Giovanni Morelli  

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"Morelli, the learned iconoclast who brought many sleepless nights to Dr. Wilhelm Bode of Berlin."--Promenades of an Impressionist (1910) by James Huneker


"Except the face, probably no part of the human body is more characteristic, individual, significant, and expressive than the hand; to represent it satisfactorily has ever been one of the chief difficulties which artists have had to contend with, and one which only the greatest have been completely successful in overcoming. Of this, both painting and sculpture afford us ample proof. I have given a few examples of characteristic hands." --Italian Painters () by Giovanni Morelli


Morelli's books look different from those of any other writer on art. They are sprinkled with illustrations of fingers and ears, careful records of the characteristic trifles by which an artist gives himself away, as a criminal might be spotted by a fingerprint ... any art gallery studied by Morelli begins to resemble a rogues' gallery."--Art and Anarchy (1963) by Edgar Wind

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Giovanni Morelli (25 February 1816, Verona – 28 February 1891, Milan) was an Italian art critic and political figure. As an art historian, he developed the "Morellian" technique of scholarship, identifying the characteristic "hands" (style) of painters through scrutiny of diagnostic minor details that revealed artists' scarcely conscious shorthand and conventions for portraying, for example, ears. The "Morellian method" was made public in his book Italian Painters; it appeared under the pseudonym "Ivan Lermolieff".

Morelli is mentioned in Freud's "The Moses of Michelangelo" (1914) but was largely re-discovered by Edgar Wind whose Art and Anarchy stated:

Morelli's books look different from those of any other writer on art. They are sprinkled with illustrations of fingers and ears, careful records of the characteristic trifles by which an artist gives himself away, as a criminal might be spotted by a fingerprint ... any art gallery studied by Morelli begins to resemble a rogues' gallery"

Morelli came to international attention in Carlo Ginzburg's famous titular essay of Clues, Myths, and the Historical Method in which Ginzburg tries to show that the methods of Morelli, Sherlock Holmes and Sigmund Freud consist of assigning the same great significance to circumstantial evidence gathered from observation, conjecture, deduction and induction.

Contents

Life

Morelli was trained as a doctor. With his return to Italy he acted as a conduit for intellectual life of the North.

Morellian method

The Morellian method is based on clues offered by trifling details rather than identities of composition and subject matter or other broad treatments that are more likely to be seized upon by students, copyists and imitators. Instead, as Carlo Ginzburg analysed the Morellian method, the art historian operates in the manner of a detective, "each discovering, from clues unnoticed by others, the author in one case of a crime, in the other of a painting". These unconscious traces— in the shorthand for rendering the folds of an ear in secondary figures of a composition, for example— are unlikely to be imitated and, once deciphered, serve as fingerprints do at the scene of the crime. The identity of the artist is expressed most reliably in the details that are least attended to. The Morellian method has its nearest roots in Morelli's own discipline of medicine, with its identification of disease through numerous symptoms, each of which may be apparently trivial in itself.

Morelli's connoisseurship was developed to a high degree by Bernard Berenson, who met Morelli in 1890. The first generation of Morellian scholars also included Gustavo Frizzoni, Jean Paul Richter, Adolfo Venturi and Constance Jocelyn Ffoulkes. Morellian scholarship penetrated the English field from 1893, with the translation of his master work. The Morellian technique of connoisseurship was extended to the study of Attic vase-painters by J.D. Beazley and by Michael Roaf to the study of the Persepolis reliefs, with results that further confirmed its validity. Morellian recognition of "handling" in undocumented fifteenth and sixteenth-century sculpture, in the hands of scholars like John Pope-Hennessy, have resulted in a broad corpus of securely attributed work. At the same time, modern examination of Classical Greek sculpture, in the wake of pioneering reassessments by Brunilde Sismondo Ridgway, has also turned away from attributions based on broad aspects of subject and style that are reflected in copies and later Roman classicising pastiche.

The complementary field of document-supported art history traces its origins to the somewhat earlier work of Joseph Archer Crowe and Giovanni Battista Cavalcaselle.

The Morellian method of finding essence and hidden meaning in details had also a much wider cultural influence. There are references to his work in the Sherlock Holmes novels by Arthur Conan Doyle and in the works of Sigmund Freud. Like Morelli, both Freud and Doyle had a medical background)

Morellian method was re-examined by Richard Wollheim, "Giovanni Morelli and the origins of scientific connoisseurship", On Art and the Mind: Essays and Lectures, 1973.

Works


Linking in 2022

1891 in Italy, Alois Riegl, Alphonse Bertillon, Andrea Solari, Annunciation (Leonardo), Austen Henry Layard, Babylonia, Bassae Frieze, Bathing Venus, Bernard Berenson, Black-figure pottery, Connoisseur, Constance Jocelyn Ffoulkes, Costabili collection, Euphronios, February 25, Flora (Francesco Melzi), Franz Wickhoff, Friedrich Hauser, Gaetano Previati, Giorgione, Giuseppe Fiocco, Gustavo Frizzoni, Henriette Hertz, History of medical diagnosis, Holy Family with Saints Elizabeth and John the Baptist (Corregio, Pavia), Il Sodoma, Jack Cato, James Hudson (diplomat), Jean Paul Richter, John Beazley, Julia Cartwright Ady, Kabukidō Enkyō, La Belle Ferronnière, List of Italian religious minority politicians, List of names in A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Rationalists, Madonna and Child (Crivelli, Ancona), Magdalen in the Desert, Mathieu Criaerd, Maud Cruttwell, Miroslav Tyrš, Morelli, Moritz Thausing, Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine (Correggio, Washington), Palazzo Cappello Layard, Parthenon Frieze, Poldi Pezzoli Madonna, Portrait of a Boy (Perugino), Portrait of a Musician, Portrait of Giovanni Agostino della Torre and his son Niccolò, Red-figure pottery, Saint Anthony Preaching to the Fish, Saint John the Baptist Preaching, Sleeping Venus (Giorgione), Style (visual arts), The Concert (Titian), Thomas Wran, Vertumnus and Pomona (Melzi), Viale Luigi Majno, War of the Eight Saints

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Giovanni Morelli" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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