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Emily Opper Visual Art in Vienna: Renaissance-1830
When one thinks about Vienna from the period
of time from the Renaissance up to the 1830's, visual art doesnt
really come to mind. The reason
for this is that art was not prominent during much of this time. The history of visual art in Vienna from the
16th until at least the 18th century is in large
part the history of Vienna as the seat of the Hapsburg Empire.
When the emperor was based in Vienna the arts gained status and
commission. When the reigning
emperor moved the seat of power, the visual arts suffered a corresponding
decline in the city. During the years from 1493 to 1519 Emperor Maximillian
I reigned. Although he made
Vienna a center of scholarly activities, he did not live there. At that time, patronage by the royalty was
the main source of support for the arts.
Therefore, the arts suffered during Maximillians reign
since he did not commission works in Vienna.
However, since Vienna was developing as an educational center,
many foreigners came to the City, some of whom were visual artists.
The primary works of significance at the beginning of the 16th
century were by foreign artists such as Lucas Cranach of Holland, who
painted scholars at Viennas university.
Under Charles V who reigned next, there was
a further decline in artistic life.
He was rarely Vienna at all and during his reign the empire suffered
from a great fire and the first Ottoman siege.
[1]
When Ferdinand I became emperor in 1558, he
decided to settle in Vienna and as a result artistic life flourished.
Under his reign and that of his son, Maximillian II, Italian artists
moved to Vienna in order to benefit from these Emperors patronage. Maximillian was the first to actually collect art. When the imperial court moved from Vienna to
Prague under Rudolf II, who reigned from 1576-1612, there was once again
a decline in the arts in Vienna. Not
only was the seat of power once again moved but the Counter-Reformation
was in full swing during this period.
Most of the art at this time was commissioned by the churches
and the artists were checked to make sure they were only using the themes
the church sanctioned. Under the emperors Mathias and Ferdinand II,
the imperial court returned to Vienna.
The Thirty Years War, from 1618-1648 really put a strain on artistic
and cultural life. One of the
few significant Austrian artists, Tobias Poca of Konstanz, painted the
Martyrdom of St. Stephen for the high altar in the cathedral
of Vienna. However, for the most part, art during this
time was of poor quality. This
was because of the lack of freedom as well as the lack of training for
artists during this period. The
lack of freedom was caused by the fact that painters and sculptors had
to belong to guilds and follow their rules. Only the few artists who
worked directly for the court had any creative freedom at all.
Along with the lack of freedom, the guilds training of
artists was poor. During most of the 17th Century
Viennese art was of poor quality compared to the art in the other parts
of Europe. In 1692
the Kaiserliche Akademie was founded by Peter Strudel in an effort promote
the arts. The Kaiserliche Akademie
was not successful and closed after Strudel died in 1714. In 1725 the Akademie de Maler, Bidhaur und Baukunstler was founded
by Jacob van Schuppen, who had trained as a painter in Paris. This institution was successful and really
helped to train new artists, enrolling 200 students a year. Austrian painters and sculptors began receiving
important commissions in the early 18th century. Johann Michael Rottmayr was a well-known artist
during this time. He had trained
in Italy and painted in the Baroque style that was popular during this
period of time. The most influential
painter was George Raphael Donner.
His most famous piece was the Providetia Fountain, which he did
in 1739. It was commissioned by the city authorities
for the Neuer Markt. During
this time period there was an increased interest in collecting art. Although the Hapsburgs Emperors, such as Charles
VI, were great art patrons, commissions were no longer only given by
the Emperor or the Church, nobles also patronized artists. This resulted
in a great flourishing if artistic life in 18th Century Vienna. The later part of the Century also saw a change
from Italian influence to French influence in Viennas artistic
life. The period of time between 1815 and 1848 in
Vienna is associated with the idea Biedermeier. Biedermeier involves a personal, intimate attitude towards life
and developed with the growth of the middle class. Painters of this school painted
landscapes, flowers and portraits.
Art in Vienna flourished. History
painting, on the other hand, was being promoted in France as means of
propaganda for nationalist and patriotic ideas but was not that significant
in Vienna. The main Biedermeier
painters were Ferdinand George Waldmuller, Peter Fendi, and Josef Franz
Dahauser. Waldmuller was a teacher
at the Akademie and was a strong realist painter. He painted the Vienna Woods and the Bourgouseie.
Rudolf Alt was the most important watercolor painter of this
time and tried to capture Vienna through his paintings.
Together with the political and social withdrawal into
private sphere that was characteristic of Biedermeier, Viennese decorative
arts attained an extraordinary level of quality at this time, attested
by exquisite objects in glass, porcelain, and silver as well as furniture;
collectively this art is summed up as Alt-Wiener Kunst.
[2]
One
can see from this overview how the roles of monarchy, the church and
the artisans guilds affected the visual arts in Vienna during
the period discussed. Only when
the artists no longer had to rely solely on the Emperor or the Church
and were freed from the guild restrictions could they develop and flourish
creatively and prolifically.
[1]
.Jane Turner, The Dictionary of Art,
1996, Macmillian Publishers Limited, London, p.442
[2]
.Ibid, pg.444 bibliography |
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