Albert Kutal (9 January 1904, Hranice na Moravě – 27 December 1976, Brno[1]) was a Czech art historian of Moravian descent who established classifying principles of Central European Gothic sculpture as one of the first to study and analyse the medieval art[2] of Bohemia and Moravia, and the influence upon it of Southern European iconography.[3] Kutal were influential in the development of formal analysis [4] in art history in the early 20th century. His magnum opus, still consulted, is Gothic Art in Bohemia and Moravia (published in English translation in 1971).[5]

Origins and career

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Kutal was born into the family of state geodesist František Kutal in the predominantly Catholic town of Hranice na Moravě, Moravia, Austro-Hungarian Empire (in the sub-region of Záhoří, today in the Czech Republic).[6] He graduated from secondary school in 1923 and went on to attend the University of Brno (1923–1928), where he was a student of Eugen Dostál and wrote his dissertation on the Romanesque and Gothic sculpture in the arch of the Porta coeli Convent in Tišnov, Moravia.

He taught at Brno, and briefly lectured in Paris, Brussels, Leuven, Bonn, Vienna and Graz.

Works

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  • "Quelques remarques sur la sculpture gothique en Boheme", in Actes du XIX. Congres international d'histoire de l'art (Paris, 1959), pp. 100–104.
  • České gotické sochařstvi, 1350–1450 (Prague, 1962)
  • "La 'Belle Madone' de Budapest" in Bulletin du Muse'e Hongrois des Beaux-Arts 23 (1963), pp.2I-40.
  • Gothic Art in Bohemia and Moravia, translated by Till Gottheiner (London, 1971)

References

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  1. ^ Grave information for PhDr. Albert Kutal DrSc., located in the hřbitov Brno - ústřední (The Central Cemetery), Brno, Moravia
  2. ^ Albert Kutal: The Brunswick sketchbook and Czech Art of the eighties of the 14th Century [1]
  3. ^ Otto Pächt and Albert Kutal: Methodological Parallels [2]
  4. ^ H U S B A N D, Timothy: A Beautiful Madonna in the Cloisters Collection[3]
  5. ^ Discovery of New Lands. The Brno Exhibition of Gothic Art of Moravia and Silesia 1935-1936 and Albert Kutal
  6. ^ Personal profile The Brno encyclopedia (in Czech)