Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd. The Burlington Magazine
Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd. The Burlington Magazine
Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd. The Burlington Magazine
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THE LITERATURE OF ART
the publication,
style, readers unfamiliar with asthe one ofarchi-
the Stockholmnot only during the period in Copenhagen,
tect's very large euvreStudies
willin thefind
History aof Art,
sym- of Gunnar but also when in Dresden.
pathetic introductionBerefelt's
to the Philippindividual
Otto Runge. Zwischen Auf- The plates at the end of Berefelt's vol-
monuments here. Thebruch very lavish
und Opposition corpus
1777-1802. ume are an invaluable collection of illus-
of illustrations finally Mris unique
Berefelt in his
explains that theinterest in trations, sometimes reproducing extremely
Palladio literature for sheer size as well as obscure and unfamiliar works not other-
Runge 'ist urspriinglich aus friiheren Studien
for its new photographs. j.s. zur Kunst and Asthetik der Goethezeit hervorge-wise accessible. (One grumble here: Wh
gangen, wobei der schwer zu bemeisternde Prob- reproduce the nasty re-engraved version
lem-Komplex, der sich hinter den Hauptbegrifenof Flaxman's engravings published as lat
"Klassizismus" und "Romantik" verbirgt imas 1872, when the original late eighteenth-
Philipp Otto Runge. Zwischen Auf- Vordergrund stand.' His volume deals with century editions are not hard to find?)
bruch und Opposition 1777-1802. the artist's stay in Hamburg after 1793,Source material as well as contemporar
By Gunnar Berefelt. 249 pp. +174 ill. followed by the period in Copenhagenparallels are sometimes juxtaposed with
Uppsala (Almqvist & Wiksell), Sw. (1799-i8oi), and finally the first years inRunge's own work, often revealing start
kr.48. Dresden. The author presents an excellent, ling comparisons and adding a great dea
visually to the discussions in the text.
detailed analysis of these vitally important,
Philipp Otto Runge is one of the most formative years studying the complex As a result Runge's neoclassical phase i
important figures in the development of blend of interests ranging from Homer,really properly evaluated for the first time
German Romantic painting. He was Virgil, and Ovid (to whose writings theand the seeds of his later Romantic develop-
praised at the time by Goethe, the Schlegel young artist was introduced while in Ham-ment - sown before he arrived in Dresden
brothers and many other contemporaries,burg) to the mysticism and naivety of Tieck- become clear. In his youth romantic and
and his premature death in 181 o was muchand Wackenroder. It was in Munich that neoclassical tendencies are found side by
lamented. This further addition to the Runge began to draw and paint, having side: but in German art these were not
Runge literature fills a vital gap, andmet itsartists and others interested in art in antithetical principles but simultaneo
importance can be fully appreciated when his brother's circle. These influential friend- attempts to create a new basis for art
one considers previous studies on this ships, including that of the future publisher Berefelt has already pointed out in an
artist. Friedrich Perthes, are discussed in the article in the Journal of Aesthetics and A
Nearly forty years after his death second
his part of Berefelt's book and illus- Criticism in 1960). Later in Runge's wo
trated with many quotations not only from the antique gives way to an increased
brother Daniel collected together the letters
and other writings, and published themRunge's
as own letters but from other con- mysticism, a striving for a universal sym-
temporary sources as well. The author
Hinterlassene Schriften. These two volumes bolism, the formulation of a new vision of
have remained ever since indispensable draws
to a clear and thorough picture of landscape and an admiration for early
Runge's biographers and critics; indeed,artistic and literary life in Hamburg at the German painters (particularly Diirer). But
some volumes on the artist contain very very end of the eighteenth century. already, before 1802, Runge's concept of
Perthes much later - in a letter of 1840
little apart from extracts from the writings, the painter-poet had been growing, and
quoted by the author - was very aptly to had been foreshadowed, for example, in
and Forsthoff's incomplete edition (1938)
summarize Runge: 'Otto's Anschauungen that fascinating early Romantic novel,
did not supersede the original publication
of 1840-I. One of the most monumental vereinigen in sich festen christlichen Glauben, Heinse's Ardinghello und die gliickseligen
pub- Phantasie und tiefen Forschungsgeist.' Inseln. DAVID IRWIN
studies of Runge is Otto B6ttcher's feurige
But
lished in 1937, but it is not of much use as before the full flowering of Runge's
an art-historical analysis. Other general,
'fantasy' lies the period of the Copenhagen
but far from detailed, studies of Runge Academy, where he was taught by the
include those of Schmidt (1923, second neoclassicist Abildgaard and the portraitist Franz Anton Maulbertsch 1724-1796.
