Jan Białostocki

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Jan Białostocki (Polish: [ˈjan bjawɔˈstɔt͡skʲi]; August 14, 1921 – December 25, 1988) was a Polish historian who was born in Saratov, Russia and died in Warsaw. He is considered to be one of the most renowned Polish art historians of the 20th century.[1]

Jan Białostocki
Białostocki in 1988
Born(1921-08-14)14 August 1921
Saratov, Russia
Died25 December 1988(1988-12-25) (aged 67)
Warsaw, Poland
AwardsAby Warburg Prize (1980)
Herder Prize (1970)
Academic background
EducationUniversity of Warsaw
Academic work
DisciplineHistorian
InstitutionsNational Museum in Warsaw
Main interestsHistory of art

Life and work

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During the German Occupation of Poland (1939–45), Białostocki studied at the so-called "Secret University of Warsaw" philosophy and art history under Wladyslaw Tatarkiewicz, Tadeusz Kotarbiński and Michał Walicki. From September 1944 to May 1945 he was a prisoner in several German concentration camps. After World War II he worked for about ten years as an assistant at the National Museum, Warsaw and from 1956 on, he directed the museum's art gallery. From 1945 on, he also worked at the University of Warsaw, first as an assistant at the Department of Medieval Art, then as a lecturer. In 1962 he was appointed professor of art history.[2]

Since 1964 Białostocki was a member of the Comité International d'Histoire de l'Art, since 1973 a member of the Institute for Advanced Study of Princeton University. He lectured at numerous academic institutions and museums in many European countries, the USA and Mexico, for instance, at Princeton University (1958), Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut (1965–1966),[3] New York University (1972), the University of Wisconsin (1972), the Pennsylvania State University (1973), the Collège de France (1978) and the University of Cambridge (1984–1985).[4] He also participated in the Twentieth International Congress for the History of Art in New York City.[5] In 1980 he was awarded the first ever Aby Warburg Prize of Hamburg.[6]

Białostocki's research interests were exceptionally broad and included the art of the Renaissance and the Baroque and Rococo, Rembrandt and the Dutch seventeenth century, Romanticism, history painting, the history of art doctrines, and methodological questions of the history of art. According to Józef Grabski, he "tried to instill in his students a need for a broad perspective when looking at a particular work of art. He was, in a way, an intellectual son of Erwin Panofsky. Prof. Białostocki directed the attention of his students to the wide context of every work of art: social, psychological, archival, but also historical, economics, as well as purely artistic. [...] He tried to show us the art historical research not only as pure history of art, but in connection with other humanist disciplines."[7] He has published more than 600 publications in several languages mainly on art from the Renaissance to the 18th century.

Białostocki was elected a foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1971.[8]

Select publications

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  • Poussin i teoria klasycyzmu (1953)
  • Pojęcie manieryzmu i problem odrębności sztuki polskiej w końcu XVI i w początku XVII wieku (1953)
  • Cyrkiel i „Melancholia”. O teorii sztuki Abrechta Dürera (1954)
  • Malarstwo europejskie w zbiorach polskich (1955)
  • Badania ikonograficzne nad Rembrandtem (1957)
  • Metoda ikonologiczna w badaniach nad sztuką (1957)
  • Pięć wieków myśli o sztuce (1959)
  • "Dürer, Albrecht". In Encyclopedia of World Art (1961)
  • Styl i modus w sztukach plastycznych (1961)
  • Teoria i twórczość. O tradycji i inwencji w teorii sztuki i ikonografii (1961)
  • Le "Baroque": style, epoque, attitude (1962)
  • Sztuka cenniejsza niż złoto. Opowieść o sztuce europejskiej naszej ery (1963)
  • "Iconography and Iconology". In Encyclopedia of World Art (1963)
  • Encompassing Themes and Archetypal Images (1965)
  • Der Manierismus zwischen Triumph und Dämmerung (1965)
  • Późny gotyk: rozwój pojęcia i terminu (1965)
  • Stil und Ikonographie. Studien zur Kunstwissenschaft (1966)
  • Kompozycja emblematyczna epitafiów śląskich XVI wieku (1968)
  • Symbolika drzwi w sepulkralnej sztuce baroku (1968)
  • Rembrandt's "Eques Polonus" (1969)
  • Erwin Panofsky (1892-1968) (1970)
  • Two Types of International Mannerism: Italian and Northern (1970)
  • William Hogarth (1972)
  • Spätmittelalter und beginnende Neuzeit (1972)
  • The Art of the Renaissance in Eastern Europe (1976)
  • Vom heroischen Grabmal zum Bauernbegräbnis (1977)
  • Refleksje i syntezy ze świata sztuki (1978)
  • Die Eigenart der Kunst Venedigs (1980)
  • Historia sztuki wśród nauk humanistycznych (1980)
  • Zeichnungen alter Meister aus polnischen Sammlungen (1981)
  • Symbole i obrazy w świecie sztuki (1982)
  • Dürer und die Humanisten (1983)
  • Dürer and his Critics, 1500-1971 (1986)
  • "Die Todessymbolik der Tür". In Festschrift zum 70. Geburtstag von Erik Forssman (1987)
  • The Message of Images. Studies in the History of Art (1988)
  • Sztuka XV wieku. Od Parlerów do Dürera (2010)

Further reading

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  • Franco Bernabei, "Jan Białostocki, Formalism, and Iconology". Artibus et Historiae, Volume 11, No. 22 (1990), pp. 9–21.
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References

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  1. ^ According to Maria Poprzęcka, he was "one of the greatest scholars and humanists of our time" and had "world fame". See Maria Poprzęcka, "A reminiscence about Jan Białostocki (1921-1988)", Polish Art Studies, 12 (1991), pp. 251-253
  2. ^ Chrościcki, Juliusz (1988). Jan Białostocki (1921–1988). Rocznik Towarzystwa Naukowego Warszawskiego. p. 26-30.
  3. ^ Jan Białostocki, "Ars Auro Prior". In Jean G. Harrell and Alina Wierzbiańska, eds., Aesthetics in Twentieth-century Poland: Selected Essays. Cranbury, New Jersey 1973, p. 270.
  4. ^ Jan Bialostocki: Slade Professor from 1984-85
  5. ^ Studies in Western Art: Acts of the Twentieth International Congress of the History of Art
  6. ^ Abi Warburg-Preis Archived 2015-02-20 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "The 35th Anniversary of the IRSA Institute for Art Historical Research". Archived from the original on 2015-04-15. Retrieved 2015-04-08.
  8. ^ "Jan Bialostocki (1921 - 1988)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
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