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Henry Fuseli

 

(born Feb. 7, 1741, Zürich, Switz. — died April 16, 1825, London, Eng.) Swiss-born British painter and writer on art. The son of a portrait painter, he trained in theology as well as in art and art history. He left his native Zürich for London in 1764. Encouraged by Sir Joshua Reynolds, he went to Italy in 1770 and stayed for eight years; on his return to England, his works exhibited at the Royal Academy, such as his most famous work, The Nightmare (1781), secured his reputation. His subject matter was chiefly literary, and his images portrayed macabre fantasies and the grotesque. He was elected a full academician in 1790 and taught painting at the academy (1799 – 1805).

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Biography: Henry Fuseli
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The Swiss painter Henry Fuseli (1741-1825) depicted the marvelous, the megalomaniac, supernatural horror, the irrational, the erotic, and the macabre, expressing violently romantic attitudes in a severe neoclassic style.

Henry Fuseli was the first artist to command the epic literature and heroic history of northern Europe as well as the Mediterranean countries, and by his wide reading and close study of the Old Masters he equipped himself to extend the scope of history painting far beyond the traditional limits of the Bible and classical antiquity. In his speculative boldness he was a child of the Enlightenment, but he was also a fierce critic of sterile rationalism and preached the gospel of the imagination with religious fervor.

Henry Fuseli was born Johann Heinrich Füssli (in 1764 he Anglicized his name) in Zurich on Feb. 6, 1741, the son of a painter with strong religious convictions who destined him for the Zwinglian ministry. After a period of intensive theological study Fuseli was ordained in 1761 and preached his first sermon. He was a friend of Johann Kaspar Lavater, whose Aphorisms on Man he later translated into English from manuscript. Fuseli became the favorite disciple of Johann Jakob Bodmer, who in 1740 had published an essay on the wonderful in poetry that led to a literary war with Johann Christoph Gottsched in Germany and the formation of a revolutionary Swiss school which used English literature, especially Milton and Shakespeare, as a spearhead in promoting romanticism.

Years in England

Fuseli's attack on corruption in high places made it prudent for him to leave Zurich in 1763. After a year in Germany, where he met most of the progressive writers of the day, he went to England. The idea was that he should act as a link between the English and the Swiss-German avantgarde movements, and his admirers confidently expected him to become the literary genius of the Continental coterie on his return. He earned his living by writing and translating and as a tutor to a young nobleman.

Like Voltaire earlier, Fuseli was attracted by the English tolerance of ideas, but it was the stirrings of romanticism and especially the theater, in which David Garrick had pioneered a revolution in stagecraft, that captured his enthusiasm. Fuseli stayed in England for 6 years, by which time he had decided to become a painter. The story that Sir Joshua Reynolds told him he would become the greatest painter of the age if he studied in Rome for a few years is probably an exaggeration, but Fuseli was undoubtedly encouraged by Reynolds.

Years in Rome

Fuseli studied in Rome from 1770 to 1778. "Fuseli in Rome" wrote Lavater in 1773, "is one of the greatest imaginations." This sums up in a nutshell the fascination he exerted not only on Reynolds but on those who, like Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, never met him but heard about him from friends. Lavater described Fuseli's look as lightning, his word a thunderstorm, his jest death, and his revenge hell. These attributes of romantic genius had the unusual support of a Voltaire an clarity of mind and incisiveness of expression. The elevation of the sketch as the spontaneous expression of genius also contributed to his reputation in romantic circles. He seems to have kept up his drawing from childhood, but his output was now prodigious, and the themes were precisely those that appealed to the early romantics: Milton, Shakespeare, Dante, the struggle for political liberty, attacks on religious bigotry, Greek tragedy, and Homer. He left many of his drawings with Lavater in Zurich, where Goethe and others eagerly sought them out.

Career as Painter and Teacher

In 1779 Fuseli returned to London, exhibiting regularly at the Royal Academy from 1780. His first outstanding success was The Nightmare, exhibited in 1782. Reynolds promoted his election as associate royal academician in 1788, the year Fuseli married Sophia Rawlins, but there was a temporary coolness when Fuseli was elected royal academician in 1790 over the head of Reynolds's nominee. In 1799 Fuseli became professor of painting at the academy, and his first three Lectures on Painting were published in 1801. In 1804 he obtained the key position of keeper, virtually head of the academy schools.

