John Charles Van Dyke
John Charles Van Dyke was an American art historian and critic. He was born at New Brunswick, New Jersey, studied at Columbia, and for many years in Europe. He was admitted to the New York State Bar Association in 1877, but never practiced law.
In 1878, Van Dyke was appointed the librarian of the Gardner Sage Library at the New Brunswick Theological Seminary, and in 1891 as a professor of art history at Rutgers College. With his appointment, the Rutgers president's residence was converted to classroom and studio space for the college's Department of Fine Arts. He was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1908.
Van Dyke wrote a series of critical guide books: New Guides to Old Masters. He edited Modern French Masters ; Old Dutch and Flemish Masters ; Old English Masters; and a series of histories covering the history of art in America.
Van Dyke was the son of Judge John Van Dyke, and great grandson of John Honeyman, a spy for George Washington who played a critical role at the battle of Trenton. He was also the uncle of film director W.S. Van Dyke.Publications
- How to Judge a Picture
- Art for Art's Sake
- A History of Painting
- Rembrandt and his school; a critical study of the master and his pupils with a new assignment of their pictures
- The Meadows: Familiar Studies of the Commonplace
- Nature for its Own Sake
- With J. Smeaton Chase
- The Opal Sea: Continued Studies in Impressions and Appearances
- The Open Spaces: Incidents of Nights and Days under the Blue Sky
- Studies in Pictures
- The Money God
- The Mountain
- In the West Indies
- Edited by Peter Wild
- * Reviewed by: Ingham, Zita. . Nineteenth-Century Prose. Retrieved January 8, 2013 from HighBeam Research