The Past Is Evolutionary, the Future Is Byzantine: Kurt Weitzmann’s Contribution to the Research on Pictorial Narration
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Development of Weitzmann’s Narrative Analysis
2.1. Institutional Background and Early Influences behind the Narrative Method
2.2. Narrative Analysis Developed through Teaching and Lecturing
2.3. Publishing the Method in Roll and Codex: Narrative Analysis for Book Illustration
3. The Context, Dissemination, and Impact of Weitzmann’s Narrative Analysis
3.1. Specificities of Weitzmann’s Narrative Method
3.2. The Broader Context of Weitzmann’s Narrative Analysis: Iconology
3.3. The Broader Context of Weitzmann’s Narrative Analysis: Narratology
3.4. The Dissemination of Weitzmann’s Theory of Narratives
3.5. The Afterlife of Roll and Codex: The Second Generation of Scholars in Narrative Research
3.6. The Impact of Visual Narratives on Weitzmann’s Autobiography
4. Conclusions: Kurt Weitzmann’s Importance and Legacy
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | (Kleinbauer and Slavens 1982, pp. 60–68). On the formation and early years of the Art and Archaeology Department at Princeton University, see (Lavin 1983). |
2 | Chapter IV: The Relation Between Text Criticism and Picture Criticism in (Weitzmann [1947] 1970, pp. 182–92); some of these ideas can also be found in (Weitzmann 1971, pp. 247–48). |
3 | More on the sources, background, and development of picture criticism in (Dolezal 1996, pp. 129, 136–37), and (Dolezal 1998, especially pp. 225–26). |
4 | See more on this theory in (Dolezal 1998, pp. 232–41). |
5 | Cf. Introduction (Weitzmann 1977, pp. 9–24, especially pp. 9–10). |
6 | On the critical voices, see (Dolezal 1998, pp. 218–20). |
7 | (Dolezal 1996, p. 128); for the criticism of Weitzmann’s method, see pp. 135–36. |
8 | (Evangelatou 2008, p. 116): “Weitzmann treated his theory on the creation of this codex not as a hypothesis in need of proof but as a fact according to which he interpreted its illustration”. |
9 | An example for these practices would be (Boreczky 2019, pp. 441–44). |
10 | Recently, four different turns toward narrative have been identified; see (Hyvärinen 2010). |
11 | For the history of narratology and the formation of the discipline, see (Onega and Landa 1996, pp. 12–34). |
12 | The problem of narrative typologies and their later development were examined in detail in Horváth, 2016. |
13 | The archive at the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections contains 60 boxes of unpublished materials, including private and official correspondence, lecture notes, course materials, manuscripts, and other documents related to expeditions, exhibitions, and conferences. Available online: https://findingaids.princeton.edu/catalog/C0777 (accessed on 23 April 2023). |
14 | Dumbarton Oaks Archives, Washington, D.C. Available online: https://www.doaks.org/research/library-archives/dumbarton-oaks-archives/collections/historical-papers/kurt-weitzmann-papers (accessed on 23 April 2023). |
15 | Kurt Weitzmann, Der Pariser Psalter MS. Grec. 139 und die mittelbyzantinische Renaissance. Jahrbuch für Kunstwissenschaft 6: 178–94. |
16 | On Friend’s inspiration, see (Weitzmann 1994a, p. 109). |
17 | (Weitzmann 1947, p. 411); today, the Index is also a digital archive, renamed as The Index of Medieval Art, and it collects works up until 1550. Available online: https://ima.princeton.edu/ (accessed on 23 April 2023). |
18 | For more on the classifications used by the Index, see (Hourihane 2014). |
19 | On the formation of Dumbarton Oaks and its research program, see (Weitzmann 1947, pp. 413–16), for Weitzmann’s early days at Dumbarton Oaks, see (Weitzmann 1994a, pp. 143–51, especially pp. 149–50). |
20 | In this section, I am referring to the materials found in the Kurt Weitzmann Archive at the Firestone Library, Princeton University, as of September 2014, at the time only roughly organized. I could only study course materials from the 1940s in Boxes 40–43 but not the Additions of 1995 with materials from the 1930s. Course documents from the period between the 1940s and 1970s were in Boxes 40 and 41 and include course outlines, course notes, course administrations with the list of students and their topics, lecture bibliographies, and reading assignments. The pages were not arranged properly and were not dated either. |
21 | Sometimes it was called the high-seminar. See more on the seminars and their students in (Weitzmann 1984, pp. 74–76; 1994a, pp. 108–9, 153–82; 1994b, pp. 56–61, 214). |