edition 1956) and Bohner (1937), andand thelandscape-painter Jens Juel. The in- By Klara Garas. vii+333 pp. (16 figs. +
much more valuable ones by Isermeyer fluence of Copenhagen on German paint- 16 colour pl.) +315 pl. (Translated from
and Degner (both 1940). Pauli produced ing has already been dealt with in detail by the Hungarian by Klara Garas and
in 1916 an excellent study of the drawings Charlotte Hintze in her Kopenhagen und die Tilda Alpari.) Vienna (Amalthea-Ver-
and scissor-cuts in the Kunsthalle at Ham- deutsche Malerei um i8oo (1937). But Bere- lag).
burg, and among other works on specialfelt now goes most usefully into more detail
aspects of Runge the most notable are two about one such German artist in Copen- Maulbertsch was the greatest painter of
analyses of his relationship with Tieck, by hagen, discussing his ideas and reproducing the splendid century of Austrian civiliza-
Krebs (1909) and Grundy (1930), and thea large number of the drawings. This was tion which began with the architecture of
correspondence with Goethe published asa period of eclecticism, but with a general Fischer von Erlach and culminated in the
Volume 51 of the Goethe-Gesellschaft (1940).neoclassical tendency. He drew from the music of Beethoven. Thus he was probably
Finally, the Art Bulletin of 1942 included anude and from the antique, copied illus- the greatest painter produced by that
penetrating analysis of the landscapes bytrations from Tischbein's recently pub- country up to the time of Kokoschka. Yet
Otto Georg von Simson. lished edition of Hamilton's collection of he could scarcely be less known in Britain
It is apparent from this brief summary vases, and was enthusiastic about Flax- (it is significant that the Murray Dictionary
of the Runge literature that what is really man's classical and Dante illustrations. The does not include him), and the fact is that
needed is a full, detailed, and up-to-dateversions of the Triumph of Love (slightlyeven in his own part of Europe he has not
analysis, which assesses Runge's impor- Rococo in feeling) and the Triumph of
until now been accorded the honour of a
tance in the context of both contemporary Apollo are discussed in a thorough art- full-scale monograph. Others - Professor
art and ideas. And in particular what is historical manner, showing roots in antiqueMartin Haberditzl particularly - have em-
seriously lacking is such a volume on sculpture, in paintings at Herculaneum barked on comprehensive studies of this
Runge's early work, that is before he pro- and in Raphael. Comparative examplessubject without achieving completion. Dr
duced the famous and uncompleted Tages-are also discussed, and illustrated, from theGaras has been able to base her work on
zeiten and also developed his colour theories,work of Abildgaard, and the lesser-known their efforts, and, in overcoming the diffi-
published in the last year of his life as Gerdt Hardorff and Giuseppe Anselmoculties inherent in surveying work spread
Farben-Kugel. A volume is very muchPellicia. Detailed discussions of this kind throughout Austria, Germany, Hungary
needed, in other words, on the neoclassical are precisely what is needed to assess more Bohemia, and Moravia, in palaces, monas
roots of Runge, before he soared to thefully Runge's work and relate it to that of teries and modest village churches as wel
visionary heights of romantic symbolism.his contemporaries. Revealing analyses of as collections all over the world, much of i
At last such a study has been produced, by this kind abound in the book under review,so far unnoticed by art historians, she has
'75
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THE LITERATURE OF ART
176
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