Name Max Imdahl | ||
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Books Jan J. Schoonhoven: Reliefs and Drawings, Barnett Newman: who's afraid of red, yellow and blue III. Similar People Gottfried Boehm, Hans Robert Jauss, Michel Pastoureau, Eugen Bohm von Bawerk |
Max imdahl gro e premiere
Max Imdahl (September 6, 1925 in Aachen – October 11, 1988 in Bochum) was a German art historian specialized in art historical methodology and the interpretation of modern art after World War II.
Contents
- Max imdahl gro e premiere
- J st hr a tribute to max imdahl es darf nicht keinen sinn geben
- Life and work
- Select publications
- References
J st hr a tribute to max imdahl es darf nicht keinen sinn geben
Life and work

Imdahl studied studio painting, art history, archaeology and German literature at the University of Münster. For his paintings he won the Blevins Davis Prize, the most prestigious art contest of the postwar period in Germany, in 1950. In 1951 he completed his Ph.D. dissertation on the treatment of color in late Carolingian book illustration under Werner Hager. He worked as an assistant professor at the University of Münster for some years and wrote his Habilitationsschrift on Ottonian Art in 1961. In 1965, he was appointed professor of art history at the newly founded Ruhr Universität Bochum, where he was engaged in promoting modern art and in advising the university's modern art collection. From 1986 until his death, he was also a member of the German Academy of Arts.

Imdahl formulated a methodology he called "the Iconic," using an artwork's structure to determine its significance. His color analyses are characteristic of his approach. Furthermore, he primarily focused on examinations of the work of individual painters. Marxist interpreters accused him of using analytical methods that lacked historical awareness. They also criticized his preference for concrete (object-free) Western Art. In contrast, he found support for his ideas among philosophers and Catholic theologians.
Select publications


