French writer, dramatist, journalist and art critic
Albert Abraham Wolff (31 December 1825, Cologne[1] – 22 December 1891, Paris), was a French writer, dramatist, journalist, and art critic who was born in Germany.
Biography
Wolff graduated from a trade school after teaching in Paris [citation needed]. This was followed by a degree [clarification needed] in Bonn before he settled in Paris in 1857. There he worked as a secretary for Alexandre Dumas. From 1859 he was editor of Le Charivari under the pseudonym Charles Brassac. He moved to Le Figaro where he became a leading art critic and was later promoted to editor of the newspaper. His discussions of the Paris Salon had a great impact of the success of contemporary artists. Wolff supported academic painting, with Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier as one of his favourite artists. Moreover he was intensively connected with contemporary French artists, a. o. the painters of the Barbizon School who he visited and interviewed frequently. In his publication of 1886: 'Notes upon certain Masters of the XIX century'[2] Wolff described the French painters whose pictures were exhibited on the exhibition 'Cent Chefs-d'Oeuvres: the Choiche of the French Private Galleries', in Paris, 1883. Wolff opposed Impressionism, although occasionally he praised individual works from this school. He also published detailed observations of Paris in several books and wrote several novels and stage plays. Politically, he opposed antisemitism.
Notice biographique publiée en préface des Notes d'un musicien en voyage de Jacques Offenbach, Paris, 1877 Texte en ligne
Correspondance entre Albert Wolff et Marie-Lise B. : un amour romantique, Paris : La Pensée universelle, 1985
Bibliography
Gustave Toudouze, Albert Wolff : histoire d'un chroniqueur parisien, Paris : Victor Havard, 1883 Texte en ligne
Guillaume Pradoura: Albert Wolff (1825-1891). Heurs et malheurs d’un critique influent in Bulletin de la Société de l'Histoire de l'Art Français. Année 2014, SHAF und Éditions de Boccard, Paris 2019.
References
^Wolff (Albert) in Gustave Vapereau: Dictionnaire universel des contemporains, No. 2.
^Wolff, Albert (1886). Notes upon certain masters of the XIX century. University of California Libraries. [New York : Gilliss brothers & Turnure, the Art age press].
^Bauer, Paul (2006). Deux siècles d'histoire au Père Lachaise. Mémoire & documents. p. 786. ISBN978-2914611480.
External links
Media related to Albert Wolff (journalist) at Wikimedia Commons
ZOETROPE STRIPS | LE FIGARO, from stephenherbert.co.uk