HName: Michel, André(-Paul-Charles)

DateBorn: 1853

Placeborn: Montpellier, France

Datedied: 1925

Placedied: Paris, France

HDescrip: Art critic, professor, curator. André Michel was from a protestant family of Montpellier, where his grandfather had been minister. In this city Michel graduated in arts and history. In 1872 he went to Paris where for a short time he studied law. He then enrolled in the École des Hautes Études and the École des Beaux-Arts where he studied under Hippolyte Taine (q.v.). In 1880 he settled in Paris where he became a contributor to various art magazines including the Gazette des Beaux-Arts and the Journal des Débats. He regularly reviewed exhibitions in Paris, such as the yearly Paris Salon and the Exposition Universelle. In 1886 he published a monograph on the painter François Boucher. Between 1887 and 1893 Michel taught history of art at the École Spéciale d’Architecture. He also wrote articles for the Grande Encyclopédie (Paris, 1885-1902). In 1891 he published L’école française de David à Delacroix. In 1893 he joined Louis Courajod (q.v.) at the Louvre as adjunct curator of the Department of Sculpture of the Middle Ages, the Renaissance and the Modern Age. He also attended Courajod’s classes at the École du Louvre. In 1896, the year in which Courajod died, he became the latter’s successor and began teaching the history of French sculpture at the École du Louvre. A number of his exhibition revues later appeared together under the title, Notes sur l’art moderne (1896) and Les Salons de 1897 (1897). He was the co-editor (with Henry Lemonnier) of the 1899-1903 publication of the classes that Courajod taught between 1887 and 1896. Michel frequently traveled to lecture all over Europe. In the fall of 1903 he visited a number of universities and colleges in the United States, including Harvard, Dartmouth, Wellesley, and Smith. At that time he was involved in the edition of his multi-volume Histoire de l’art, a general history of western art from the early Christian period up to the twentieth century. The first volume appeared in 1905. In addition to being the editor, he contributed many sections on French and Italian sculpture and wrote concluding essays for each volume. In the first year of World War I, in 1914, Michel lost his son Robert, who died in action. He never recovered from his grief. The war also interrupted the publication of the Histoire de l’art volumes. In 1917 Michel was elected a member to the Académie des Beaux-Arts. In 1920 he was appointed as professor at the College de France and left the Louvre. Three years later his weakening health forced him into retirement. By that time the seventh volume of his Histoire de l’art was published. Michel died in 1925, the last volume not yet completed. It was edited and published in 1929 by his pupil and successor at the Louvre, Paul Vitry (q.v.).

Michel questioned the use of the term “Middle Ages” for the period between Antiquity and Renaissance. His Histoire de l’art, one of the earliest general art histories of the 20th century, was meant to give a synthesis of the continuous evolution of art from one school to the other and from one period to the other. It also included the applied arts. Inspired by his mentor, Taine, Michel was convinced that the milieu in which art works were created needed to be studied and for him, like for his predecessor Courajod, the intrinsic value of the artwork deserved to be considered prior to all other art historical research. MD

HCountry: France

HBiography: “M. André Michel, Art Critic, in this City.” New York Times November 19, 1903, p. 16; Vitry, Paul. “André Michel” Gazette des Beaux-Arts s. 5, 12, (1925): 317-332; Bazin, Germain. Histoire de l'histoire de l'art; de Vasari à nos jours. Paris: Albin Michel, 1986, pp. 373- 375; Asfour, Amal. “Michel, André(-Paul-Charles)” Dictionary of Art 21 (1996): 428.

HBibliography: François Boucher. Paris: Librairie de l’Art, 1886; L’école française de David à Delacroix. Paris: Librairie Illustrée, 1891; Notes sur l’art moderne (peinture) Corot, Ingres, Millet, Eugène Delacroix, Raffet, Meissonier, Puvis de Chavannes. A travers les Salons. Paris: A. Colin, 1896; Les Salons de 1897. Ouvrage précédé d’une étude sur les Salons au Palais de l’Industrie de 1857 à 1897. Paris: Journal des Débats et Gazette des Beaux-Arts, 1897; and Lemonnier, Henry, eds. Louis Courajod. Leçons professées à l’École du Louvre (1887-1896). 1. Origines de l’art roman et gothique, 2. Origines de la Renaissance, 3. Origines de l’art moderne. Paris: Alphonse Picard et Fils, Éditeurs, 1899-1903; and Vitry, Paul, eds. L'histoire de l'art depuis les premiers temps chrétiens jusqu’à nos jours. 8 vols, 17 parts. Paris: A. Colin, 1905-1929; and Laran, Jean. Puvis de Chavannes. Paris: La Renaissance du Livre, J. Gillequin & cie, 1911; and Migeon, Gaston. Le Musée du Louvre, sculptures et objets d’art du moyen âge, de la renaissance et des temps modernes. Paris: Renouard, 1912.