DICTIONARY OF ART HISTORIANS |
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A Biographical Dictionary of Historic Scholars, Museum Professionals and Academic Historians of Art
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Junius (du Jon), Franciscus (the younger), Francisci Filius Franciscus Junius Date born: 1589 or 1591 Place Born: Heidelberg, Germany Date died: 1677 Place died: Windsor, United Kingdom Philologist, author of an early art history and exponent of the visual arts. Junius was born into an illustrious Calvinist family. His father, Junius the elder, was a French Huguenot theologian who taught in Heidelberg and Leiden. One uncle, Johan van den Corput (1542-1611), a military engineer and another, Franciscus Gomarus (1563 - 1641), a theologian was an important figure in the Dutch Reformation. Fanciscus Junius was educated at Leiden in philology, theology and the sciences. In 1621 he moved to England, first to work in the library of the Bishop of Norwich, Samuel Harsnet (1561 -1631) and then as librarian to Thomas Howard (1585 - 1646), the 2nd Earl of Arundel. As a patron of the arts second only to Charles I, Arundel owned vast collections of paintings and classical sculpture. Junius initially studied medieval manuscripts in the 1650's before focusing his attention on compiling the extant references to art from the classical world. His brother-in-law, the Dutch scholar John Gerard Vossius (1577-1649), suggested Junius extract the references on art from John Selden's Marmora Arundelliana (1627), a compilation of classical inscriptions. Junius' work, De pictura veterum was published in 1637 and translated into English the following year as The Painting of the Ancients. The book became a powerful scholarly and political tool in the right for art to be ranked among the highest disciplines. Junius' relationship with his patron, the Earl, however, was never easy. He frequently left the Earl's service though he was in exile with the family during the civil wars of the 1640's. After 1642 he spent his life in the Netherlands, returning to England only in 1674 at the end of his life. The year before his death he donated his collection of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts as well as a portion of his book collection on philology to the the Bodleian Library at Oxford. De Pictura Veterum is divided in several books. One book is composed of classical texts on the arts and Junius' commentary on them. A second is an alphabetical list of quotations of the lives and works of artists of antiquity. Like other collections of classical quotations, De Pictura Veterum served scholars and rhetoriticians as a source for ancient thought. Junius' commentary to the inscriptions extended the scholarly content. The tome found a second important use, as well. The renaissance debate over the primacy of the arts--the written arts vs. the graphic arts--had once again come to the fore. The most recent dispute arose between the playwright Ben Jonson (1573-1637), and court architect Inigo Jones (1573-1652) for Charles I. In The Painting of the Ancients, Junius can be clearly read as siding with Jones and the supremacy of the visual arts. Junius's championing of the visual arts also supported the notion of art's power to promote a virtuous life, countering the argument of William Prynne (1600-1669) in his Histrio-mastix,1633, which attacked the Court of Charles I and its patronage of the arts. Later art historians, such as Johannes Overbeck (q.v.) made heavy use of Junius' book, particularly in his influential Die antiken Schriftquellen, 1868. Home Country: Germany/England Sources: Howarth, David. "Franciscus Junius." Dictionary of Art 17: 693-4; Rademaker, C. S. M. "Young Franciscus Junius: 1591-1621." in, Franciscus Junius F. F. and His Circle. Rolf H. Bremmer, ed. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1998, pp. 1-33; Pfehl, Philipp. "Access to the Ancients: Junius, Rubens and Van Dyck." in, Franciscus Junius F. F. and His Circle. Rolf H. Bremmer, ed. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1998, pp. 35-70; Fehl, Philipp. "Junius (Du Jon) Franciscus." Encyclopedia of the History of Classical Archaeology. Nancy Thomson de Grummond, ed. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996, pp. 625-27. Bibliography: De pictura veterum libri tres. Amsterdam: Johann Blaeu, 1637, English: The Painting of the Ancients, in Three Bookes. London: R. Hodgkinsonne and Daniel Frere, 1638; [correspondence:] Romburgh, Sophia Georgina van, ed. For my Worthy Freind [sic] Mr Franciscus Junius: an Edition of the Complete Correspondence of Francis Junius F.F. (1591-1677). 2 vols. [unpublished dissertation, Ph. D., Leiden University, 2002].
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