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Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung [Art literature as an experience of Italy]. Edited by Helmut Pfotenhauer. Part Two



Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung
[Art literature as an experience of Italy]

Edited by Helmut Pfotenhauer

Villa Vigoni Series, Number 5
Tübingen, Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1991, 327 pages


Review by Francesco Mazzaferro - Part Two

Fig. 11) Johann Friedrich Eich, Portrait of the writer Johann Jakob Wilhelm Heinse, 1779


We continue describing the most significant contributions to the study of art history sources, contained in the proceedings of the German-Italian conference on "Art literature as an experience of Italy" held at Villa Vigoni, on the Come Lake, in 1990. The second part deals with art literature from the second half of the eighteenth century until the early twentieth century.


Gottfried Boehm, 
The 'Description of the Images' by Wilhelm Heins

Gottfried Boehm (1942,-) taught art history in Bochum, Gießen and Basle. Along with the aforementioned Norbert Miller, he was the main editor of the five volumes of the Library of artistic literature (1992-1995).  His contribution to the conference at Villa Vigoni focused on the proto-Romantic writer Wilhelm Heinse (1749 -1803). In the German art literature, he marked a fundamental step, inaugurating the genre of the literary description of the paintings (with the collection of the Düsseldorfer Gemäldebriefe of 1776-1777 [40], a series of fictitious letters to a friend, describing the paintings in the Düsseldorf gallery). From the point of view of the history of taste, Heinse was the big opponent of Winckelmann, as he harshly attacked the latter’s obsession with the male statues of Greek antiquity [41], while showing veneration for the colours of the Venetians and Rubens.

Boehm's writing is all dedicated to the lexical study of some Heinse’s letters. As a writer on art, Heinse intended to describe the pleasant effect that the paintings may have on the viewers, aiming at creating through his texts a trait d'union between the surface of the painting and the eye of the viewer admiring it [42], and managing in some cases to even communicate the feeling of sexual excitement for the beauty of the bodies. For him, paintings were not objects, but sources of energy and pleasure. The description was very detailed, and focused not on the action displayed, but on the relationship between all the parts of the picture (figures, objects, landscapes) and the whole. The goal was to run the reader along the same cognitive path which the eye of a viewer would follow, analysing the construction of the painting and deriving from it an impression of naturalness [43].


Giorgio Cusatelli, 
Canova as an "art theorist"

Giorgio Cusatelli (1930-2007) was one of the most important Italian scholars of German literature (and for many years the director of the publishing house Garzanti). We owe him a brief writing on Antonio Canova (1757 -1822) as an art theorist, which opens explaining that the sculptor – although he expressed the view that artists should not originate aesthetic thought and considered therefore classicism as a style and not a thought [44] – was a much cultivated artist. His Thoughts on Fine Arts, published posthumously by Melchior Missirini in 1824, revealed his Aristotelian approach, with which he opposed Winckelmann’s Platonism, and rejected the thesis of the latter on the primacy of Greek sculpture and the Hellenistic classicism of Thordvaldsen [45].

Fig. 12) Antonio Canova, Venus Italica, 1804-1811
Fig. 13) Bertel Thorvaldsen, Venus with apple, 1813-16

In fact, some of the proto-romantic features of Canova explained why he had been criticized in Germany as insufficiently classicist, especially by Carl Ludwig Fernow [46].


Fig. 14) Carl Ludwig Fernow, Roman studies, 1806

Friedmar Apel, 
C.G. Carus’ Italian acrobatics. Art experiences and organization of a middle-class life in the 19th century

The German scholar Friedmar Apel (1948,-) dedicated his contribution to a little known personalities outside Germany: the physician and painter Carl Gustav Carus (1789 -1869). Author of a very broad scientific production (with works in different fields of medicine), Carus left us 1,500 paintings and also writings in the field of artistic literature [47]. His program was “marring science and poetic spirit” [48]. In his Nine Letters on Landscape Painting (Neun Briefen über Landschaftsmalerei [49]), he proposed the theme of the sameness between the divine and the landscape; he stated that the world of real things and the one of the ideas was unified by the essential nature of measurement units (area, line, point). The pictorial depiction of the landscape would therefore be nothing but a representation of the spirit of the world [50] and would allow human beings to vanish into the immensity of the divine [51]. His "Journey to Germany, Italy and Switzerland in the year 1828” [52] relaunched the theme of the synthesis of art and science, as well as between religion and landscape. The travel diaries in Italy also revealed a dichotomy between his admiration for art and the constant negative bias on the Italian reality of the period. He was, nevertheless, one of the few German travellers to take an interest of Italian contemporary art, commenting among other things the work "The last farewell of Romeo and Juliet" by Francesco Hayez [53].

