Winckelmann and Art Criticism: Bildhauerkunst, Published in 1755, Shortly Before He Left For Rome (
Winckelmann and Art Criticism: Bildhauerkunst, Published in 1755, Shortly Before He Left For Rome (
Winckelmann and Art Criticism: Bildhauerkunst, Published in 1755, Shortly Before He Left For Rome (
Scholars such as Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1717–1768), criticised Vasari's "cult" of artistic
personality, and they argued that the real emphasis in the study of art should be the views of the
learned beholder and not the unique viewpoint of the charismatic artist. Winckelmann's writings thus
were the beginnings of art criticism. His two most notable works that introduced the concept of art
criticism were Gedanken über die Nachahmung der griechischen Werke in der Malerei und
Bildhauerkunst, published in 1755, shortly before he left for Rome (Fuseli published an English
translation in 1765 under the title Reflections on the Painting and Sculpture of the Greeks),
and Geschichte der Kunst des Altertums (History of Art in Antiquity), published in 1764 (this is the
first occurrence of the phrase ‘history of art’ in the title of a book)".[12] Winckelmann critiqued the
artistic excesses of Baroque and Rococo forms, and was instrumental in reforming taste in favor of
the more sober Neoclassicism. Jacob Burckhardt (1818–1897), one of the founders of art history,
noted that Winckelmann was 'the first to distinguish between the periods of ancient art and to link the
history of style with world history'. From Winckelmann until the mid-20th century, the field of art
history was dominated by German-speaking academics. Winckelmann's work thus marked the entry
of art history into the high-philosophical discourse of German culture.
Winckelmann was read avidly by Johann Wolfgang Goethe and Friedrich Schiller, both of whom
began to write on the history of art, and his account of the Laocoön group occasioned a response
by Lessing. The emergence of art as a major subject of philosophical speculation was solidified by
the appearance of Immanuel Kant's Critique of Judgment in 1790, and was furthered
by Hegel's Lectures on Aesthetics. Hegel's philosophy served as the direct inspiration for Karl
Schnaase's work. Schnaase's Niederländische Briefe established the theoretical foundations for art
history as an autonomous discipline, and his Geschichte der bildenden Künste, one of the first
historical surveys of the history of art from antiquity to the Renaissance, facilitated the teaching of art
history in German-speaking universities. Schnaase's survey was published contemporaneously with
a similar work by Franz Theodor Kugler.
Our 21st-century understanding of the symbolic content of art comes from a group of scholars
who gathered in Hamburg in the 1920s. The most prominent among them were Erwin
Panofsky, Aby Warburg, and Fritz Saxl. Together they developed much of the vocabulary that
continues to be used in the 21st century by art historians. "Iconography"—with roots meaning
"symbols from writing" refers to subject matter of art derived from written sources—especially
scripture and mythology. "Iconology" is a broader term that referred to all symbolism, whether
derived from a specific text or not. Today art historians sometimes use these terms
interchangeably.
Panofsky, in his early work, also developed the theories of Riegl, but became eventually more
preoccupied with iconography, and in particular with the transmission of themes related to
classical antiquity in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. In this respect his interests coincided
with those of Warburg, the son of a wealthy family who had assembled an impressive library in
Hamburg devoted to the study of the classical tradition in later art and culture. Under Saxl's
auspices, this library was developed into a research institute, affiliated with the University of
Hamburg, where Panofsky taught.
Warburg died in 1929, and in the 1930s Saxl and Panofsky, both Jewish, were forced to leave
Hamburg. Saxl settled in London, bringing Warburg's library with him and establishing
the Warburg Institute. Panofsky settled in Princeton at the Institute for Advanced Study. In this
respect they were part of an extraordinary influx of German art historians into the English-
speaking academy in the 1930s. These scholars were largely responsible for establishing art
history as a legitimate field of study in the English-speaking world, and the influence of
Panofsky's methodology, in particular, determined the course of American art history for a
generation.
Group photo 1909 in front of Clark University. Front row: Sigmund Freud, Granville Stanley Hall, Carl
Jung; back row: Abraham A. Brill, Ernest Jones, Sándor Ferenczi
Though the use of posthumous material to perform psychoanalysis is controversial among art
historians, especially since the sexual mores of Leonardo's time and Freud's are different, it is
often attempted. One of the best-known psychoanalytic scholars is Laurie Schneider Adams,
who wrote a popular textbook, Art Across Time, and a book Art and Psychoanalysis.
An unsuspecting turn for the history of art criticism came in 1914 when Sigmund Freud
published a psychoanalytical interpretation of Michelangelo's Moses titled Der Moses des
Michelangelo as one of the first psychology based analyses on a work of art.[13] Freud first
published this work shortly after reading Vasari's Lives. For unknown purposes, Freud originally
published the article anonymously.