Frederick B. Deknatel Explained

Frederick B. Deknatel
Birth Name:Frederick Brockway Deknatel
Birth Date:9 March 1905
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, United States
Death Place:Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
Burial Place:Mount Auburn Cemetery
Workplaces:Harvard University
Occupation:Art historian
Educator
Spouse:Virginia Herrick (m. 1931-1973)
Children:3
Discipline:Art history
Sub Discipline:Modern art
Alma Mater:Princeton University
Harvard University
Thesis Title:The Thirteenth-Century Gothic Sculpture of the Cathedrals of Burges and Leon
Thesis Url:http://id.lib.harvard.edu/alma/990038344890203941/catalog
Thesis Year:1935
Influences:Charles Rufus Morey
Arthur Kingsley Porter
Paul J. Sachs
Influenced:Kermit S. Champa

Frederick Brockway Deknatel (March 9, 1905 – November 3, 1973) was an American art historian and educator. Deknatel was the William Door Boardman Professor of Fine Arts at Harvard University from 1942 to 1972.

Career

Born in Chicago, Deknatel graduated from the Lawrenceville School in 1924. He then earned a Bachelor of Arts in history from Princeton University in 1928. Deknatel married Virginia Herrick three years later, and received a Doctor of Philosophy in art history from Harvard University in 1935. He wrote a doctoral dissertation on thirteenth-century Gothic sculpture in the Burgos and León Cathedral. However, Deknatel soon gained an interest in modern art of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Five years after graduating, Deknatel was hired as associate professor of fine arts at Harvard, and was made full professor in 1946. In the mid-1940s, he took on a number of important administrative roles, including the assistant dean of Harvard College (1942-1945), chair of the Department of Fine Arts (1944-1949), and president of the College Art Association (1947-1948).

In 1950, Deknatel staged the first exhibition in the United States showcasing the work of the artist Edvard Munch. Deknatel was subsequently named Knight of the Order of St. Olav by the Government of Norway.[1] Three years later, his professorship was endowed as the William Door Boardman Professor of Fine Arts. In 1966, Deknatel was the recipient of an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Alfred University.[2]

Retirement and death

Deknatel retired from Harvard in 1972 and died one year later of a heart attack.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Frederick B. Deknatel .
  2. https://haa.fas.harvard.edu/files/history-artsarchitecture/files/deknatel_memorial_minute.pdf Memorial
  3. Web site: Professor Deknatel Dies; Taught Art for 40 Years | News | the Harvard Crimson .