A match not made in heaven: artist anecdotes and the “Dialogues of the Dead”

Artist anecdotes are arguably among some of the more informal and entertaining bodies of artistic literature. As such, they frequently become fertile ground for experiments with different literary forms and genres of art writing. This article focuses on one historical case, a short pamphlet by the N...

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Main Author: Hans C. Hönes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Art History, University of Birmingham 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Art Historiography
Subjects:
Online Access:httphttps://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/hones1.pdfs://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/hones1.pdf
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description Artist anecdotes are arguably among some of the more informal and entertaining bodies of artistic literature. As such, they frequently become fertile ground for experiments with different literary forms and genres of art writing. This article focuses on one historical case, a short pamphlet by the Nuremberg engraver Georg Wolfgang Knorr, with the title ‘Historic Artist-Entertainment’ (1738). Knorr’s booklet draws on an oft-repeated anecdote – told, among others, by Vasari and Sandrart -, namely the legendary meeting between Albrecht Dürer and Raffael. Knorr reconfigured this anecdote and opted for a novel way of imagining the discussions between the artists: he wrote a ‘dialogue of the dead’, staging this artistic encounter as a posthumous one, with the artists meeting each other in heaven. Knorr’s short work is intriguing for mainly one reason: it is an attempt to ‘vulgarise’ art historical knowledge by moulding it in a literary shape that was incredibly popular in mid-eighteenth-century Germany. Knorr’s text thus can serve as a case study for how authors tried to disseminate art historical knowledge amongst the new, significantly enlarged reading public of Enlightenment Europe, and which literary strategies they employed for doing so. Yet Knorr’s attempt to present art historical knowledge in a new genre – namely the dialogues of the dead – was by and large unsuccessful. Very few other dialogues of the dead with artists as protagonists were written. Moreover, Knorr himself quickly abandoned his original project of publishing a whole volume of such dialogues. The article therefore aims to discuss the reasons behind this failure, and to analyse what this might tell us about the popular appeal of artistic literature, and artist anecdotes in particular.
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spelling doaj.art-d3a3357bd3784d2bacf935c5c254db852022-12-21T22:46:55ZengDepartment of Art History, University of BirminghamJournal of Art Historiography2042-47522020-12-012323HGH1A match not made in heaven: artist anecdotes and the “Dialogues of the Dead”Hans C. Hönes0University of AberdeenArtist anecdotes are arguably among some of the more informal and entertaining bodies of artistic literature. As such, they frequently become fertile ground for experiments with different literary forms and genres of art writing. This article focuses on one historical case, a short pamphlet by the Nuremberg engraver Georg Wolfgang Knorr, with the title ‘Historic Artist-Entertainment’ (1738). Knorr’s booklet draws on an oft-repeated anecdote – told, among others, by Vasari and Sandrart -, namely the legendary meeting between Albrecht Dürer and Raffael. Knorr reconfigured this anecdote and opted for a novel way of imagining the discussions between the artists: he wrote a ‘dialogue of the dead’, staging this artistic encounter as a posthumous one, with the artists meeting each other in heaven. Knorr’s short work is intriguing for mainly one reason: it is an attempt to ‘vulgarise’ art historical knowledge by moulding it in a literary shape that was incredibly popular in mid-eighteenth-century Germany. Knorr’s text thus can serve as a case study for how authors tried to disseminate art historical knowledge amongst the new, significantly enlarged reading public of Enlightenment Europe, and which literary strategies they employed for doing so. Yet Knorr’s attempt to present art historical knowledge in a new genre – namely the dialogues of the dead – was by and large unsuccessful. Very few other dialogues of the dead with artists as protagonists were written. Moreover, Knorr himself quickly abandoned his original project of publishing a whole volume of such dialogues. The article therefore aims to discuss the reasons behind this failure, and to analyse what this might tell us about the popular appeal of artistic literature, and artist anecdotes in particular.httphttps://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/hones1.pdfs://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/hones1.pdfanecdotesenlightenmentraphaelalbrecht dürernazarenesvulgarizationart literaturedialogues of the dead
spellingShingle Hans C. Hönes
A match not made in heaven: artist anecdotes and the “Dialogues of the Dead”
Journal of Art Historiography
anecdotes
enlightenment
raphael
albrecht dürer
nazarenes
vulgarization
art literature
dialogues of the dead
title A match not made in heaven: artist anecdotes and the “Dialogues of the Dead”
title_full A match not made in heaven: artist anecdotes and the “Dialogues of the Dead”
title_fullStr A match not made in heaven: artist anecdotes and the “Dialogues of the Dead”
title_full_unstemmed A match not made in heaven: artist anecdotes and the “Dialogues of the Dead”
title_short A match not made in heaven: artist anecdotes and the “Dialogues of the Dead”
title_sort match not made in heaven artist anecdotes and the dialogues of the dead
topic anecdotes
enlightenment
raphael
albrecht dürer
nazarenes
vulgarization
art literature
dialogues of the dead
url httphttps://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/hones1.pdfs://arthistoriography.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/hones1.pdf
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