Anton von Maron

Anton von Maron (8 January 1733, Vienna 3 March 1808, Rome) was an Austrian painter who specialized in portraits. Most of his career was spent in Rome.

Self-portrait (late 1700s)
Portrait of Johann Joachim Winckelmann (1768)

Life and work

He was born to Johann Leopold Maron (1696-1770), a painter, and his wife Anna Catharina née Schuster. From 1741 to 1744 he was a student at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, where he trained under Karl Aigen. He also studied with Daniel Gran.[1] In 1755 Maron moved to Rome.

in 1754 Anton Raphael Mengs became director of the Vatican painting school.[2] From 1756 to 1761 Maron served as Mengs' pupil and assistant.[3][4] In 1765, he married Mengs' sister, Therese, who was also an artist.[1]

The following year, he became a member of the Accademia di San Luca. This brought him into contact with several important persons who helped him establish a connection between the Viennese and Roman art communities. His classically-inspired works made a lasting impression on the work of fellow Austrian Martin Knoller.[3]

Maron became one of the most highly regarded portrait painter in eighteenth-century Rome. [1] He received a number of commissions from both church dignitaries and English aristocrats passing through on the Grand Tour.[5] His first portrait to attract critical attention was one of the art historian, Johann Joachim Winckelmann; now in the Schloss Weimar. From 1770 onwards, he painted several members of the Habsburg family, including Empress Maria Theresa. In addition to portraits, he and Mengs worked together on frescoes in the Church of San Eusebio and at the Villa Albani (1757-1760).His portrait of British merchant Peter Du Cane Sr. hangs in the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.

In 1772, he served as a consultant for the reorganization of the Vienna Academy. Following his recommendations, the Academy began sending scholarship holders to study in Italy, and placed them under his supervision. Shortly after, he was raised to the nobility and given the title of Baron. He held academic positions in both cities, became a lecturer, and wrote some treatises on art.

For most of his career he was successful and respected, but by the time of the Napoleonic period, his style fell out of fashion.[6]

References

Sources

Further reading

  • Antonella Cesareo, "Studi su Anton von Maron: 2001-2012", in: Saggi di storia dell'arte Vol.30, Campisano, 2014
  • Clario Di Fabio, "Prima della tempesta. Anton von Maron, i ritratti Cambiaso e le altre opere genovesi" , in Anton von Maron e Angelica Kauffmann, Ritrattisti europei per i Genovesi alla moda, exhibition catalog, Galleria nazionale di palazzo Spinola 2018-2019, G. Zanelli, pp. 14-43.

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