Fig. 15) Carl Gustav Carus, Pilgrim in the rocky valley, about 1820
Fig. 16) Francesco Hayez, The last farewell of Romeo and Juliet, 1823


Claudia Becker,
Germany and Italy. The meaning of pre-Raphaelite paintings in the artistic conceptions of Friedrich Schlegel


Professor Claudia Becker teaches sociology of mass media in Padeborn. Her contribution revealed us the philosopher and literature critic Friedrich Schlegel in the perspective of an art critic. The writings that he included in his magazine "Europe" in Paris during the Napoleonic era were central to this activity [54]. From the French capital Schlegel attacked the pro-classicist Propyläen magazine, inspired by Goethe in Weimar, placing himself in the proto-romantic prospect of Wackenroder and of the Sturm und Drang. At the Louvre, Friedrich Schlegel had the chance to admire the most complete collection of paintings that one was ever able to see, from the Middle Ages to modern times, concentrated in Paris thanks to the policy of requisitions by Napoleon [55]. This huge art collection allowed him to historicize his tastes. In his articles (published in 1803), he criticized as a romantic the Carraccis [56], Guido Reni and Domenichino [57], and considered the school of Bologna as the origin of the Italian art decadence; his favourites were the primitives, i.e. the Italian artists of the late middle age and of the fifteenth century [58], and especially Bellini, Perugino, Mantegna and Masaccio, of whom he appreciated "the severe forms and the relations of the purity" [59]; the latest painters he considered worthy of his consideration were Titian, Correggio, Giulio Romano and Andrea del Sarto [60]. With Schlegel, the cult of Raphael shifted from the triumph of the great classical paintings, above all the Transfiguration, which was discussed at the Louvre as the most beautiful painting in history (Mengs, Goethe, Hegel), to the intimacy of the Madonnas, especially the Madonna with the Blue Diadem for the delicacy of its colours (it is now considered a minor work, performed by Raphael with the students of his school) [61]. Moreover, in contrast to the existing doctrine in Napoleonic times, Schlegel believed that true art should have a religious subject; thus, he created the programmatic basis for the Nazarenes who would form the Brotherhood of St. Luke in Rome in 1809.

Fig. 17) Raphael and Gianfrancesco Penni, Madonna with the Blue Diadem, 1510-1511

Lucia Borghese,
Art Literature in Florence in the late nineteenth century: the writings of Karl Hillebrand and Adolf von Hildebrand


Lucia Borghese Bruschi teaches German language and literature at the University of Florence. Her paper was dedicated to the aesthetics production of the historian Karl Hillebrand (1829-1884), the writer Isolde Kurz (1853 -1944) and the sculptor Adolf von Hildebrand (1847 -1921). The three were active in Florence in the late nineteenth century. Compared to the capitals of the European culture of the time, the city of Florence was characterized by small size, a more relaxed pace of life and - as von Hildebrand wrote to his parents in 1867 - was a real paradise on earth [62]. The three formed an ideologically conservative group, rejecting the assertion of the bourgeoisie, the values of the French Revolution, the uprisings of 1848, industrialization, photography and all new image-reproduction technologies: Isolde Kurz idealized Florence as the last bastion of an aristocratic and traditional society, that rejects the industrial processes which were ongoing in the German empire [63].  She celebrated Florence because it was not ruining with smoke the elsewhere polluted air of the big cities.

Fig. 18) Adolf von Hildebrand, The hunt of the Amazons, 1887-1888

It is perhaps surprising that a conservative mind like Hillebrand triggered the first negative reaction to the discovery of the primitives. In those years, it was developing in Florence and Europe a real 'romantic' cult for Fra Angelico; he opposed to it, in 1860, the argument that the faces and types in his paintings were all the same, like if they were the result of a mechanized process. In short, Beato Angelico reminded Hillebrand of the standardisation of mass industrial production [64]. Even the upper room in the cloister of Santa Croce, then attributed to Giotto and now to Taddeo Gaddi, seemed degraded by the first hints of an alienated mass tourism (alas, he did not know that the few visitors in 1860 would certainly not be considered now anymore as an alienating factor in town, in comparison with current numbers). In short, the art of the primitive was associated with the defects of the modern world (standardization, anonymity), and the only cure seemingly was to return to Raphael, Leonardo and Titian [65]. In 1873, Hillebrand published an anonymous pamphlet (Twelve letters of a heretic in terms of aesthetics [66]) in which he proclaimed the Apollonian art of Adolf von Hildebrand as art regeneration and recovery of its naturally aristocratic identity.

