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John Walker (curator)

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Art curator

Alma mater
  
Harvard University

Died
  
October 15, 1995

Occupation
  
Art curator

Education
  
Harvard University

Name
  
John Walker


John Walker (curator)

Born
  
1906
Pittsburgh

Known for
  
director of the National Gallery of Art,

Books
  
John Constable, Clinical Parasitology: A Handb, Dynamical Systems and Evol, The Rise of Big Government, Visual Culture: An Introduction

Similar People
  
Leslie Halliwell, J M W Turner, Andrew Murray

John Walker III (1906 Pittsburgh - 1995 Amberley, West Sussex) was an American art curator, and the second director of the National Gallery of Art, from 1956 to 1969.

Contents

Life

Walker received an undergraduate degree in art history from Harvard University in 1930, where he studied with Paul J. Sachs. He formed the Harvard Society for Contemporary Art, with Philip Johnson, Lincoln Kirstein, and Edward Warburg. He studied at Villa I Tatti in Florence with Bernard Berenson, and served as professor and assistant director of the American Academy in Rome from 1935 to 1939.

Walker became chief curator of the National Gallery of Art in 1939 and was involved in identifying works of art looted by the Nazis following World War II. In 1956 he was named director of the National Gallery, succeeding David E. Finley, Jr., and remained in the position until his retirement in 1969. During his tenure at the gallery, Walker cultivated donor relationships with collectors such as the Mellon family, Joseph Widener, Armand Hammer, and Chester Dale; his significant acquisitions included Rembrandt's Aristotle with the Bust of Homer, Fragonard's La Liseuse, El Greco's Laocoon, and the Ginevra de' Benci by Leonardo da Vinci. Walker was the author of six books, including Bellini and Titian and Titian at Ferrara, and an autobiography, Self-Portrait with Donors. Like his predecessor, David Finley, Walker served on the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, from 1967 to 1971.

In 1961, Walker hired J. Carter Brown as his assistant. He retired in 1969, and lived in Florida, Fishers Island, New York, and England.

Works

  • National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1963, New York; 1964, Thames & Hudson, London, and other European editions
  • Self-Portrait with Donors. Little, Brown, 1974, ISBN 978-0-316-91803-9
  • Portraits: 5,000 Years, Abrams, 1983
  • The National Gallery of Art: One Thousand Masterpieces. Abradale Press, 1995, ISBN 9780810981485
  • References

    John Walker (curator) Wikipedia


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