«A completely fascinating volume. Essential reading on the development of art and cultural history in the twentieth century. It confirms Edgar Wind as one of the master thinkers in both domains. Difficult, mercurial and always original, his work has never ceased to be stimulating, as this book so vividly shows. No one who heard his lectures as the first Professor of Art History at Oxford, or his 1960 Reith lectures entitled Art and Anarchy has ever forgotten the richness of their content or the elegance with which he delivered them. His brilliance and his complicated character could not emerge more clearly than in this outstanding series of essays – one as compelling as the other. It could hardly be otherwise. This is a team of both younger and more senior scholars headed by Jaynie Anderson (more responsible than any for the revival of Wind’s reputation), that includes Oswyn Murray (who knew him well), and Elizabeth Sears (who knows the complex cast of characters involved in the history of the great institute founded by Aby Warburg in Hamburg better than anyone else). Here are rich accounts of Wind’s challenges to Warburg’s colleagues and protegés such as Ernst Cassirer, Fritz Saxl, Erwin Panofsky and many others, as well as his fundamental role in the transfer of the Institute to London and the consequences of his unfortunate separation from it.»
(David Freedberg, Pierre Matisse Professor Emeritus of the History of Art, Columbia University)
«This close attention to Edgar Wind is long overdue. The vast range of interests and ideas of the German-trained mainstay of art history in England at last find proper tribute and assessment in this volume. Not only are his own close studies of cultural symbols examined anew, but his dialogues with mentors are also assessed. This collection of scholarly essays provides a much-needed suggestion of Wind’s own contributions and should spark a vital return to his legacy.»
(Larry Silver, Farquhar Professor of Art History, Emeritus, University of Pennsylvania)
Edgar Wind (1900–1971) was a cosmopolitan scholar who made important contributions to many disciplines, including philosophy, Renaissance art history and modern art criticism.
This book considers a crucial question: to understand the work of an art historian, how important is it to know their life story? In the case of Edgar Wind, biography and scholarly endeavour are intimately connected. His intellectual exchanges with leading art historians, philosophers and artists of his day were essential for his research. Moreover, his wife, Margaret Wind, was determined to establish an Edgar Wind Archive after his death.
This book is the first comprehensive study in English of Wind’s intellectual achievements.
Edited by:
Jaynie Anderson,
Bernardino Branca,
Fabio Tononi
Series edited by:
Katia Pizzi
Imprint: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Edition: New edition
Volume: 20
Dimensions:
Height: 229mm,
Width: 152mm,
Weight: 623g
ISBN: 9781800799523
ISBN 10: 1800799527
Series: Cultural Memories
Pages: 408
Publication Date: 23 January 2024
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Contents: Pablo Schneider: Edgar Wind: A Mind Naturalized in Antiquity – Fabio Tononi: Aby Warburg and Edgar Wind on the Biology of Images: Empathy, Collective Memory and the Engram – Giovanna Targia: On Details and Different Ways of Viewing Raphael: Edgar Wind and Heinrich Wölfflin – Tullio Viola: Philosophy of Culture: Naturalistic or Transcendental? A Dialogue between Edgar Wind and Ernst Cassirer – Franz Engel: ‘Chaos Reduced to Cosmos’: Reconstructing Edgar Wind’s Interpretation of Dürer’s Melencolia I – Bernhard Buschendorf: Symbol, Polarity and Embodiment: The Composite Portrait in Aby Warburg and Edgar Wind – Bernardino Branca: Edgar Wind: Metaphysics Embodied in Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel Ceiling – C. Oliver O’Donnell: A Crucial Experiment: An Historical Interpretation of Edgar Wind’s ‘Hume and the Heroic Portrait’ – Ianick Takaes de Oliveira: ‘That Magnificent Sense of Disproportion with the Absolute’: On Edgar Wind’s Critique of (Humourless) Modern Art – Oswyn Murray: Edgar Wind and the Saving of the Warburg Institute – Elizabeth Sears: Edgar Wind and the ‘Encyclopaedic Imagination’ – Ben Thomas: Circular Arguments: Edgar Wind at Chicago, 1942–1944 – Jaynie Anderson: Understanding Excessive Brevity: The Critical Reception of Edgar Wind’s Art and Anarchy.
Jaynie Anderson AM OSI FAHA is Professor Emeritus at the University of Melbourne. Bernardino Branca is a PhD candidate at the University of Kent, UK, and co-editor of The Edgar Wind Journal. Fabio Tononi is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at NOVA University of Lisbon and co-editor of The Edgar Wind Journal.