Seite - 213 - in Wiener Jahrbuch für Kunstgeschichte, Band LIX
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“i then asked myself: what ist the ‘wiener schule’” 213
Hermann21, Schlosser for instance, all curators of
the Museum ), he never talked shop with them; he
repeated anecdotes, described mannerisms of his
teachers, and enjoyed it immensely. Later when
as a young married couple22 we visited him in his
bachelor apartment behind the University or met
him in the Floriani in Piazza in the evening, it was
the same with us, but the pace was slower, there
were longer pauses between the stories and less
variety. (Wickhoff did not overcome his reserve
against our generation of pupils. None of us ever
became intimate with him. He had chosen my
husband as his assistant23 after Dvořák had been
made Professor24 – follower of Riegl – but he did
not change his attitude. All his warmth, his long-
ing for family life he kept for Dvořák. He fought
down the difficulties which Dvořák’s appointment
met; the “deutsch-national” students stormed into
class and booed Wickhoff in whom they rightly
recognized Dvořák’s protector. I will remember
this lecture. Dvořák intercepted me at the stair-
case which led down from the art historical insti-
tute. “Don’t go”, he said, “it will be grim.” And we
could hear the racket. It lasted what seemed to me
an eternity. Then suddenly it has stopped and it
was Wickhoff’s voice alone. The deputated horde
had left the classroom after having absolved their
mission.25 Wickhoff recognized in Dvořák not
only his spiritual, but also his worldly heir. It was
a father-son relationship. Dvořák was a good lis-
tener and he listened not only to the string of an-
ecdotes but also to the discussion of art historical
problems which Wickhoff tackled in his last years and to his extra-art historical interests. Wickhoff, a
great reader and Goethe enthusiast tried to finish
Goethe’s fragment […].26
This poetical ambition seems to have shoved
the scholarly one into the background in his last
years.
Wickhoff did not only seem an old man to us
because we were young but had indeed cut down
the various interests which used to fill the life of
scholars of his age. I remember him telling us
about an elderly friend that she did not mind to
go to the same resort every year: “Every mountain
looks alike […].” He never could understand her.
“But nowadays I feel the same way.” I don’t know
whether he ever travelled to Spain; I do remem-
ber that he visited the great Rembrandt Exhibit in
Amsterdam.27 “Not even Rembrandt can stand an
exhibition of so many of his works”, was his com-
ment. What would Wickhoff have said to a One-
Man-Show of Jacopo Bassano, Mostra 1957?!28
Well, he might have enjoyed it. Everything in con-
nection with Venice was dear to his heart. It was
in Venice that he spent all his leisure time – in the
years I had known him. And in Venice he died.
His love for Venice became the heritage
which he left to his pupils. It is difficult to sum
up what I owe Wickhoff as a teacher. His rejec-
tion of the cliché, the skepsis against everything
before I haven’t checked it myself, the interest in
the subject and its relation to its spiritual back-
ground- and my love for Venice.
There is one more instance which I’ll try to
formulate. He was not a connoisseur and did
21 Hermann Julius Hermann (1869–1953), 1925–1933 erster Direktor des Kunsthistorischen Museums, Direktor der
Sammlung für Plastik und Kunstgewerbe.
22 Hans Tietze und Erica Conrat heirateten im Dezember 1905.
23 Hans Tietze war 1905 und 1906 Assistent Wickhoffs.
24 Max Dvořák (1874–1921) wurde nach Riegls Tod 1905 zum außerordentlichen Professor ernannt.
25 Max Dvořák war als gebürtiger Tscheche Angriffen von deutschnationaler Seite ausgesetzt.
26 J. W. Goethes unvollendetes Festspiel „Pandora“ wurde von Wickhoff fertig gestellt.
27 Möglicherweise ist die holländische Ausstellung zur dreihundertsten Wiederkehr von Rembrandts Geburtstag im
Jahr 1906 gemeint.
28 Die Gesamtschau der Werke Jacopo Bassanos 1957 im Palazzo Ducale in Venedig war vermutlich Anlaß für eine der
letzten Europareisen Erica Tietze-Conrats vor ihrem Tod in New York 1958.
Wiener Jahrbuch für Kunstgeschichte
Band LIX
Entnommen aus der FWF-E-Book-Library
- Titel
- Wiener Jahrbuch für Kunstgeschichte
- Band
- LIX
- Herausgeber
- Bundesdenkmalamt Wien
- Institut für Kunstgeschichte der Universität Wien
- Verlag
- Böhlau Verlag
- Ort
- Wien
- Datum
- 2011
- Sprache
- deutsch, englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-205-78674-0
- Abmessungen
- 19.0 x 26.2 cm
- Seiten
- 280
- Schlagwörter
- research, baroque art, methodology, modern art, medieval art, historiography, Baraock, Methodolgiem, Kunst, Wien
- Kategorie
- Kunst und Kultur