Fig. 19) Taddeo Gaddi, Tree of Life, The Last Supper and sacred stories, about 1355

Also the sculptor Adolf von Hildebrand had a horror of the modern world and its relativism. The solution was for him to return to a theology of art. He lived retired in the cloister of Saint Francis of Paola [67]. Isolde idealized him as naive man, unexperienced of the things of the world, who did not care for anything outside of art. For him, "art is an absolute" [68]. In 1893 he published a writing on the problem of form, entitled "The problem of form in figurative art" [69]. The text had great diffusion, being published in French in 1903 and in English in 1907, in Hungarian in 1910, in Russian in 1914, and finally in Italian in 1949. Any form must escape the play of light, avoid photographic outcomes and not give rise to any effect: the viewers have to identify themselves with the form, not the other way around. The form must indeed be designed in such a way that the aesthetic effect of the work cannot be subject to any change due to external causes [70].

Fig. 20) Adolf Hildebrand, Standing Young, 1881-1884


Giacomo Agosti
"Historians of art", "Connoisseurs" and "Museum officials": the German colleagues of Adolfo Venturi at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth century


Fig. 21) The volume of Giacomo Agosti on Adolfo Venturi

The essay by Giacomo Agosti, Professor of History and methodology of art criticism at the Brera Academy in Milan, was dedicated to the relationship between Adolfo Venturi (1856-1941) and the German-speaking world. Agosti devoted to Venturi an essay in 1996 entitled The birth of the history of art in Italy ("La nascita della storia dell'arte in Italia2) [71]; moreover, he also curated the catalogue of his correspondence [72]. The young art historian from Modena published at the age of 26, in 1882, the catalogue of the Royal Estense Gallery in Modena [73] and immediately showed to have higher qualities than any other Italian art critic. His study led him, very young, in contact with Hubert Janitschek (1846-1893), who was also still a young professor at the University of Strasbourg and Director of the local art gallery. It was the beginning of an intensive cooperation with the German-speaking world, which took a break only at the beginning of World War I (when the son Lionello volunteered as officer).

Prior to Venturi, the counterparties in our country of the major directors of galleries and university professors in the German world, as Henry Thode (1857-1920) and Franz Wickhoff (185 -1909), had been especially the connoisseurs, most notably Giovanni Morelli  (a physician, but also a man of great artistic culture and great familiarity with the German language) and GiovanniBattista Cavalcaselle (often considered instead by the Germans more a practitioner that a man of profound art culture). With Venturi, for the first time, the German world was confronted with a modern professional, able to handle the administration of fine arts (since 1888, he was heading the Central Directorate of Antiquities and Fine Arts in Rome) [74]. For his part, as Borchardt recognized in 1904 [75], Venturi promoted the awareness in Italy of the major European monographs on Italian art, including many German studies: he spread among Italian scholars the essays on Michelangelo by Blanc [76], Grimm [77] and Justi [78], the monograph on Giotto by Thode [79], the one on Mantegna by Kristeller [80], and then the works by Schmarsow on Donatello [81] and by Vischer on Signorelli [82]. Venturi also ensured the support of many German-speaking scholars for his "Historical Archive of Art". His interest in the German art criticism, however, was limited to the assessments made by German scholars on Italian art. Furthermore, unlike what was happening with art criticism in Germany, for instance with Meier-Graefe and von Seidlitz, he had no interest in contemporary art. Often forced to deal with a very aggressive policy of purchases (such as the one by Bode for the Berlin museums), Venturi decided to involve the directors of foreign museums in a policy of preservation of the heritage of our country, inviting them to be part of the commissions to authorizing exports. Thereby, he made them aware of the need not to impoverish the Italian cultural scene [83].


NOTES

[40] The fictitious letters by Heinse were published in the journal Teutsche Merkur between 1776 and 1777.

