Allan Marquand

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Allan Marquand
Born(1853-12-10)December 10, 1853
DiedSeptember 24, 1924(1924-09-24) (aged 70)
New York City, New York, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
Alma materSt. Paul's School (New Hampshire)
Princeton University
Johns Hopkins University
OccupationArt historian
Known forCurator of the Princeton University Art Museum
Spouse
(m. 1896)
ChildrenEleanor Marquand Delanoy
Mary Marquand Hochschild
Sarnia Marquand
Allan Marquand Jr.
Parent(s)Elizabeth Allen Marquand
Henry Gurdon Marquand
RelativesHarold K. Hochschild (son-in-law)
Adam Hochschild (grandson) Frederick Marquand (uncle)

Allan Marquand (/ˈmɑːrkwənd/; December 10, 1853 – September 24, 1924) was an art historian at Princeton University and a curator of the Princeton University Art Museum. Marquand is notable as one of the foremost art historians and critics of his time, and helped to popularize and establish the field in elite college campuses. Along with his contemporary, Harvard's Charles Eliot Norton, Marquand was the first academic to bring the serious, academic study of art history into American collegiate curricula.[1]

Early life[edit]

Marquand was born on December 10, 1853, in New York City. He was a son of Elizabeth Love (née Allen) Marquand (1826–1895) and Henry Gurdon Marquand, a prominent philanthropist and art collector who served as the second president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[2] The Marquand Family gained prominence in the silver trade, having established Marquand and Co.[3] Marquand's uncle, Frederick Marquand, as well as cousin Virginia Marquand Monroe, founded Southport's Pequot Library Association.[4]

After graduating from Princeton in 1874, Allan studied theology for three years at Princeton Seminary and the Union Theological Seminary, later travelling to study at the University of Berlin.[1] He went on to obtain his Ph.D. in Philosophy at the Johns Hopkins University in 1880. His thesis, supervised by Charles Sanders Peirce, was on the logic of Philodemus.[2]

Career[edit]

After obtaining his Ph.D., he returned to Princeton in 1881 to teach Latin and logic.[2]

During the 1881–1882 academic year, Marquand built a mechanical logical machine that is still extant; he was inspired by related efforts of William S. Jevons in the UK. In 1887, following a suggestion of Peirce's, he outlined a machine to do logic using electric circuits. This necessitated his development of Marquand diagrams.[5] This machine is preserved at Princeton's Firestone Library.[6]

James McCosh, the President of Princeton, deemed Marquand's relatively mathematical approach to teaching logic "unorthodox and uncalvinistic," an approach he had learned at Peirce's feet.[7] Hence in 1883, Marquand was offered a position as the first professor of art history, a position he held until his death and at which he excelled. Marquand is notable as the founder of Princeton's Department of Art and Archaeology.[1] He was elected chairman of the Department of Art and Archaeology in 1905. He also served as the first director of the Princeton University Art Museum, a position he held until his 1922 retirement.[8]

Marquand provided the museum and art history department with books, papers, and art, paying for all other departmental expenses out of his own pocket. Forty year after he founded the department, the enrollment in the Art History department at Princeton had grown from an initial few students with one instructor to a full-time faculty of thirteen who had served over eight hundred students.[1]

Allan is largely seen as the foremost authority on the fifteenth and sixteenth Della Robbia family of sculptors, a passion that developed from a Della Robbia altarpiece donated to the Metropolitan Museum of Art by his father. He published an academic study of this specific altarpiece in the American Journal of Archaeology in 1891.[9] His first volume of critical writing on the Della Robbia was the inaugural installment of the Princeton Monographs, appearing in 1912.

Personal life[edit]

On June 18, 1896, he married Eleanor Cross in the Church of the Holy Communion in South Orange, New Jersey.[10] Eleanor, a daughter of English born railroad official and banker Richard James Cross and Matilda (née Redmond) Cross, was a niece of Goold H. Redmond and Frances Redmond Livingston. Her brothers, John Walter and Eliot Buchanan Cross, were prominent architects. Marquand and his family lived in the western section of Princeton, purchasing an estate he renamed "Guernsey Hall" after his family's ancestral home.[1] Together, Eleanor and Allan were the parents of four children:[2]

Marquand died at the Presbyterian Hospital in New York on September 24, 1924, and was buried at Princeton Cemetery.[2] His widow, an authority on the representation and symbolism of flowers and trees in art, died in February 1950.[19]

Publications[edit]

