Gertrud Bing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gertrud Bing (born 1892, died 1964) was a scholar and Director of the Warburg Institute. She was educated at the Lyceum in Hamburg from 1909-1913, and received her abitur from the Heinrich-Hertz Realgymnasium in 1916. After this, she studied at the universities of Munich and Hamburg. Her doctoral dissertation, written under the supervision of Ernst Cassirer, concerned Lessing and Leibniz. In 1922 she began working as a librarian at the Kulturwissenschaflichen Bibliothek Warburg, which was later moved to London when the Nazis rose to power, becoming the Warburg Institute. With her partner, Fritz Saxl, the new Institute's first Director, she settled in Dulwich. Saxl died in 1949, and was succeeded as Director by Henri Frankfort. At his death in 1954, Bing became Director of the Institute, and Professor of the History of the Classical Tradition. She held these posts until her death in 1964.
[edit] External links
This biographical article about an art historian is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |