John Michael Montias
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John Michael Montias (1928–2005) was an economist and art historian, well-known for his contributions to the economic history of Dutch Golden Age painting. Born in Paris, he studied at Columbia University, where he received his PhD in Soviet block economics in 1958. He subsequently taught economics at Yale University. He published studies on Polish and Romanian economics, and, in 1977, the book Structure of Economic Systems.
In the mid-1970s his interest shifted to the economics of art in seventeenth-century Netherlands, a subject that had interested him since his time as a postgraduate student. His first article on this subject, "Painters in Delft, 1613–1680" published in the 1978–1979 volume of Simiolus, is credited with helping invigorate the study of the economies of art. This line of research culminated in his book Artists and Artisans in Delft: A Socio-Economic Study of the Seventeenth Century (1982). The book demonstrates convincingly how economic history may contribute to a better understanding of cultural developments.
Montias's contributions to Vermeer studies have been widely acknowledged. He discovered new documents on Pieter van Ruijven, Jacobus Dissius, his son-in-law and Hendrick van Buijten, the principal collectors of Vermeer's paintings. He concentrated on Maria Thins, Vermeer's mother-in-law, when he discovered Vermeer had moved in at her house.
[edit] References
- Dictionary of Art Historians
- Gary Schwartz, "Some Questions Concerning Inventory Research," in A. Golahny and M.M. Mochizuki (eds.), In His Milieu Essays on Netherlandish Art in Memory of John Michael Montias, Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2006 (403–410).
[edit] External link
An online book: Essays on Netherlandish Art in Memory of John Michael Montias