Parallel with Fuseli's career in the academy, and entirely in harmony with its goal, he threw himself with enthusiasm into every scheme for promoting the revival of history painting, including his illustrations of Homer (he collaborated with William Cowper from 1786); his paintings for John Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery; and above all his own Milton Gallery, 47 canvases on which he worked from 1790 to 1800.

Fuseli's last lectures - which put him in the forefront of those who pioneered art history in England by combining the analytical approach of Johann Joachim Winckelmann (whose Reflections he translated in 1765) with an even wider background of ideas - were delivered in 1825. On April 16 of that year he died in London.

Further Reading

The Life and Writings of Henry Fuseli, edited by John Knowles (3 vols., 1831), is valuable. By far the best introduction in English is Eudo C. Mason, The Mind of Henry Fuseli: Selections from His Writings (1951), a brilliantly annotated selection of Fuseli's major writings with an introductory study by Mason. Also useful is the essay on Fuseli in Ruthven Todd, Tracks in the Snow: Studies in English Science and Art (1946). An English translation of Paul Ganz, The Drawings of Henry Fuseli, appeared in 1949. Frederick Antal, Fuseli Studies (1956), is a scholarly monograph that reproduces some of Fuseli's finest drawings and is especially valuable for its critical apparatus and bibliographical references.

Additional Sources

Fuseli, Henry, Henry Fuseli, London: Academy Editions; New York: St. Martin's Press, 1974.

Fuseli, Henry, The life and writings of Henry Fuseli, Millwood, N.Y.: Kraus, 1982.

Schiff, Gert., Henry Fuseli, 1741-1825: essay, catalogue entries and biographical outline, London: Tate Gallery Publications, 1975.

Fairy Tale Companion: Henry Fuseli
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Fuseli, Henry (1741–1825), Swiss‐born British romantic artist; a man of letters as well as a painter. A history painter, Fuseli rendered themes he found embodied in literature, legend and history, illustrating the works of Milton, Dante, Charles Dickens, William Shakespeare, Sophocles, Virgil, Pope, and Homer in heroic style. In particular, his illustrations for Edmund Spenser's Faerie Queene and Christoph Martin Wieland's Oberon are notable. Classicism was integral to Fuseli's illustrative work. While his contemporaries described his art as bold, dreamlike, wild, grotesque, disturbing, they noted his genius.

Bibliography

  • Auckland City Art Gallery, A Collection of Drawings (1967).
  • Knowles, John, Life and Writing of Henry Fuseli (1982/1831).
  • Weinglass, D. H., Prints and Engraved Illustrations by and after Henry Fuseli (1994).

— Sharon Scapple

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Henry Fuseli
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Fuseli, Henry (fyū'zĭlē), 1741-1825, Anglo-Swiss painter and draftsman, b. Zürich. He was known also as Johann Heinrich Fuessli or Füssli. He took holy orders but never practiced the priesthood. Fuseli went (c.1763) to England and studied in London, where Joshua Reynolds befriended him. He spent a few years in Italy, where he made the studies for his famous series of nine paintings for Boydell's Shakespeare Gallery. Returning to England, he exhibited a number of works of a grotesque and visionary type, including the celebrated Nightmare (1782). His own Milton Gallery housed a series of his paintings illustrating the poet's works. His drawings, of which he left over 800, further reveal his romantic fascination with the terrifying and weird. Fuseli admired and encouraged William Blake. Some of his lectures to the Royal Academy have been published.

Bibliography

See studies by F. Antal (1956), P. A. Tomory (1972), and G. Schiff (2 vol., 1974).

Quotes By: Henry Fuseli
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Quotes:

"Nature is a collective idea, and, though its essence exist in each individual of the species, can never in its perfection inhabit a single object."

"Our ideas are the offspring of our senses; we are not more able to create the form of a being we have not seen, without retrospect to one we know, than we are able to create a new sense. He whose fancy has conceived an idea of the most beautiful form must have composed it from actual existence."

