Speranza
Dietrich Felix von Bothmer (October 26, 1918 – October
12, 2009) was a German art historian, who spent six decades as a
curator of Roman Antiquities at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Bothmer was born in
Eisenach, Germany on October 26, 1918.
An ardent opponent of the Nazi
dictatorship, Bothmer attended Berlin's Friedrich Wilhelms University and
then went to Wadham, Oxford in 1938 on the final Rhodes Scholarship
awarded in Germany.
At Wadham, he worked with J. Beazley on his books Attic
Red-Figure Vase-Painters and Attic Black-Figure Vase-Painters, working
collaboratively to group works by identifying the individual craftsmen and
workshops that had created each of hundreds of Greek vases.
Bothmer graduated in 1939
with a major in archaeology.
A tour of museums in the United
States in 1939 left von Bothmer stuck there with the start of World War II.
Due
to his strong anti-Nazi sentiments, he refused to return to Germany, and
narrowly escaped being sent back to Germany against his will.
He earned his
doctorate at the University of California, Berkeley in 1944.
Though not yet a
citizen, in 1943 he volunteered for the United States Army.
After 90 days in the
U.S. Army, he was sworn in as a U.S. citizen in March, 1944.
He served in the
Pacific theater of operations, earning a Bronze Star Medal and Purple Heart for
a conspicuous act of bravery on August 11, 1944, while serving in the South
Pacific, where, despite being wounded himself in the thigh, foot, and arm, he
recovered a wounded comrade and carried him back three miles through enemy
lines.
Following the completion of his military service, Bothmer
was hired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1946, and was named as a Roman
curator in 1959.
By 1973, Bothmer was department chairman and he was named in 1990
as distinguished research curator.
In 1972, together with the Director,
Thomas Hoving, von Bothmer argued in favor of the purchase of the Euphronios SARPEDONE
krater, a vase used to mix wine with water that dated from the sixth century
BCE. T
hey convinced the museum's board to purchase the artifact for $1 million,
which the museum funded through the sale of its coin collection.
The Government
of Italy demanded the object's return, citing claims that the vase had been
taken illegally from an ancient Etruscan site near Rome.
The vase was one of TWENTY
pieces that the museum sent back to Italy in 2008.
Bothmer's exhibit "Thracian Treasures
from Bulgaria" covered twenty centuries of Thracian culture, with more than 500
art works dating back to the Copper Age.[3]
The 1979 show "Greek Art of the
Aegean Islands" included 191 pieces, of which 46 came from the Met and a similar
number from the Louvre.
The remainder came from several different museums in
Greece, including the largest known Cycladic sculpture, dating to 2700 to 2300
BCE, on loan from the National Archaeological Museum, Athens.[4]
A 1985
exhibition based on his research, "The Amasis Painter and his World: Vase
Painting in Sixth Century B.C. Athens," included 65 works of a single artist who
created his pottery 2,500 years before, the first to document the history of the
work of a single craftsman from that ancient period as a one-man show.
Bothmer's numerous published works in the field include the 1957 Amazons in
Greek Art,
"Ancient Art From Private Collections"
and
"An Inquiry Into the
Forgery of the Etruscan Warriors in the Metropolitan Museum of Art",
both published in 1961, Greek Vase Painting: an Introduction in 1972, his 1985
book The Amasis Painter and His World: Vase-Painting in Sixth-Century B.C.
Athens, his 1991 book
Glories of the Past: Ancient Art from the Shelby White and
Leon Levy Collection, and in 1992,"Euphronios, peintre: Actes de la journee
d'etude organisee par l'Ecole du Louvre et le Departement des antiquites
grecques, etrusques de l'Ecole du Louvre (French Edition)."
He also contributed
in 1983 to "Wealth of the Ancient World (Hunt Art Collections;" to "Development
of the Attic Black-Figure, Revised edition (Sather Classical Lectures)" in 1986,
and a wide variety of other publications.
He took a faculty position in 1965 at
the Institute of Fine Arts, the nation’s top-ranked graduate program in art
history, according to the National Research Council's 1994 study.
Bothmer
was the recipient of numerous awards and citations, including a Chevalier de la
Légion d'honneur; a member of the Académie française (one of only two Americans
to have this honor); an honorary fellow of Wadham College; and several honorary
doctorates.
Complementing his career as a curator and an academic, he served
on the Art Advisory Council of the International Foundation for Art Research
(IFAR).[6]
A resident of both the Manhattan district of New
York City and Oyster Bay, New York, von Bothmer died at age 90 on October 19,
2009, in Manhattan.
He was survived by his wife, Joyce von Bothmer, as well as
by a son, Bernard von Bothmer of San Francisco, a daughter, Maria Villalba of
New York City, three step-daughters, five grandchildren, and five
step-grandchildren.
His brother was the renowned Egyptologist Bernard V.
Bothmer, who died in 1993.
References
Grimes, William. "Dietrich von Bothmer, Curator and Art Historian, Dies at 90",
The New York Times, October 15, 2009. Accessed October 26, 2009.
Staff. "VON BOTHMER GETS NEW MUSEUM POST", The New York Times, July 2, 1959.
Accessed October 26, 2009.
Barry, Ann. "Arts and Leisure Guide;
Arts and Leisure Guide", The New York Times, July 3, 1977. Accessed October 26,
2009.
Kramer, Hilton. "Greece and France Join Met in Show Of Aegean
Art; Aegean Art In Show At the Met", The New York Times, November 2, 1979.
Accessed October 26, 2009.
Reif, Rita. "ANTIQUES; LYRIC WORLD OF AN
ANCIENT PAINTER", The New York Times, October 6, 1985. Accessed October 26,
2009.
Jump up ^ International Foundation for Art Research, about
IFAR
External links[edit]
Greek vase painting, a catalog from The
Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF) by Dietrich
von Bothmer
Persondata
NameBothmer, Dietrich
von
Alternative names
Short descriptionRecipient of the Purple Heart
medal
Date of birthOctober 26, 1918
Place of birth
Date of deathOctober
12, 2009
Place of death
Categories:
1918 births
2009 deaths
People from Eisenach
Alumni
of Wadham College, Oxford
American military personnel of World War
II
German art historians
German Rhodes Scholars
Humboldt University of
Berlin alumni
People associated with the Metropolitan Museum of Art
New
York University faculty
People from Manhattan
People from Oyster Bay, New
York
United States Army soldiers
Guggenheim Fellows
Recipients of the
Bronze Star Medal
Recipients of the Purple Heart medal
Monday, January 27, 2014
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