stronger stone or replacing wooden roofs with metal ones. In his Entretiens he suggested iron for the framework in order to allow areas of transparency as in Gothic architecture, and designs of various hypothetical iron structures were included. Viollet-le-Duc’s Gothic restoration was a rationalist approach to architectural history. He argued that medieval architecture appeared the way it did becuase of structural issues and contemporary medieval techniques of construction. He viewed the early formulation of a common evolutionary cycle in the development of aesthetic forms (Bazin). In the twentieth century, Achille Carlier launched a particularly virulent critique of Viollet-le-Duc’s work. [writing on Viollet-le-Duc is legion, works constulted here include:] Gout, Paul. Viollet-Le-Duc, sa vie, son Åuvre, sa doctrine. Paris: E. Champion, 1914; Summerson, John. “Viollet-le-Duc and the Rational Point of View.” Heavenly Mansions and Other Essays on Architecture. New York: Norton, 1963, pp. 135-158; Middleton, Robin. Viollet-le-Duc and the Rational Gothic Tradition. [unpublished dissertation,. Cambridge University, 1958]; Middleton, Robin.”‘Viollet-le-Duc’s Academic Ventures and the Entretiens sur l’architecture.” in, Börsch-Supan, Eva. ed. Gottfried Semper und die Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts. Basle: Birkhäuser, 1976; Kultermann, Udo. Geschichte der Kunstgeschichte: Der Weg einer Wissenschaft. 2nd ed. Frankfurt am Main: Ullstein, 1981, p. 189; Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l’histoire de l’art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, pp. 136-137, 181-184; Bercé, Françoise. “Viollet-le-Duc, Eugène-Emmanuel.” Dictionary of Art 32 : 594-599; Murphy, Kevin D. Memory and Modernity: Viollet-le-Duc at Vézelay. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2000.




Citation

"Viollet-le-Duc, Eugène." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/violletleduce/.


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Architectural historian/restorer; major theorist of the Gothic in 19th-century France; responsible for the “over-restoration” of many Gothic churches in France. Viollet-le-Duc’s father was Sous-Contrôleur des Services for the Tuileries, a

Villot, Fédéric

Full Name: Villot, Fédéric

Gender: male

Date Born: 1809

Date Died: 1875

Home Country/ies: France

Subject Area(s): conservation (discipline) and conservation (process)

Career(s): conservators (people in conservation)


Overview

Director of the Louvre Museum and conservateur des peintures. In 1850, Otto Mündler published an essay on old Master paintings in the Louvre criticizing of the Louvre’s administrative policies and particularly the research of Villot, pointing out the errors in Villot’s 1849 catalog.


Selected Bibliography

Notice des tableaux exposés dans les galeries du Musée national du Louvre [series:] I, Ecoles d’Italie. Paris: Vinchon, 1849 [added to as] 1re pt. Écoles d’Italie et d’Espagne (3. éd.) [first by Villot to include Spain], 1853, 2e pt. Écoles allemande, flamande et hollandaise (6th ed.) [first under Villot’s authorship], Paris: Vinchon, 1859, 3e partie. École française. Paris: Charles de Mourgues Frères/Musées Impériaux, 1857 [3rd ed, first under Villot’s authorship], abridged English, and Both de Tauzia, L.. Guide through the Galleries of Paintings of the Imperial Museum of the Louvre. Paris: Printed by de Soye and Bouchet, 1856; Notice des peintures, sculptures, gravures et lithographies de l’école moderne de France exposés dans les galeries du Musée National du Luxembourg. Paris: Vinchon, 1852.


Sources

Anderson, Jaynie. “Mündler, Otto.” The Dictionary of Art.




Citation

"Villot, Fédéric." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/villotf/.


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Director of the Louvre Museum and conservateur des peintures. In 1850, Otto Mündler published an essay on old Master paintings in the Louvre criticizing of the Louvre’s administrative policies and particularly the

Villani, Filippo

Full Name: Villani, Filippo

Gender: male

Date Born: c. 1325

Date Died: c. 1405

Home Country/ies: Italy

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

Career(s): authors

Institution(s): Santa Croce


Overview

Florentine writer whose guide to Florence (De origine civitatis Florentinae, ca.1400 ) includes a list of artists and their careers. These include Ciomabue, Giotto, and Taddeo Gaddi. Villani lacks the synthesis of earlier writers.


Selected Bibliography

Liber de origine civitatis Florentiae et eiusdem famosis civibus (codex Laurentian Library)


Sources

La letteratura artistica: Manuale delle fonti della storia dell’arte moderna. Revised and edited by Otto Kurz. Florence: La Nuova Italia, 1964, p. 52. Kultermann, Udo. The History of Art History. New York: Abaris, 1993, p. 5.



Contributors: Lee Sorensen


Citation

Lee Sorensen. "Villani, Filippo." Dictionary of Art Historians (website). https://arthistorians.info/villanif/.


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Florentine writer whose guide to Florence (De origine civitatis Florentinae, ca.1400 ) includes a list of artists and their careers. These include Ciomabue, Giotto, and Taddeo Gaddi. Villani lacks the synthesis of earlier writers.