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382 Matthew Rampley
Eitelberger’s views were central to his activity not only as a scholar but also as mu-
seum director, and this brings us back to his letter to Henszlmann. As Diana Reynolds
has argued, at its very foundation, the Museum of Art and Industry, and its school of
design and applied art, was an imperial institution intended to encompass the creative
activities of all peoples of the Empire ; while he lacked the resources to set up further
museums beyond Vienna, he was highly supportive of local initiatives that established
museums and schools of design and industry in, for example, BrĂĽnn (Brno), Prague,
Reichenberg (Liberec) and Budapest.54 The museum Eitelberger founded stayed broadly
loyal to this mission, long after his death. The pages of the Mittheilungen des k. k. Ă–ster-
reichischen Museums (and its successor from 1898, Kunst und Kunsthandwerk) are full of
reviews and reports not only on major international museums and exhibitions, but also
on often quite minor and provincial towns across the Austrian crownlands. Indeed, the
museums of industry and applied arts were, he thought, a showcase for the universal
artistic culture he understood to span national, ethnic and class differences. This also
shaped their relation to their publics. When he founded the Museum of Art and Indus-
try the primary audience consisted of industrial producers : artisans and designers, as
well as the larger-scale industrialists who commissioned particular designs and were
responsible for their large-scale production. For even though the aim was to improve
taste, Eitelberger viewed this problem in terms of supply rather than demand. The idea
that the purchasing public might become more discerning thanks to the museum ex-
hibits was a secondary consideration. Yet though reform was directed at producers, the
museums of design were not to be understood as being for their particular needs. As he
noted in his review of design museums across the Empire : “Es handelt sich bei diesen
Museen nicht darum, das particulare Interesse der Fabrikanten und das Einzelinteresse
der Handwerker zu fördernÂ
– denn für solche particulare Interessen gründet man keine
Museen […].”55 Again, this included the issue of cultural identity, for while many mu-
seums were set up in smaller provincial towns, their purpose should not be to promote
only local or national culture, for the ultimate goal was to improve competitiveness on
the world market : “Ebenso ist es grundfalsch, solche Museen auf nationaler Grundlage
[…]. Taste is not something that can be placed under a political glass cover ; it does not tolerate iso-
lation.” Eitelberger, Die Kunstbestrebungen Ă–sterreichs (cit. n.Â
38), p.Â
199.
54 D. Reynolds, Die Ă–sterreichische Synthese : Metropole, Peripherie und die kunstgewerblichen
Fachschulen des Museums, in : Noever (ed.), Kunst und Industrie (cit. n.Â
3), pp.Â
203–218.
55 “With these museums it is not a question of supporting the particular interests of factory owners
or the individual interests of craftsmen ; we don’t establish museums for such particular interests.”
Eitelberger, Die Gewerbemuseen in den Kronländern Ă–sterreichs (cit. n.Â
4), p.Â
254.
Open Access © 2019 by BÖHLAU VERLAG GMBH & CO.KG, WIEN
Rudolf Eitelberger von Edelberg
Netzwerker der Kunstwelt
- Titel
- Rudolf Eitelberger von Edelberg
- Untertitel
- Netzwerker der Kunstwelt
- Autoren
- Julia RĂĽdiger
- Eva Kernbauer
- Kathrin Pokorny-Nagel
- Raphael Rosenberg
- Patrick Werkner
- Tanja Jenni
- Verlag
- Böhlau Verlag
- Ort
- Wien
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-205-20925-6
- Abmessungen
- 17.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 562
- Kategorie
- Biographien