Ferdinand Olivier

Johann Heinrich Ferdinand Olivier (1785–1841) was a German painter associated with the Nazarene movement.

Portrait of Olivier by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld (1817)

Life

Abraham and Isaac (1817)

Olivier was born in Dessau on 1 April 1785,[1] to a family of Swiss-French descent. He began his artistic education in 1801 by taking drawing lessons from Carl Wilhelm Kolbe, and also studied with the woodblock printers Christian Haldenweg and Johann Friedrich Unger. In 1804 he move to Dresden with his brother Heinrich.[2] There he studied with Jakob Wilhelm Mechau and Karl Ludwig Kaaz,[1] copied old masters in the Gemäldegalerie, and got to know the artists Caspar David Friedrich and Philipp Otto Runge.[2] Between 1807 and 1810 he was employed on a diplomatic mission to Paris in the service of Prince Leopold Friedrich Franz von Anhalt-Dessau.[1] While there he often visited the Musée Napoléon, particularly admiring the works of Northern Renaissance artists such as Jan van Eyck and Hans Memling, who had a profound effect on his style.[2] While still in Paris he painted, in collaboration with his brother Heinrich, two works for the chapel on the Prince's estate at Wörlitz[3] and began a life-sized portrait of Napoleon on his horse, which he seems only to have finished after leaving the city.[1]

In 1810 he returned to Dessau. He toured the Harz Mountains with his brother, Friedrich, before settling in Vienna in 1811.[2] There he got to know, and came under the influence of, the landscape painter Joseph Koch.[1] Fritz Novotny contrasts Olivier's paintings of this period – "artificial landscapes with their wings – typical Nazarene work" – and the precise, closely observed drawings he made of the suburbs of Vienna at the same time in which he shows "by means of things small and insignificant in themselves, the might of the invisible forces of nature, the infinity and silence of space".[4]

Olivier visited Salzburg in 1815 and 1817, making drawings which, in 1822, he used as the basis of a series of lithographs in the which Austrian landscapes form the background to Christian iconography.[2] In 1817 he became a member of the "Lukasband" (usually translated as the "Brotherhood of Saint Luke"), a fraternity of artists, often known as the "Nazarenes", which had been founded by Friedrich Overbeck and Franz Pforr eight years earlier.[5][6] Olivier was the only member of the group never to have visited Italy.[2]

In 1830 he moved to Munich, where, three years later, he was appointed secretary of the academy and professor of art history.[2] He died at Munich on 11 February 1841.[1]

His two younger brothers Friedrich and Heinrich also became artists.[2]

gollark: Do you sell flame books?
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gollark: It's not worth the inevitable gigantic cost.
gollark: Fine. I'll go all the way upstairs and log back in.

References

  1. Schnorr von Carolsfeld (1886). "Olivier, Ferdinand von". Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. 24. Historischen Kommission bei der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. pp. 308–11.
  2. Artist biography in German Masters of the Nineteenth Century (1981), p.270
  3. Novotny 1978, p.123
  4. Novotny 1978, p.123
  5. Gossman, Lionel (2003). "Unwilling Moderns: The Nazarene Painters of the Nineteenth Century". Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
  6. "Johann Heinrich Ferdinand Olivier". National Gallery, London. Retrieved 22 February 2014.

Sources



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