[41] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, edited by Helmut Pfotenhauer, Tübingen, Niemeyer, 1991, 327 pages. Villa Vigoni Series, Number 5. Quotation at page 33.

[42] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 22.

[43] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 30.

[44] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 201.

[45] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 198.

[46] Fernow, Carl Ludwig - Ueber den Bildhauer Canova und dessen Werke, in: Fernow, Römische Studien, first volume, Zurich, Gessner, 1806, pages 11-248.

[47] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 208.

[48] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 210.

[49] Carus, Carl Gustav - Neun Briefe über Landschaftsmalerei, geschrieben in den Jahren 1815 - 1824. Zuvor ein Brief von Goethe als Einleitung (Nine letters on landscape painting, written in the years 1815-1824. Preceded by a letter of Goethe as an introduction), Leipzig, Fleischer Verlag, 1831, 212 pages. The text is available at 
http://reader.digitale-sammlungen.de/resolve/display/bsb10258110.html.

[50] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 214.

[51] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 216.

[52] Carus, Carl Gustav - Reise durch Deutschland, Italien und die Schweiz im Jahre 1828, Lipsia, Fleischer Verlag, In two parts, 1835, pages 362 and 348. Texts available at the addresses 
https://opacplus.bsb-muenchen.de/Vta2/bsb10466541/bsb:BV008750794 
and https://opacplus.bsb-muenchen.de/Vta2/bsb10466542/bsb:BV008750795.

[53] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 220.

[54] Schlegel, Friedrich – Nachricht von den Gemählden in Paris, in Europa: eine Zeitschrift, 1803, N. 1, pages 108–157. Schlegel, Friedrich - Nachtrag italiänischer Gemählde, in: Europa. Eine Zeitschrift, 1803, N. 2, pages. 96–116.

[55] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 228.

[56] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 225.

[57] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 228.

[58] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 228.

[59] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 229.

[60] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 229.

[61] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 230.

[62] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 263.

[63] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 268.

[64] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 265.

[65] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 266.

[66] Hillebrand, Karl - Zwölf Briefe eines ästhetischen Ketzers, Berlin, Oppenheim, 1874, 127 pages.

[67] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 273.

[68] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 274.

[69] von Hildebrand, Adolf - Das Problem der Form in der bildenden Kunst, Strasburgo, J.H.E. Heitz, 1893, 125 pages.

[70] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 275.

[71] Agosti, Giacomo - La nascita della storia dell'arte in Italia: Adolfo Venturi, dal museo all'università, 1880-1940, Marsilio, 1996, 274 pages.

[74] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 290.

[75] Rudolf Borchardt, The robbed Italy and the foreign museums, La Tribuna, 29 October 1904.

[76] Blanc, Charles - L'Œuvre et la vie de Michel-ange, dessinateur, sculpteur, peintre, architecte et poëte, Paris, Gazette des beaux-arts, 1876, 343 pages. The text is available at 
http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k932186f.

[77] Grimm, Herman - Leben Michelangelo's, Hannover, C. Rümpler, 1860, in two volumes, pages 471 and 598. Texts available at the addresses 
http://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/grimm1860bd1 
e http://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/grimm1863bd2.

[78] Justi, Carl  - Michelangelo: Beiträge zur Erklärung der Werke und des Menschen, Lipsia, Breitkopf und Härtel, 1900, 430 pages.

[79] Thode, Henry – Giotto, Bielefeld, Leipzig, Velhagen und Klasing, 1899, 150 pages. 
See https://archive.org/stream/giotto00thod#page/n5/mode/2up.

[80] Kristeller, Paul - Andrea Mantegna, London, Longmans, Green, 1901, 511 pages. 
See: https://archive.org/stream/andreamantegna00kris#page/n9/mode/2up.

[81] Schmarsow August - Donatello. Eine Studie über den Entwicklungsgang des Künstlers und die Reihenfolge seiner Werke, Breslavia, 1886, Verein für Geschichte der Bildenden Künste zu Breslau, 56 pages. 
See: https://archive.org/details/donatelloeinestu00schm.

[82] Vischer, Robert - Luca Signorelli und die italienische Renaissance, Lipsia, Veit und Comp, 418 pages. 
See: https://archive.org/stream/lucasignorelliu00signgoog#page/n8/mode/2up.

[83] Kunstliteratur als Italienerfahrung, (quoted) …, p. 299.


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