• Source: Robert von Hirsch
    • Robert Max Hirsch, from 1913 von Hirsch (born July 13, 1883 in Frankfurt am Main, Germany; died November 1, 1977 in Basel, Switzerland) was a German-Swiss leather manufacturer and patron of the arts.


      Life



      Hirsch came from the assimilated Jewish upper middle class of Frankfurt and was the son of Ferdinand Hirsch (1843-1916), who had founded an iron wholesale business there in 1867, and Anna Mayer. He had two older brothers, Paul and Karl. In 1898, Hirsch joined the leather factory Mayer & Feistmann (later J. Mayer & Sohn) in Luisenstraße, which was founded on July 15, 1857 in Offenbach am Main and belonged to his uncle, the Kommerzienrat Ludo Mayer, where he became a partner in 1906. A meeting with Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig of Hesse-Darmstadt at the inauguration of a company building in Offenbach led to Hirsch's elevation to the nobility of the Grand Duke of Hesse in 1913, an honor that was originally intended for Ludo Mayer. After his uncle's death in 1917, he continued to run the company alone.
      As a Frankfurter, Hirsch served in the First World War as a royal Prussian lieutenant in the Landwehr cavalry.


      Art collection and philanthropy


      Hirsch trained as a self-taught art expert alongside his entrepreneurial activities and began to build up an art collection at the age of just 24 (1907),[1] which he expanded considerably between 1920 and 1933 with the help of Städel director Georg Swarzenski. The focus of his collection was on medieval and Renaissance art. However, he also purchased historical furniture, everyday objects, carpets and tapestries as well as works of art from the 20th century. He was appointed administrator of the Städel in Frankfurt at an early stage and thus belonged to a circle of young art collectors who donated important works of art to the museum. Hirsch's most famous donation was the painting Flowers and Ceramics (fleurs et ceramique, 1913) by Henri Matisse.
      In 1927, Hirsch commissioned a villa in Frankfurt's Westend from the architect Anton Eyssen; the building at Friedrichstrasse 64 was demolished in June 2010 after 83 years.


      Nazi era


      In 1933, Hirsch left Nazi Germany and emigrated to Basel in Switzerland, where his company already had a branch. He managed to take art with him and even expanded it further in exile. To obtain the right to export his collection he gifted Lucas Cranach's masterpiece Judgment of Paris to Hermann Göring. His brother, Karl, was arrested during the Nazi antisemitic pogrom known as Kristallnacht in 1938, and Hirsch tried to pay a ransom of 500,000 Swiss francs to obtain his brother's freedom, but he brother died of his injuries. He also helped the art historian Adolph Goldschmidt to flee to Basel in April 1939.
      Hirsch became a Swiss citizen in 1940 and married the sculptor Martha Dreyfus-Koch (1892-1965), a childhood acquaintance and daughter of the Frankfurt jeweler Louis Koch, in 1945. The couple lived in a villa built in 1888 in the Louis XIII style in the middle of a large garden on Engelgasse, which also housed his collection of mainly medieval and Renaissance art in a Petersburg hanging.


      Postwar


      He donated important works from his collection to Basel museums . In 1955, he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Basel. Hirsch was of the opinion that public museums should only collect canonized art. The acquisition policy of the museums of the city of Basel under their directors Arnold Rüdlinger and Franz Meyer, who favored contemporary, not yet established, American art, led to dissent and caused the childless Hirsch to abandon his plan to donate the entire collection to the city of Basel after his death.In his will, he stipulated that his collection should be broken up, some works should go to museums, but the majority should be auctioned. This took place over eight auction days in June 1978 at Sotheby's in London. In the spring of 1978, the works were shown once again at the Städel and the Kunsthaus Zürich, ranging from gold-ground paintings, decorative arts and medieval furniture to Impressionist works. It brought in 18.4 million pounds (DM 78 million at the time). With the help of the Federal Republic of Germany and under the coordination of Josef Abs, twelve German museums acquired valuable works from the collection. “The most expensive piece in the auction, at 4.6 million marks, an enamel medallion of a personification “Operatio” from the Remaklus retable of the Stablo monastery from the middle of the 12th century ... went to the Kunstgewerbemuseum Berlin, an armilla from the circle of Friedrich Barbarossa to the Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nürnberg, and the important Dürer watercolor “Trintperg” to the Kunsthalle Bremen." Hirsch did not set foot on German soil again after 1933.Hirsch supported charitable and cultural institutions, particularly the German Leather Museum in Offenbach, with foundations and donations.
      His brother Paul Hirsch had taken over his father's ironmongery and was also an important collector. His grandniece, the writer Silvia Tennenbaum, portrayed Robert von Hirsch as the literary figure of the banker and art collector Eduard Wertheim in her novel “Streets of Yesterday” (1983)[1].


      Awards


      Erhebung in den großherzoglich hessischen Adelsstand (1913).
      Ehrensenator der TH Darmstadt.
      Ehrendoktorwürde der Universität Basel (1955).


      Coat of arms


      In a shield divided silver and red two upright stag's poles of mixed color. On the helmet with red-silver covers a growing red-armored silver stag.


      Literature


      Arnd Bauerkämper, Manuel Borutta, Jürgen Kocka: Die Praxis der Zivilgesellschaft. Campus, 2003, ISBN 3-593-37235-5, S. 221f. (GoogleBooks).
      Helmut Schneider: Letzte Chance. In: Die Zeit, Nr. 15/1978.
      Meisterwerke aus der Sammlung Robert von Hirsch. Parke Bernet Sotheby, 1978.
      Meisterwerke aus der Sammlung Robert von Hirsch. Ausstellungen Städelsches Kunstinstitut Frankfurt am Main 23.3.–16.4.1978, Kunsthaus Zürich 20.4.–4.5.1978, Royal Academy London 1.6.–8.6.1978, Ausstellungskatalog, Hrsg.: Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt (Main) 1978.
      Lothar Gall: Der Bankier Hermann Josef Abs, Seite 425f., Verlag C.H.Beck, 2006, ISBN 3-406-54738-9 (GoogleBooks)
      Paul Arnsberg, Hans-Otto Schembs: Die Geschichte der Frankfurter Juden seit der Französischen Revolution. Hrsg.: Kuratorium für Jüdische Geschichte. Verlag E. Roether, Frankfurt (Main) 1983, ISBN 3-7929-0130-7, S. 197.
      Joseph Walk (Hrsg.): Kurzbiographien zur Geschichte der Juden 1918–1945. Hrsg. vom Leo Baeck Institute, Jerusalem. Saur, München 1988, ISBN 3-598-10477-4, S. 155.
      Werner Röder; Herbert A. Strauss (Hrsg.), Biographisches Handbuch der deutschsprachigen Emigration nach 1933 / International Biographical Dictionary of Central European Emigrés 1933–1945, Vol II, 1 München : Saur 1983, ISBN 3-598-10089-2, S. 516.
      Heinrich Kuhn: Basel und die Sammlung Robert von Hirsch. Wurde ein wertvoller Schatz verspielt? In: Basler Stadtbuch 1979, S. 59-64.


      Weblinks


      Publikationen von und über Robert von Hirsch im Katalog Helveticat der Schweizerischen Nationalbibliothek
      Literature by and about Robert von Hirsch in the German National Library catalogue
      Literaturliste im Online-Katalog der Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
      Hirsch, Robert von in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
      Akten aus dem Nachlass von Robert von Hirsch im Staatsarchiv Basel-Stadt
      Hirsch, Robert Max von. Hessische Biografie. (Stand: 4. September 2023). In: Landesgeschichtliches Informationssystem Hessen (LAGIS).


      References

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: