Helen Gardner (art historian)  

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"WHAT is art? We do not know. The essential nature of that mysterious, intangible, indefinable something that we call art baffles us." --Gardner's Art Through the Ages (1926) by Helen Gardner

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Helen Gardner (1878–1946) was an American art historian and educator. Her Art Through the Ages remains a standard text for American art history classes.

Contents

Biography

Gardner was born in Manchester, New Hampshire and attended school in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago. In 1901 she graduated with a degree in classics from the University of Chicago.

After an interval as a teacher, she returned to the same university to study art history, and received a master's degree in 1918. In 1920 she began lecturing at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she would spend the rest of her career, with the exception of short appointments at UCLA and the University of Chicago.

In 1919, she became the head of the photograph and lantern-slides department at the Ryerson Library of the Art Institute of Chicago. The next year she started to teach an art history course at the School of the Art Institute. In 1922, she made the choice to resign her position at the library to spare more time for teaching. From the frustration of not being able to find a comprehensive textbook that had a broad enough coverage in art history, she resolved the problem by writing such a book herself, which resulted in a popular art history textbook used for decades, Art Through the Ages.

Her major work, Art Through the Ages (1926), was the first single-volume textbook to cover the entire range of art history from a global perspective. Frequently revised, it remains a standard textbook at American schools and universities. In 1932 she also published Understanding the Arts, an art appreciation text directed toward educators. For both volumes, the analytical drawings were supplied by artist Kathleen Blackshear. In 1936, she published a second edition of Art Through the Ages, with its content expanded.

In 1946, aged 68, she died due to cancer. However, despite her illness before her death, she remained in an advisory capacity at the Art Institute.

Works

Linking in as of 2022

Ancient Greek architecture, Architecture of cathedrals and great churches, Architecture of the medieval cathedrals of England, Art Institute of Chicago Building, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago Stock Exchange Arch, Edward Clark (artist), Egyptian pyramids, Gardner's Art Through the Ages, Gothic architecture, Helen Gardner, History of art, Jesus predicts his betrayal, Kathleen Blackshear, Lamentation of Christ (Mantegna), Leonardo da Vinci, Lester Raymer, Lions (Kemeys), List of Ancient Greek temples, List of painters in the Art Institute of Chicago, List of regional characteristics of European cathedral architecture, List of regional characteristics of Romanesque churches, List of School of the Art Institute of Chicago people, Michelangelo, Notable American Women, 1607–1950, Randolph Street Gallery, Renaissance architecture, Romanesque architecture, Romanesque secular and domestic architecture, Rose window, Ryerson & Burnham Libraries, Saying Grace (Chardin), Sistine Chapel ceiling, St Paul's Cathedral, St. Peter's Basilica, The Creation of Adam, Thorne miniature rooms, Video Data Bank, Women in the art history field, Ziggurat of Ur


See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Helen Gardner (art historian)" 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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