Wikipedia: Henry Fuseli
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The artist in conversation with Johann Jakob Bodmer, 1778-1781.

Henry Fuseli (German: Johann Heinrich Füssli) (February 7, 1741 – April 17, 1825) was a British painter, draughtsman, and writer on art, of German-Swiss origin.

Contents


Kriemhild and Gunther, 1807

Biography

He was born in Zürich, Switzerland, the second of eighteen children. His father was Johann Caspar Füssli, a painter of portraits and landscapes, and author of Lives of the Helvetic Painters. He intended Henry for the church, and sent him to the Caroline college of Zurich, where he received an excellent classical education. One of his schoolmates there was Johann Kaspar Lavater, with whom he became close friends.

Horseman attacked by a giant snake, c. 1800.

After taking orders in 1761 Fuseli was forced to leave the country as a result of having helped Lavater to expose an unjust magistrate, whose powerful family sought revenge. He first travelled through Germany, and then, in 1765, visited England, where he supported himself for some time by miscellaneous writing. Eventually, he became acquainted with Sir Joshua Reynolds, to whom he showed his drawings. Following Sir Joshua's advice he devoted himself wholly to art. In 1770 he made an art-pilgrimage to Italy, where he remained till 1778, changing his name from Füssli to Fuseli, because it was more Italian-sounding.

Silence, 1799-1801.

Early in 1779 he returned to Britain, taking in Zürich on his way. He found a commission awaiting him from Alderman Boydell, who was then organizing his famous Shakespeare Gallery. Fuseli painted a number of pieces for Boydell, and published an English edition of Lavater's work on physiognomy. He likewise gave William Cowper some valuable assistance in preparing a translation of Homer. In 1788 Fuseli married Sophia Rawlins (originally one of his models), and he soon after became an associate of the Royal Academy. The early feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, whose portrait he had painted, planned a trip with him to Paris, but after Sophia's intervention the Fuselis door was closed to her forever.[1] Two years later he was promoted to Academician.

In 1799 Fuseli exhibited a series of paintings from subjects furnished by the works of John Milton, with a view to forming a Milton gallery corresponding to Boydell's Shakespeare gallery. There were 47 Milton paintings, many of them very large; they were completed at intervals in the space of nine years. The exhibition, which closed in 1800, proved a commercial failure. In 1799 Fuseli was also appointed professor of painting to the Academy. Four years afterwards he was chosen as keeper, and resigned his professorship; but he resumed it in 1810, and continued to hold both offices until his death. In 1805 he brought out an edition of Pilkington's Lives of the Painters, which did little for his reputation.

Antonio Canova, when on his visit to England, was much taken with Fuseli's works, and on returning to Rome in 1817 caused him to be elected a member of the first class in the Academy of St Luke. Fuseli, after a life of uninterrupted good health, died at Putney Hill, at the advanced age of eighty-four, and was buried in the crypt of St Paul's Cathedral. He was comparatively rich at his death.

Works

As a painter, Fuseli favoured the supernatural. He pitched everything on an ideal scale, believing a certain amount of exaggeration necessary in the higher branches of historical painting. In this theory he was confirmed by the study of Michelangelo's works and the marble statues of the Monte Cavallo, which, when at Rome, he liked to contemplate in the evening, relieved against a murky sky or illuminated by lightning. The violent and intemperate action which he often displays, in the conventional wisdom, destroys the grand effect of many of his pieces. A striking illustration of this occurs in his famous picture of "Hamlet breaking from his Attendants to follow the Ghost": Hamlet, it has been said, looks as though he would burst his clothes with convulsive cramps in all his muscles.

On the other hand, his paintings are never either languid or cold. His figures are full of life and earnestness, and seem to have an object in view which they follow with intensity. Like Rubens he excelled in the art of setting his figures in motion. Though the lofty and terrible was his proper sphere, Fuseli had a fine perception of the ludicrous. The grotesque humour of his fairy scenes, especially those taken from A Midsummer-Night's Dream, is in its way not less remarkable than the poetic power of his more ambitious works.