  • McComb, Arthur; Marquand, Allan; Cook, Walter W. S.; Smith, E. Baldwin; Clapp, Frederick Mortimer; Mather, Frank Jewett (1924). Art Studies: Medieval, Renaissance and Modern. Department of Fine Arts, Harvard University; Department of Fine Arts, Princeton University. Princeton University Press.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e "Princeton - A Princeton Companion - chaptertitle". pr.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  2. ^ a b c d e "ALLAN MARQUAND, ARCHAEOLOGIST, DIES; Head of Department at Princeton Succumbs Here at 70 After a Long Illness. ON THE FACULTY 48 YEARS Author Aided in Building Princeton's Art Museum and Contributed His Own Library" (PDF). The New York Times. 25 September 1924. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  3. ^ Ltd, Spencer Marks. "Marquand and Co. Pair of Antique Coin Silver Gravy Boats, NYC, NY, 1833-39". Spencer Marks Ltd. Retrieved 2023-09-11.
  4. ^ "Frederick Marquand | Pequot ArchivesSpace". specialcollections.pequotlibrary.org. Retrieved 2023-09-11.
  5. ^ Marquand, Allan (1881). "XXXIII: On Logical Diagrams for n terms". The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. 5. 12 (75): 266–270. doi:10.1080/14786448108627104. (NB. Quite many secondary sources erroneously cite this work as "A logical diagram for n terms" or "On a logical diagram for n terms".)
  6. ^ "Marquand, Allan, Class of 1874 | Princetoniana Museum". www.princetonianamuseum.org. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  7. ^ Lavin, Marilyn Aronberg, 1983. The Eye of the Tiger: The Founding and Development of the Department of Art and Archaeology, 1883–1923. Princeton: The Department of Art and Archaeology and the Art Museum.
  8. ^ "ALLAN MARQUAND" (PDF). The New York Times. September 26, 1924. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  9. ^ "Workshop of Andrea della Robbia | Nativity | Italian, Florence". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2024-03-15.
  10. ^ "A DAY'S WEDDINGS.; Marquand -- Cross" (PDF). The New York Times. 19 June 1896. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  11. ^ "Eleanor Marquand Delanoy, Rights Advocate, 91". The New York Times. 5 February 1988. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  12. ^ "ELEANOR MARQUAND ENGAGED TO MARRY; Daughter of Late Archaeologist to Wed George Howard Forsyth Jr" (PDF). The New York Times. 6 December 1926. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  13. ^ The Class of 1923 (1991). "Memorial George Howard Forsyth Jr. '23 *27". Princeton Alumni Weekly. Retrieved 27 January 2020.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. ^ "MRS. E. M. FORSYTH BRIDE IN PRINCETON; She Is Wed to Douglas Delanoy in University Chapel--Dean Robert Wicks Officiates" (PDF). The New York Times. 15 February 1948. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  15. ^ "Harold K. Hochschild, 88, Is Dead; Industrialist Active in Conservation". The New York Times. 25 January 1981. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  16. ^ "MARY MARQUAND MARRIED; Becomes Bride Here of Harold Hochschild of This City" (PDF). The New York Times. 27 November 1941. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  17. ^ "Historical Society of Princeton : Online Collections". princeton.pastperfectonline.com. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  18. ^ "ALLAN MARQUAND; Metropolitan Museum of Art Founded by His Grandfather" (PDF). The New York Times. 20 July 1938. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  19. ^ "Mrs. Allan Marquand" (PDF). The New York Times. 28 February 1950. Retrieved 27 January 2020.

Further reading[edit]

  • Ketner, Kenneth Lane, (assisted by A. F. Stewart) 1984, "The Early History of Computer Design: C. S. Peirce and Marquand's Logical Machines," Princeton University Library Chronicle: 187–211.
  • Marquand, Allan
    • 1883, in Charles Sanders Peirce, ed., Studies in Logic by members of the Johns Hopkins University, Little, Brown, and Company, Boston, MA, 1883. Reprinted 1983. John Benjamins.
      • "The Logic of the Epicureans," pp. 1–11, Arisbe Eprint. Google Books Eprint.
      • "A Machine for Producing Syllogistic Variations", pp. 12–15 Google Books Eprint.
      • "Note on an Eight-Term Logical Machine", p. 16, Google Books Eprint.
    • 1886, "A New Logical Machine," Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 21: 303–307, Little, Brown, and Company, Boston, MA, 1886. Google Books Eprint.
  • Peirce, Charles Sanders, 1993, "Letter, Peirce to A. Marquand" dated 30 December 1886, in Kloesel, C. et al., eds., Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition: Volume 5: 1884–1886. Indiana University Press: 421-422, with an image of the letter page with the circuits on p. 423.

External links[edit]