Konrad Fiedler
Konrad Fiedler (born September 23, 1841 in Oederan , Saxony , † June 13, 1895 in Munich ; occasionally also in the spelling Conrad Fiedler ) was one of the most important German art theorists of the 19th century .
Life
Fiedler studied law from 1861 at the Université de Lausanne and the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg . In 1862 he became a member of the Corps Guestphalia Heidelberg . As an inactive he moved to the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Berlin and the Universität Leipzig , which made him Dr. iur. PhD. After a short employment in a law firm, Fiedler gave up his profession as a lawyer. Instead, he dedicated himself to art and traveled through Europe and the Middle East as a patron , art collector and art critic . In Rome he met Hans von Marées and Adolf von Hildebrand , whose friend and sponsor he became. In 1876 Fiedler married Mary (later 'Levi') Meyer, the daughter of the art historian Julius Meyer . In 1880 the couple settled in Munich, where he a. a. lively exchanged ideas with the eminent composer Ethel Smyth on intellectual and artistic matters. In 1895 Konrad Fiedler died after falling from a window with a low parapet; Whether it was an accident (as stated at the time) or suicide has not been conclusively clarified. Fiedler was buried in the family grave at Gut Crostewitz . Since the village and manor of Crostewitz had to give way to lignite mining in 1967, his remains were moved to the south cemetery in Leipzig.
plant
Fiedler is considered to be a “pioneering theorist” (Kultermann) for the view of art in the 20th century . In the circle of the German-Roman artists Anselm Feuerbach , Adolf von Hildebrand and Hans von Marées, he developed an art-philosophical concept of the autonomous work of art based on the philosophy of Kant and Schopenhauer . In the works of Hildebrand and Marées, Fiedler saw the possibility of a new artistic language that was solely committed to the laws of art and not, as was common in official history painting at the time , to non-artistic reality .
Fiedler exerted a great influence on artists of the early 20th century, among them Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky . Heinrich Wölfflin (also through Adolf von Hildebrand) was influenced by Fiedler among the art historians . In addition, the approaches of the patron of the arts and private scholars are important not only for aesthetics , but also for a philosophy of perception .
The most important works by Fiedler published during his lifetime include On the Assessment of Works of Fine Art (1876), On Art Interests and Their Promotion (1879), Modern Naturalism and Artistic Truth (1881), On the Origin of Artistic Activity (1887) and Hans by Marées (1889).
Modern naturalism and artistic truth
The title of Modern Naturalism and Artistic Truth (1881) might suggest that naturalism in art leads to truth . On the contrary, in Fiedler's art-philosophical concept, art is independent of all “external reality” - and thus also of the imitation of nature ( mimesis ) from which naturalism proceeds. Reality and therefore truth be realized in the artist, who in the art , the vision illustrated as such. Fiedler emphasizes the autonomy and self-importance of an art that is understood as "absolute". The work of art is to be created as something to be understood out of itself and a “pure visibility” - and not as one that refers to conceptual or spiritual content.
About the origin of artistic activity
Probably the most important work by Fiedler On the Origin of Artistic Activity (1887) explores the role of the work of art in the knowledge of the world in a completely new way by developing its own theory of perception based on Immanuel Kant and the findings of Impressionism . This is characterized by an accentuation of the 'perception-forming' subject , a monadic view of the perception process and the idealistic stylization of the work of art (far removed from the Kantian judgment of taste) as a possible place of 'pure' visibility.
expenditure
- Konrad Fiedler: The origin of artistic activity. Hirzel, Leipzig 1887. ( digitized version and full text in the German text archive ).
- Conrad Fiedler's writings on art. Published by Hans Marbach, Leipzig 1896.
- Konrad Fiedler: On the essence of art. Selection from his writings. Compiled and introduced by Hans Eckstein, Munich 1942.
- Konrad Fiedler: writings on art. Published by Gottfried Boehm , Munich 1971, 2 vols. (2nd improved and expanded edition 1991)
- Conrad Fiedler. The diaries 1866-1875. Edited and introduced by Brigitte Boiar, Kulturförderverein Ruhrgebiet - Amazon-kindle-edition, Gladbeck 2011.
literature
- Hermann Konnerth: The legality of the fine arts. A presentation of Conrad Fiedler's art theory. With an appendix: From the estate of Conrad Fiedler (Introduction and II, 1–5). Ebering, Berlin 1908.
- Berta Geissmar : Relationship between art and science in Conrad Fiedler's art teaching, Frankfurt am Main 1921, OCLC 80508992 (Dissertation University Frankfurt am Main 1921, 118 sheets, 2 microfiches),
- Udo Kultermann : History of Art History. The way of a science. Econ, Vienna / Düsseldorf 1966 DNB 457317817 .
- Philippe Junod: Transparence et opacité. Essai sur les fondements théoriques de l'art moderne: pour une nouvelle lecture de Konrad Fiedler. L'Age d'homme, Lausanne 1976. New edition: Jacqueline Chambon, Paris 2004, ISBN 2-87711-272-1 .
- Gottfried Boehm : Image and sense organs. In: New Issues for Philosophy. 18/19 (1980), pp. 118-132.
- Stefan Majetschak (Ed.): Eye and Hand. Konrad Fiedler's art theory in context. Fink, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-7705-3187-6 .
- Stefan Majetschak (ed.): Classics of art philosophy. From Plato to Lyotard. Beck, Munich 2005, pp. 179-198, ISBN 978-3-406-52834-7 .
- Lambert Wiesing (Ed.): Philosophy of Perception. Models and reflections. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt am Main 2002, ISBN 3-518-29162-9 , p. 43 ff. And P. 170 ff.
- Lambert Wiesing: The visibility of the picture. History and Perspectives of Formal Aesthetics. Campus, Frankfurt am Main / New York, NY 2008, chap. 4th
- Hermann Arthur Lier : Fiedler, Konrad . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 48, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1904, p. 555.
- Arthur von Schneider: Fiedler, Adolph Konrad. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 5, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1961, ISBN 3-428-00186-9 , pp. 140 f. ( Digitized version ).
Web links
- Literature by and about Konrad Fiedler in the catalog of the German National Library
- Partial estate in the Bavarian State Library
Individual evidence
- ↑ Kösener Corpslisten 1960, 64 , 646
- ↑ Stefan Majetschak (ed.): Classics of the philosophy of art. From Plato to Lyotard . Beck, Munich 2005, ISBN 3-406-52834-1 , p. 179 .
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Fiedler, Konrad |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Fiedler, Conrad |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Theorist of fine arts |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 23, 1841 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Oederan , Saxony |
DATE OF DEATH | June 13, 1895 |
Place of death | Munich |