HName:  Shapley, John

DateBorn:  ca. 1890

Placeborn:  Jasper County, MO

Datedied: 1978

Placedied: Washington, DC

HDescrip: Early Christian and Byzantine art scholar; chair of the Department of Art, University of Chicago, 1929-?.  Shapley was born on the family farm in Missouri and educated in a one-room school house.  He graduated from the University of Missouri in 1912.  He continued for an M.A. at Princeton University, granted in 1913. While still a student, Shapley and his teacher, John Pickard, helped found the College Art Association, the American professional body of art historians and professional artists.. His Ph.D. from the University in Vienna, as conferred in 1914. The following year, he joined the faculty at Brown University.  During World War I, his mathematics proficiency landed him a job teaching soldiers for the war effort.  He married another University of Missouri alum and art historian, Fern Rusk (q.v.) in 1918.  Shapley taught at Brown until 1924. He was the editor of the College Art Association's Art Bulletin between 1921 and 1939, which he supported from his personal finances during the hard years of the Great Depression.  In 1924, he joined the faculty of New York University as Samuel F. B. Morse professor. While an NYU professor, Shapley headed a project funded by the Carnegie Corporation donating books on art history to over 200 high schools and colleges in the United States and Great Britain.  When the head of the art department at the University of Chicago, Walter Sargent (1868-1928), died in 1928, Shapley was appointed his successor. Shapley was responsible for bringing a greater variety and more scholarly faculty to the University, including José Pijon (q.v.). His wife worked as an assistant to Bernard Berenson (q.v.) in Italy editing a second edition of his corpus of Italian drawings.  Shapley used his income and connections at the University to publish the three-volume set for a modest cost.  The Shapley's moved to Washington in the early 1940s where Fern Shapley became a curator at the National Gallery in 1947. From 1960 to 1963 he taught at the University of Baghdad in Iraq. He later taught at Catholic and George Washington universities.  Though he published no books, he contributed essays to A Survey of Persian Art, the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and the Dictionary of Religion and Ethics. He succumbed to cardiac arrest in 1978. His brother was the noted Harvard astronomer Harlow Shapley (1885-1972).

Shapley's work for the Carnegie project launched the widespread study of art history and archeology in the United States.  Before the Carnegie initiative, almost no materials for the study of art history were available at the secondary school level. The so-called Carnegie "sets" consisted of more than 2,000 color art reproductions and about 200 books, most of them selected by Shapley.

HCountry:  United States

HBiography:  "Prof. John Shapley Will Leave NYU: Art Authority Has Been Appointed Head of Department University of Chicago." New York Times August 6, 1929, p. 34; [obituary:] Joyce, Maureen. "Art Historian John Shapley, 88, Dies." Washington Post September 13, 1978, p. C8.

HBibliography: and Shapley, Fern Rusk. Comparisons in Art: a Companion to the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.  New York: Phaidon, 1957.