Here are the latest publicly available notes about Francis Haskell, the English art historian (1928–2000).
Overview
- Francis James Herbert Haskell was a prominent English art historian known for emphasizing the social history of art and for influential patronage studies. He passed away in 2000. [Wikipedia information consolidated from multiple sources][4][5]
Key biographical highlights
- Birth and death: Born 7 April 1928 in London; died 18 January 2000 in Oxford. [biographical sources][2][3][4]
- Academic career: Long association with Oxford University as professor of the history of art; retired in 1995. [National Gallery records and obituary summaries][5]
- Notable works: Patrons and Painters; Rediscoveries in Art; History and its Images; The Ephemeral Museum. These works helped shape the field’s understanding of taste, patronage, and collecting practices.[4][5]
Recent memorials and legacies
- Francis Haskell Memorial Fund exists to support fellowships and research in related fields, with initial announcements in 2012 and ongoing activity tied to arts historians and scholars. [Enfilade memorial note][6]
- Archival and biographical materials about Haskell are preserved in major institutions, including the National Gallery and major university archives. [National Gallery archive page][5]
Notes and cautions
- There are several obituaries and memorial pieces that describe his personal life (e.g., his marriage to Larissa Salmina) and his battle with illness, but details may vary slightly across sources. If you need precise biographical dates or quotations, I can pull exact passages from specific sources.
Would you like a concise timeline of his major publications and career milestones, or a comparison of his major works and their impact on art history? I can also provide direct citations to specific sources if you’re compiling a bibliography.
Sources
As noted in the latest issue of CAA News (20 June 2012) and posted at CAA (from The Burlington Magazine) . . . Francis Haskell Memorial Fund Applications due by 10 September 2012 Grants of up to £2…
enfilade18thc.comView Francis Earl Haskell's obituary, send flowers and sign the guestbook.
www.legacy.comThe papers include Francis Haskell's research notes, papers, articles and correspondence relating to collectors.
www.nationalgallery.org.ukequally smitten, but the problems that they faced were formidable. Pessimistic by nature, seemingly wholly unpractical, as well as being a con- stantly anxious traveller and at that time unable to face flying, Francis nonetheless succeeded in meeting Larissa in Yugoslavia and Russia and finally in obtaining permission to marry in 1965, in the Soviet Palace of … San Francisco Gay Men’s Choir singing God Rest You Merry Gentlemen on television, but so did the resources of the Getty Center and...
www.thebritishacademy.ac.ukFrancis Haskell. Self: Entretiens du Louvre. Francis Haskell was born on 7 April 1928 in London, England, UK. He died on 18 January 2000 in Oxford, England, UK.
www.imdb.comical volumes of the Hope Bequest were decaying there, and he had to be rebuked by the University authorities for buttonholing plutocrats to pay for their rebinding (thus, perhaps, diverting them from endowing a chair in business studies). Later in 1955, King's awarded Francis a fellowship to convert … Index, that great historical enterprise which he so passionately supported. But in December he learnt that he had cancer of the liver. He immediately resolved to re-read Shakespeare, Moliere and...
francishaskellmemorialfund.com