As a colourist Fuseli has but small claims to distinction. He scorned to set a palette as most artists do; he merely dashed his tints recklessly over it. Not infrequently he used his paints in the form of a dry powder, which he hastily combined on the end of his brush with oil, or turpentine, or gold size, regardless of the quantity, and depending on accident for the general effect. This recklessness may perhaps be explained by the fact that he did not paint in oil until he was twenty-five years of age. Despite these drawbacks he possessed the elements of a great painter.

Odysseus in front of Scylla and Charybdis, Fussli's Romance painting of Odysseus facing the choice of monsters, giving the phrase: between Scylla and Charybdis, 1794-1796

Fuseli painted more than 200 pictures, but he exhibited only a minority of them. His earliest painting represented "Joseph interpreting the Dreams of the Baker and Butler"; the first to excite particular attention was The Nightmare, exhibited in 1782. He painted two versions, shown in the Nightmare article. Themes seen in "The Nightmare" were repeated in his 1796 painting, "Night-Hag visiting the Lapland Witches."

His sketches or designs numbered about 800; they have admirable qualities of invention and design, and are frequently superior to his paintings. In his drawings, as in his paintings, his method included deliberately exaggerating the due proportions of the parts and throwing his figures into contorted attitudes. One technique involved setting down arbitrary points on a sheet, which then became the extreme points of the various limbs—rather like creating a constellation from the unintentional relations of stars. Notable examples of these drawings were made in concert with George Richmond when the two artists were together in Rome.

He rarely drew the figure from life, basing his art on study of the antique and Michelangelo. He produced no landscapes—"Damn Nature! she always puts me out," was his characteristic exclamation—and painted only two portraits.

His general powers of mind were large. He was a thorough master of French, Italian, English and German, and could write in all these tongues with equal facility and vigour, though he preferred German as the vehicle of his thoughts. His writings contain passages of the best art-criticism that English literature can show. The principal work is his series of Lectures in the Royal Academy, twelve in number, commenced in 1801.

Many interesting anecdotes of Fuseli, and his relations to contemporary artists, are given in his Life by John Knowles (1831). He influenced the art of Fortunato Duranti.

Time in England

In 1788 Fuseli started to write essays and reviews for the Analytical Review. With Thomas Paine, William Godwin, Joseph Priestley, Erasmus Darwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, and other men and women interested in art, literature and politics, Fuseli frequented the home of Joseph Johnson, a publisher and prominent figure in radical British political and intellectual life. He also visited Allerton Hall in Liverpool, the home of William Roscoe.

When Louis XVI was executed in France in 1793, he condemned the revolution as despotic and anarchic, although he had first welcomed it as a sign of "an age pregnant with the most gigantic efforts of character." In 1799 he was appointed professor of painting at the Royal Academy, and keeper of the Academy in 1804. Among his pupils were John Constable (1776-1837), the major English landscape painter of his time, Benjamin Robert Haydon (1786-1846), William Etty (1787-1849), and Edwin Landseer (1802-73), who first exhibited at the age of twelve. William Blake, who was sixteen years his junior, recognized a debt to him, and for a time many English artists copied his mannerisms.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Liukkonen, Petri. "Henry Fuseli (1741-1825)". http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/fuseli.htm. Retrieved 2007-07-23. 

References

Bibliography

  • Calè, Luisa. Fuseli's Milton Gallery: 'Turning readers into spectators'. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2006.
  • Keay, Carolyn. Henry Fuseli. London: Academy Editions, 1974.
  • Lentzsch, Franziska, et al. Fuseli: The Wild Swiss. Zürich: Scheidegger & Spiess, 2005.
  • Myrone, Martin. Gothic Nightmares: Fuseli, Blake and the Romantic Imagination. London: Tate Publishing, 2006.
  • Myrone, Martin. Henry Fuseli. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001.
  • Powell, Nicolas. Fuseli: The Nightmare. London: Allen Lane, 1973.
  • Pressly, Nancy L. The Fuseli Circle in Rome: Early Romantic Art of the 1770s. New Haven: Yale Center for British Art, 1979.
  • Tomory, P. A. The Life and Art of Henry Fuseli. New York: Praeger, 1972.
  • Weinglass, David H. Henry Fuseli and the Engraver's Art. Boston: World Wide Books, 1982.

 
 

 

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