Catalogue raisonné

The typical catalogue raisonné is a monograph giving a comprehensive catalogue of artworks by an artist.

The essential elements of a catalogue raisonné are that it purports to be an exhaustive list of works for a defined subject matter describing the works in a way so that they may be reliably identified by third parties.

Contents

Purports to be an exhaustive list

The term "catalogue raisonné" has been given a loose interpretation in the past but it has always meant a complete listing.

The Compact Oxford English Dictionary defines "catalogue" as

  1. a list, register or complete enumeration (emphasis added),
  2. now usually distinguished from a mere list (emphasis added) or enumeration by systematic or methodical arrangement…..

The author of a catalogue raisonné presumes to have catalogued a complete list and then publishes the catalogue. The difficulty is in knowing when an author can ever be confident that the list is complete i.e. the concern that an undiscovered work remains to be found. In reality it is typical for works to show up after the publication of the catalogue resulting in new editions or completely new compilations by other authors. In other cases research shows that some works have been wrongly attributed to the artist in earlier catalogues.

Rembrandt, an example of catalogues being modified

There are about 20 catalogues purporting to list Rembrandt’s complete etchings; each one building on the other, in some cases adding etchings, in others removing etchings and in others adding different states of the etchings. The important catalogues being:

Defined subject matter

The subject matter covered by a catalogue raisonné is always defined with the parameters set by the author. The parameters are often just two:

  1. all the works of
  2. one artist.

However there are many variations, both broader and narrower than "all the works" or "one artist". The parameters could be restricted to one type of art work by one artist or it could be widened to all the works by a group of artists.

One artist?

While the typical catalogue raisonné is devoted to the works of one artist, the author could widen the parameters to include a group of artists.

An example of all the works of a group of artists is:

A Catalogue Raisonné of the Works of the Most Eminent Dutch, Flemish, and French Painters by John Smith; published by Smith & Son, London in 9 volumes 1829-1842 also seen in an Elibron Classics facsimile reprint published by Adamant Media Corporation (February 9, 2001) of the 1836 edition.

But for a modern example of multiple artists that is nearly as vague, see a catalogue of the principal artists of The Grosvenor School of Modern Art from the 1920s and 30s.

Linocuts of the Machine Age: Claude Flight and the Grosvenor School; by Stephen Coppel, Publisher: Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1995. This book purports to be a complete listing (over 380) of the linocuts done by seven of the artists of the Grosvenor School.

In rare cases "catalogue raisonné" is not even used to refer to art or an artist but is used to catalogue an institutional collection e.g. in what purports to be a definitive book on the Jewish Museum's Hanukkah Lamp collection see: Braunstein, Susan L, Five Centuries of Hanukkah Lamps From the Jewish Museum: A Catalogue Raisonné, Publisher: The Jewish Museum (New York) under the auspices of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and Yale University Press New Haven, New York; 2004

Medium

Most artists work in various media, e.g. oils, water colors, sculpture, etc. In some cases the author of the catalogue raisonné restricts the catalogue to works in just one medium by the artist.

Picasso: an example of one artist and some of his different mediums, each medium with its own catalogue raisonné:

Time periods

Sometimes only a certain period of the artist's life is covered as set out below for Jim Dine.

Combinations

For an example where the parameters are limited to:

Describing the works so they may be identified

Collectors, buyers, sellers, museum curators, art dealers, art appraisers, and others will often make reference to a particular artwork that is in a museum collection, was in a past auction, was the subject of a journal article, etc. They may then compare that piece of art to another that they are considering.

The concern is to ensure that everyone is talking about the same piece of art.

The problem is:

The catalogue raisonné is required to ensure all parties are in agreement as to which piece they are discussing. - need to describe reference # - incomplete

Expected contents of a catalogue raisonné

Scholarship has become more exacting since the late 1800s and more information is being included. In more recent usage a catalogue raisonné ideally provides the following for every work discussed:

In addition, the catalogue often contains:

Because artwork can be widely distributed, and some owners may not wish for high-quality images to be made available, some photographic reproductions of works may be only in black and white and/or small in size. Works since destroyed may exist only as old photographs or prints.

