Concise, critical reviews of books, exhibitions, and projects in all areas and periods of art history and visual studies

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Stephanie Smith, ed.
Exh. cat. Chicago: Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, 2013. 380 pp.; 320 color ills. Paper $45.00 (9780935573527)
Exhibition schedule: Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, Chicago, February 16–June 10, 2012; Blaffer Art Museum, University of Houston, Houston, August 31, 2013–January 5, 2014; SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe, February 1–May 17, 2014; Gund Gallery, Kenyon College, Gambier, OH, July 25–November 30, 2014; Weisman Art Museum, University at Minnesota, Minneapolis, January 31–May 10, 2015
Over the last twenty-five years, meals constructed by artists as art have flourished through a range of itinerant arts initiatives in public and private spaces and become recent programmatic mainstays in galleries and museums around the world, giving the impression that these works are a contemporary trend. Yet, in the 1930s the Italian Futurists generated a body of work about food that predated these artist projects—opening a restaurant, La Taverna del Santopalato (Tavern of the Holy Palate), in Turin, Italy, for example, that was forty years ahead of Food, the restaurant founded in New York by Gordon Matta-Clark, Caroline Goodden… Full Review
December 3, 2014
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Glenn Willumson
Berkeley: Ahmanson-Murphy Fine Arts, 2013. 254 pp.; few b/w ills. Cloth $60.00 (9780520270947)
Glenn Willumson’s Iron Muse: Photographing the Transcontinental Railroad begins with a discussion of a photograph by Andrew Joseph Russell titled East and West Shaking Hands at Laying Last Rail (no. 227) (1869), also known as Meeting of the Rails, Promontory, Utah, 1869. The photograph features workers and executives from the Central Pacific Railroad and the Union Pacific Railroad celebrating the completion of the transcontinental line. Willumson starts by analyzing how Russell’s photograph is often reproduced as historical illustration, but its original context is rarely considered. To read the image as symbolic of technological superiority and the triumph of national… Full Review
November 26, 2014
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Eduardo Cadava and Gabriela Nouzeilles, eds.
Princeton: Princeton University Art Museum, 2013. 240 pp.; 135 color ills.; 71 b/w ills. Cloth $45.00 (9780300174366)
Exhibition schedule: Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, September 7, 2013–January 19, 2014
There is a kind of fatigue in recent literature on photography. The ritual of declaring a ubiquitous abundance of photographic images, both historical and contemporary, is usually accompanied by a compulsion to address this situation and a requirement to analyze them. But how, in what framework, and to what ends? Understanding photography as a journey, as a set of “itinerant languages,” is one way to respond to this challenge. The Itinerant Languages of Photography, edited by Eduardo Cadava and Gabriela Nouzeilles, offers itself as the product of a double voyage of conferences and workshops in different locations… Full Review
November 26, 2014
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Catherine Zuromskis
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2013. 264 pp.; 77 b/w ills. Cloth $34.95 (9780262019293)
Selfies, Instagram feeds, photo tagging: whatever value we may have once placed on the privacy of our photographs seems gone forever. The incorporation of digital cameras into cell phones has created this condition, launching us into a post-camera, post-print era where we press the button and a messaging service does the rest. The “rest” is to render instantly our private moments into public documents that can be neither reversed nor regulated. As many critics of new media have proclaimed, it is the end of photography as we once practiced it and the end of privacy as we once felt it… Full Review
November 26, 2014
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Stephen Bann
New Haven: Yale University Press, 2013. 276 pp.; 10 color ills.; 95 b/w ills. Cloth $65.00 (9780300177275)
Evolutionary approaches positing seamless and irreversible transitions from one medium to another continue to exert a significant hold over the history of art. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the study of nineteenth-century printed images, a field still under the powerful sway of Walter Benjamin’s “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.” Photography and film are held to triumph not only over painting, with its aura of uniqueness, but even over the reproductive techniques that preceded them. Burin engraving, it seems, was eclipsed by the first stirrings of technological modernity, while lithography was but a fleeting… Full Review
November 26, 2014
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Katherine A. Bussard
New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014. 232 pp.; 104 color ills. Cloth $65.00 (9780300192261)
It is strangely difficult to consider what is meant by street photography, both for those who write about it and for the photographers for whom the street is their location and, to varying degrees, their subject. This is due in large part to the remarkable success of a genre that is most often championed through reference to its so-called “greats”—photographers such as Henri Cartier-Bresson, Harry Callahan, and Garry Winogrand—and, more tellingly still, through a familiarity and popularity that has seen it become the stock and trade of photography blogs and image-sharing sites. Much of this popularity is predicated on a… Full Review
November 14, 2014
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Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin
London: MACK and Archive of Modern Conflict, 2013. 768 pp.; 614 color ills. Cloth $80.00 (9781907946417)
Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin’s Holy Bible takes the form of a King James facsimile, complete with tissuey paper and gilt edges. Opening the book reveals photographs printed as if pasted over the text, with evocative scriptural phrases underlined in red. A crimson pamphlet in the back bears the essay “Divine Violence” by philosopher Adi Ophir, which argues that the biblical God regulated humanity through catastrophic violence, and that with the rise of law and the nation state, this power shifted to the human realm. This very human condition is manifested in the compelling documentary photographs, chosen by the artists… Full Review
November 14, 2014
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Sarah Pearce, ed.
Supplement Series, Volume II.. Oxford: Journal of Jewish Studies, 2013. 288 pp.; 50 color ills. Paper £55.00 (978-0957522800)
Although entitled The Image and Its Prohibition in Jewish Antiquity, the ten essays in this collection edited by Sarah Pearce center as much on the power of the image as on its prohibition. From the remarkable wall paintings of the Dura Europos synagogue to the surprising floor mosaics featuring Helios and the zodiac, the richness of ancient Jewish art, particularly the art of Late Antiquity, is on display. Nearly half of the essays focus on the art of that period—a good choice, since much of the scholarly community, not to mention the general public, is still unfamiliar with its… Full Review
November 7, 2014
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Dominic Johnson, ed.
Intellect Live.. Bristol, UK: Intellect, 2013. 248 pp.; 132 color ills.; 67 b/w ills. Cloth $35.00 (9781783200351)
Ron Athey’s performances present bloody religious tableaux, explicit sex, and self-harming actions. Deeply disturbing and profoundly moving, these performances have garnered critical attention and generated controversy since the 1990s, when Athey’s Torture Trilogy (1992–95) became the focal point of Congressional culture war debates. The ideas and aesthetics embedded in Athey’s artworks reflect his complex, overlapping identities, both past and present: Pentecostal child prodigy, punk adolescent, heroin addict, S&M club performer, HIV-positive patient, tattooed man, avant-garde performance artist. As the first book to focus on Athey’s work, Pleading in the Blood: The Art and Performances of Ron Athey addresses these and… Full Review
November 7, 2014
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John Ott
The Histories of Material Culture and Collecting, 1700–1950.. Burlington: Ashgate, 2014. 330 pp.; 4 color ills.; 73 b/w ills. Cloth $119.95 (9781409463344)
The title of John Ott’s book, Manufacturing the Modern Patron in Victorian California: Cultural Philanthropy, Industrial Capital, and Social Authority, is a riff on Sarah Burns’s important Inventing the Modern Artist: Art and Culture in Gilded Age America (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1996). Ott covers much the same ground chronologically as Burns and with the same high ambitions. But while Burns’s focus is a traditional one on the artist as the maker of meaning, Ott turns his attention to the patron. Ott argues that for the most part Americanists have labored in the shadow of Thorstein Veblen… Full Review
October 8, 2014
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