22 | Except the spring semester of 1948, when Friend again had three lectures. |
23 | Weitzmann taught at Princeton between 1935 to 1972; see (Weitzmann 1994a, p. 419), where he also speaks about the circumstances and concerns raised around his retirement. |
24 | These can be seen in almost every MSS course up until 1958. |
25 | While Weitzmann was a guest professor at Yale University. |
26 | The list of names of the MSS course started in 1931, when the course was introduced, and ran till 1973. It seems that colleagues sometimes also participated in the course: Weitzmann and Friend is on the list in 1935, Hugo Buchthal in 1960, when he was a temporary member at the IAS and not a student. |
27 | Carl Robert’s three types are usually known as Verfahren (or Kompletives Verfahren, which did not appear as such in the book), Situationsbilder, and Chroniken-Stil/Bildercyklen, all described in (Robert 1881). Wickhoff also used three types (complementary, isolated, and continuous) in (Wickhoff 1895). Although Wickhoff’s volume was translated into English in 1900, it did not cause substantial waves of reactions. |
28 | (Meyboom 1978; Dehejia 1990; Lavin 1990; Stansbury-O’Donnell 1999). In my study on these classifications, I argued that while these typologies function well for the general treatment of narrative works, rich individual examples of storytelling art might not find their place in this system, see (Horváth 2016). |
29 | For the details of his method, see for example (Weitzmann 1977, Plate 3, 25, 39, 46 or 47). |
30 | Cf. (Horváth 2016, pp. 262–65). See more in (Frank 2012). |
31 | For example: “pictures speak a language often just as clear and vivid as the text itself” (Weitzmann 1971, p. 270, my italics). |
32 | See, for example, the case of Giovanni Bellini in (Rodini 1998). |
33 | Some of the most important examples are (Mitchell 1981; Mitchell 1994; Ryan 2004; Ryan and Thon 2014; Thon 2016). |
34 | Panofsky’s iconology is “largely narrative representation of predominantly literary subjects” (Hasenmueller 1978, p. 299, footnote 8). |
35 | For more on the problem of grammar, see (Ryan 1979, p. 130) and also (Prince 1982, especially p. 184). |
36 | (Barthes 1977, p. 79). The essay was originally published in French in 1966 and was translated into English in 1975. |
37 | See Weitzmann’s correspondence with Kraeling, 1944–1948. |
38 | Correspondence with Kraeling, 26 July 1955. |
39 | Kraeling’s original plan was to include narrative art from the Roman Near East and the Gandhara region; this could have given a more complete thematic approach. For practical reasons, for the context of the conference, narrative art was consensually narrowed down into noteworthy historical events and mythological representations, excluding scenes of ordinary life. Cf. (Kraeling 1957, p. 43). |
40 | American Journal of Archaeology 61: 1957. See (Kantor 1957; Perkins 1957; Güterbock 1957; Hanfmann 1957; Blanckenhagen 1957). |
41 | The title of the lecture was The Selection of Texts for Cyclic Illustration. |
42 | (Weitzmann 1994a, p. 165), and his personal correspondence. |
43 | The title of the lecture was International Colloquium on the Art of Ancient and Medieval Book-Illustration and it was read by Vikan. |
44 | See more in the interview with (Belting 2008). |
45 | (Vikan 2016). He served the Walters Art Museum for decades, eventually as its director. |
46 | (Dolezal 1998, p. 221). Dolezal sees problematic that, in the memoir, the circumstances for leaving Nazi Germany and immigrating to the US remain unclear, but I think it needs no further explanation (Dolezal 1998, p. 230). |
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Horváth, G. The Past Is Evolutionary, the Future Is Byzantine: Kurt Weitzmann’s Contribution to the Research on Pictorial Narration. Arts 2023, 12, 86. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030086
Horváth G. The Past Is Evolutionary, the Future Is Byzantine: Kurt Weitzmann’s Contribution to the Research on Pictorial Narration. Arts. 2023; 12(3):86. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030086
Chicago/Turabian StyleHorváth, Gyöngyvér. 2023. "The Past Is Evolutionary, the Future Is Byzantine: Kurt Weitzmann’s Contribution to the Research on Pictorial Narration" Arts 12, no. 3: 86. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030086
APA StyleHorváth, G. (2023). The Past Is Evolutionary, the Future Is Byzantine: Kurt Weitzmann’s Contribution to the Research on Pictorial Narration. Arts, 12(3), 86. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030086