Guide to the Lorenz Eitner papers SC1519

Claudia Willett
Department of Special Collections and University Archives
November 2022
Green Library
557 Escondido Mall
Stanford 94305-6064
specialcollections@stanford.edu


Language of Material: English
Contributing Institution: Department of Special Collections and University Archives
Title: Lorenz Eitner
Creator: Eitner, Lorenz.
Identifier/Call Number: SC1519
Physical Description: 39 Linear Feet
Date (inclusive): 1950-2009
Physical Location: Special Collections and University Archives materials are stored offsite and must be paged 36-48 hours in advance. For more information on paging collections, see the department's website
Physical Location: Special Collections and University Archives materials are stored offsite and must be paged at least 36 hours in advance.

Conditions Governing Use

While Special Collections is the owner of the physical and digital items, permission to examine collection materials is not an authorization to publish. These materials are made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Any transmission or reproduction beyond that allowed by fair use requires permission from the owners of rights, heir(s) or assigns. See: http://library.stanford.edu/spc/using-collections/permission-publish

Preferred Citation

[identification of item], Lorenz Eitner papers (SC1519). Department of Special Collections and University Archives, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, Calif.

Biographical / Historical

Lorenz Eitner, an expert in 18th- and 19th-century European art and renowned for his work on Théodore Géricault, was born Aug. 27, 1919, in Brno, Czechoslovakia, of Austrian parents. His mother belonged to the Thonet family, which had originated the bentwood furniture-making process. His father worked in the business. Eitner was educated in Frankfurt and Berlin. The family moved to Brussels about the time the Nazis came to power, and immigrated to South Carolina in 1935.
He earned a bachelor's degree from Duke University, where he graduated summa cum laude in 1940. He was drafted two years later. He eventually became a U.S. intelligence officer with the Office of Strategic Services and was stationed in Washington, London, Paris and Salzburg. He was head of the research section in the Office of Chief Prosecution for the Nuremberg Trials. He met his future wife, Trudi von Kathrein, in Austria; she had been the secretary to one of the leaders in the Austrian resistance.
After the trials, Eitner returned to the United States to earn his MFA and PhD degrees from Princeton (1948 and 1952), with a dissertation on Géricault, which was published by Princeton University Press in 1952. After 14 years at the University of Minnesota, Eitner came to Stanford University in 1963 to be chairman of its art department and director of its museum. By the time he retired in 1989, he had recruited a nationally prominent faculty of artists and art historians, revamped and expanded the curriculum, added PhD and MFA programs and created a highly ranked museum.
Eitner was a Fulbright Fellow (1952-53) in Brussels and a Guggenheim Fellow (1956-57) in Munich. He received a National Endowment for the Humanities Research Grant, and both a $10,000 Mitchell Prize for the History of Art and a Charles Rufus Morey Book Award of the College Art Association for his book Géricault: His Life and Work (1983). He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1988. He won Stanford's Gores Award for excellence in teaching in 1986. He was awarded the Gold Medal for Meritorious Service to the Austrian Republic in 1990. The award is one of the highest decorations Austria bestows.
The Osgood Hooker Professor in Fine Arts, Emeritus, Eitner died March 11, 2009 at his home of a heart attack. He was 89.
Excerpted from 'https://news.stanford.edu/news/2009/march18/eitner-031809.html

Scope and Contents

The collection includes Stanford Museum and Art Department correspondence, lecture notes (boxes 1-8), publications drafts, research files, and unpublished research projects (boxes 13-15 and 24-39).
In addition, the Géricault files (boxes 9-12 and 16-23) contain, among other things, Eitner's responses to requests for authentication of paintings and drawings (works often previously unknown, or newly discovered), along with the reference material he used to back up his decisions. Not infrequently he discovered works that were intentional forgeries or accidental misattributions. The photos in those files are key to his evaluations, and often are unique - i.e. not available online, for example, photos of artwork in private collections sent to him only.

Subjects and Indexing Terms

Art.
Museums.
Stanford University

 

ARCH-2019-263 ARCH-2019-263

Box 1

Museum and Art Department files 1963-1989

Box 2

Museum exhibitions 1963-1989

Box 3

Public lectures, notes, outlines 1950-1999

 

Art Department classes

Box 4

Art #1-100

Box 5

Art #120A-220A

Box 6

Art #120B and others

Box 7

Art #120B-120C

Box 8

Lecture notes by artist

Box 9

Theodore Gericault expertise and authentication 1950-2009

Box 10

Theodore Gericault expertise and authentication 1950-2009

Box 11

Theodore Gericault expertise and authentication 1950-2009

Box 12

Other expertise and authentications (not Gericault)

Box 13

Publication notes, drafts, final versions 1950-1969

Box 14

Publication notes, drafts, final versions 1970-1989

Box 15

Publication notes, drafts, final versions 1980-1999

Box 16, Box 17, Box 18, Box 19, Box 20

Theodore Gericault notes and images by theme

Box 21

Theodore Gericault notes and images by theme; the Italian & Chicago sketchbooks

Box 22, Box 23

Theodore Gericault source materials

Box 24

Unpublished research projects

Box 25

National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. correspondence and papers

Box 26

Research notes French artists: A-C

Box 27

Research notes French artists: Corot

Box 28

Research notes French artists: Courbet

Box 29

Research notes French artists: Daumier - David

Box 30

Research notes French artists: David (cont.) - Delacroix

Box 31

Research notes French artists: Delacroix (cont.) - Hugo

Box 32

Research notes French artists: Ingres - Millet

Box 33

Research notes French artists: Moitte - Rouget

Box 34

Research notes French artists: Rousseau - Vernet

Box 35

Research notes English artists: A-R

Box 36

Research notes English artists: S-Z; American and Italian artists

Box 37

Research notes German artists: A-K

Box 38

Research notes German artists: L-Z

Box 39

Research notes: bibliographic sources