Grammatical and linguistic matters

The term catalogue raisonné is French, meaning "reasoned catalogue"[2] (i.e., containing arguments for the information given, such as attributions.)

American spelling

Catalogue raisonné has wide usage in English and is part of the technical terminology used primarily in the art world. Accordingly, the spelling is never Americanized to "catalog", even in the United States.[3][4]

Plural usage - catalogues raisonnés

"Catalogue raisonné" is a compound noun, which can cause confusion when users attempt to pluralize it.
The most common variations of the plural form are:[5]

Catalogues raisonné - wrong

As set out in The Elements of Grammar by Margaret Shertzer, when the compound is made up of a noun and a preposition, a noun and a prepositional phrase, or a noun and an adjective, the noun is usually pluralized such as is in "mothers-in-law", "commanders in chief" and "works of art".

This would suggest that the plural form is "catalogues raisonné". However, this is incorrect.

Catalogue raisonnés - wrong

The common thinking is that one should just add an "s" at the very end to create the plural.
This would suggest that the plural form is "catalogue raisonnés". However, this is incorrect.

Catalogues raisonnés - correct

"Catalogue raisonné" is French and even though it is used in English, the French pluralization is required.

Other language equivalents

e.g. Remedios Varo: Catalogo Razonado/Catalogue Raisonne by Ovalle, R., Gruen, W., et al. 4th Revised edition; Publisher: Mexico: Ediciones Era, 2008. Featuring the complete works of Remedios Varo.

e.g. "L'Opera completa di Cezanne" by Gatto, Alfonso and Sara Orienti Publisher: Milano (Milan): Rizzoli, 1979 A Catalogue raisonné of the paintings. 838 items described and illustrated.
In some cases it may be shortened to "L'Opera" e.g. L'Opera Pittorica Di Edouard Manet by Venturi, Marcello Publisher: Rizzoli, Milan 1967. Catalogue raisonné. 64 pp of colour plates, 520 b&w illustrations.

e.g. "Max Ernst: Oeuvre-Katalog, 1906-1963. the Complete Paintings, Drawings, Sculpture, Frottages, Collages and Graphics" by Spies, Werner, S. & G. Metken and Helmut Leppien. Publisher: Menil / Wittenborn 1975 Catalogue raisonné. Text in English, German and French. Catalogue descriptions in German with English language glossary

e.g. "Kurt Kocherscheidt: Werkverzeichnis: Malerei und Holzarbeiten (Catalogue Raisonné: Paintings and Wood Sculptures) 1966–1992"; by Morat, Franz Armin; Pub: Morat-Institut für Kunst und Kunstwissenschaft 2006

e.g. "Emil Nolde: Werkverzeichnis der Gemalde, Band I 1895-1914"; by Urban, Martin; Pub: Verlag C.H. Beck München

Hard copy

Examples of catalogues raisonné in book form have been around for centuries (see Rembrandt example above.)

Benefits of hard copy

There are many reasons to prefer hard copy books, including:

Problems with hard copy

On-line catalogues raisonnés

Book form catalogues raisonné have been around for centuries while the on-line catalogue raisonné is a recent introduction. Until scholars have had more time to reflect, any comments must be viewed with caution.

Benefits of an on-line catalogue raisonné

References

  1. ^ "Tête de Femme (Head of a Woman)" is used by Picasso in over 600 artworks - many with just the title "Tête de Femme" - search picasso.csdl.tamu.edu
  2. ^ Online Merriam Webster Dictionary
  3. ^ Artlex.com, Art Dictionary on catalogue raisonné
  4. ^ FAQ, placing the Catalogue Raisonné in context with other types of art catalogues arthistory.about.com
  5. ^ based on a Google search for each variation on May 4, 2010
  6. ^ Merriam-webster.com
  7. ^ As seen in the CRSA homepage, catalogueraisonne.org

Recommended books

External links

General links

Databases for hard copy editions

On-line projects