Johann Heinrich Ferdinand von Olivier
(b Dessau, 1 April 1785; d Munich 11 Feb 1841).
Painter, draughtsman and lithographer, brother of Heinrich Olivier. The
brothers’ mother was a court opera singer in Dessau, and Ferdinand’s
later interest in the German medieval and Nazarene styles owed much to
the intellectual climate at the Anhalt-Dessau court, where Leopold III
Frederick Francis, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, had been the first German
prince to introduce the Gothic Revival style. Olivier took up drawing in
1801–2 under the tuition of Carl Wilhelm Kolbe and the engraver Johann
Christian Haldenwang (1777–1831). In 1802–3 he accompanied his father to
Berlin, where he studied woodcut techniques under Johann Friedrich
Gottlieb Unger (1755–1804) and may have attended August Wilhelm
Schlegel’s lectures on belles-lettres and art. It was here, at the
latest, that he discovered Herzensergiessungen eines kunstliebenden
Klosterbruders (Berlin, 1797) by Wilhelm Heinrich Wackenroder and
Ludwig Tieck, and the latter’s Franz Sternbalds Wanderungen
(Berlin, 1798), two books of vital significance for the painting of the
Romantic era. Having decided to make art their career, Ferdinand and his
brother Heinrich spent two years (1804–6) in Dresden, where they copied
the works of Ruisdael and Claude Lorrain in the art gallery during the
summer months. Ferdinand also took lessons from Jacob Wilhelm Mechau
(1745–1808) and Carl Ludwig Kaaz, both painters of idealized landscapes,
and he was probably introduced to the work of Philipp Otto Runge and
Caspar David Friedrich by Friedrich August von Klinkowström (1778–1835),
a friend of Runge. In June 1807 Ferdinand’s excellent knowledge of
French led to his appointment as embassy secretary in Paris, where
Heinrich soon joined him. However, after just a few weeks he gave up his
diplomatic career in order to devote himself to a study of the Musée
Napoléon, which at that time housed art treasures pillaged from all
parts of Europe. Ferdinand and Heinrich jointly produced three paintings
for Leopold III Frederick Francis of Anhalt-Dessau: a portrait of
Napoleon on Horseback (c.1809; Wörlitz, Schloss), and a
Last Supper and Baptism (1809–10; Wörlitz, Evangel. Ch.) for
the Gothic Revival church in Wörlitz. Although these last two were
supposed to be copies after the ‘old German school’, the Olivier
brothers in fact used 15th- and 16th-century Dutch and Flemish models to
create original compositions. At the end of 1809 they returned to Dessau.
In 1810, on a tour of the Harz with his younger brother Friedrich
Olivier, Ferdinand produced a number of markedly naturalistic sketches
that testify to the break with his schooling in Dresden, for example
Cliffs on the Brocken (1810; Dessau, Anhalt. Gemäldegal.). In 1811
he travelled with Friedrich via Dresden to Vienna where the Lukasbrüder
had been formed shortly before. Although the group had since moved to
Rome, the Olivier brothers soon became acquainted with its ideals
through Philipp Veit, Friedrich von Schlegel’s stepson, whose home they
frequented, and Joseph Sutter (1781–1866). In 1817, with Julius Schnorr
von Carolsfeld, they were accepted—from afar—into the Lukasbrüder.