Luke John Herrmann (born Lutz Johann Wolfgang Maximilian Hermann; 9 March 1932 – 9 September 2016) was a British art historian who was an expert on the art of J. M. W. Turner.
Early life
Herrmann was born on 9 March 1932 in Berlin into a German Jewish family. He was educated in England at Westminster School and at the University of Oxford.[1]
Career
Herrmann briefly worked at the Illustrated London News. While there, he got to know editor Bruce Ingram, who was a prominent art collector and under whose guidance he began to collect English watercolour paintings in the 1950s. After Ingram's death in 1963, Herrmann inherited over 30 pictures from him, which he donated to a selection of British art galleries in 2002.[2] He later worked at the Ashmolean Museum.[3]
Personal life
In 1965, Herrmann married Georgina (née Thompson); she would go on to become a notable archaeologist of Western Asia.[4] Together they had two sons.[1]
Ruskin and Turner: A study of Ruskin as a collector of Turner, based on his gifts to the University of Oxford; incorporating a catalogue raisonné of the Turner drawings in the Ashmolean Museum. F.A. Praeger, New York, 1969.
British landscape painting of the eighteenth century. Faber & Faber, London, 1973. ISBN9780571093946