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Browse Recent Reviews
Benjamin Schmidt
Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015.
448 pp.;
24 color ills.;
179 b/w ills.
Cloth
$85.00
(9780812246469)
Historian Benjamin Schmidt’s Inventing Exoticism: Geography, Globalism, and Europe’s Early Modern World picks up, chronologically speaking, where his prior book, Innocence Abroad: The Dutch Imagination and the New World, 1570–1670 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2001), left off—in 1670. In Innocence Abroad Schmidt trained his scholarly gaze on Dutch encounters with and conceptions of the New World in the first century of the Dutch Republic. In Inventing Exoticism he casts a wider net, to describe how around the turn of the eighteenth century “a new conception of the exotic world and a new conceit of Europe came to be, and…
Full Review
September 22, 2016
Ian F. Verstegen
Early Modern Studies, Vol. 14.
Kirksville, MO:
Truman State University Press, 2015.
171 pp.;
8 color ills.;
25 b/w ills.
Cloth
$60.00
(9781612481326)
Ian Verstegen’s new book, Federico Barocci and the Oratorians: Corporate Patronage and Style in the Counter-Reformation, examines the interior decoration of the Chiesa Nuova in Rome, specifically the altarpieces of the chapels, in light of the order and their beliefs. His focus is on Barocci and how his style corresponded so well to the tenets of the Oratorians that they repeatedly sought his paintings, despite the fact that other artists were available and Barocci was expensive, slow, always in demand by numerous patrons, and did not even live in Rome. Verstegen asks some key questions that successfully frame his…
Full Review
September 21, 2016
Ilan Stavans and Jorge J. E. Gracia
Durham:
Duke University Press Books, 2014.
240 pp.;
13 color ills.
Paper
$22.95
(9780822356349)
E. Carmen Ramos
Exh. cat.
London:
D Giles Limited, 2014.
365 pp.;
265 color ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9781907804441)
Exhibition schedule: Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC, October 25, 2013–March 2, 2014; Patricia and Phillip Frost Art Museum at Florida International University, Miami, March 28–June 22, 2014; Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, September 21, 2014–January 11, 2015; Utah Museum of Fine Arts, Salt Lake City, February 6–Mary 17, 2015; Arkansas Art Center, Little Rock, October 16, 2015–January 17, 2016; Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, March 5–Mary 29, 2016
There are two questions that must be considered before a review of these two books is presented: What is a Latino and what is Latino art? The term Latino, as used by the authors of these very interesting and different perspectives on the subject of Latino art in particular, refers to the descendants of people of Latin America, the Spanish-speaking Caribbean, and the Iberian Peninsula who were either born in or moved to the United States. Today, the Latino community's numbers are growing rapidly. Latinos already outnumber non-Hispanic whites in New Mexico and California, and by 2050 the U.S. Census…
Full Review
September 21, 2016
Stefanie Solum
Visual Culture in Early Modernity.
Burlington:
Ashgate, 2015.
288 pp.;
4 color ills.;
75 b/w ills.
Cloth
$119.95
(9781409462033)
Stefanie Solum opens this stimulating book by discussing a question fundamental for those interested in artistic patronage in Renaissance Florence: whether or not laywomen commissioned significant paintings, sculptures, or buildings in the city during the fifteenth century. Archival sources, the lifeblood of patronage studies, suggest that they did not; essentially nothing in the existing documentary record ties any woman, as patron, to any major fifteenth-century project (6). Arguing that archival silence should not stymie investigation of this issue, Solum contends that one can address the topic by employing a methodology that considers the work of art as, essentially, a document—a…
Full Review
September 16, 2016
Megan R. Luke
Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2014.
352 pp.;
22 color ills.;
98 b/w ills.
Cloth
$55.00
(9780226085180)
Doing justice to the importance of Megan R. Luke’s compelling study of the German artist Kurt Schwitters’s late work of the 1930s and 1940s requires taking stock of how Schwitters’s richly contradictory art has previously been understood. The story as usually told—following John Elderfield’s foundational monograph (Kurt Schwitters, New York: Thames and Hudson, 1985)—goes something like this: soon after the end of the First World War, Schwitters began making what he called Merzbilder, works joining the recent innovations of abstraction and collage to one another in an unprecedented manner. In 1919, in his first statement about these…
Full Review
September 15, 2016
Anne Umland, Blair Hartzell, and Scott Gerson, eds.
New York:
Museum of Modern Art, 2014.
350 pp.
E-book
$24.99
(9780870708046)
Exhibition schedule: Museum of Modern Art, New York, February 13–June 6, 2011
Begun in the winter of 1912 and known collectively as the papiers collés, Pablo Picasso’s collages of pasted papers, from newsprint and wallpaper to fine drawing paper, have been the battleground for several of the most fraught methodological debates in modernist art history. In the 1980s and 1990s, the interpretive field was divided between, on the one hand, scholars who read the newspapers as incorporating conscious reference by Picasso to the political events or mass cultural phenomena of his day and, on the other, those who objected that such readings succumbed precisely to the naturalistic and referential logic dissected…
Full Review
September 14, 2016
Exhibition schedule: Tate Modern, London, May 15–16, 2015
[See the multimedia version on Scalar.]
Introduction: “If caa.reviews were performance.reviews?”
This jointly authored review of Boris Charmatz’s If Tate Modern Was Musée de la Danse? (2015) inaugurates a new initiative, spearheaded by the editorial board of caa.reviews, to review time-based media. The increasing prominence of dance, performance, video, film, and sound works in museum and gallery exhibitions gives caa.reviews an opportunity not simply to broaden the journal’s scope, but also to bring a range of diverse perspectives to bear on this growing phenomenon. By inviting scholars of dance to write this review,…
Full Review
September 8, 2016
Exhibition schedule: Tate Modern, London, May 15–16, 2015
[See the multimedia version on Scalar.]
Museum Metaphysics: 20 Dancers for the XX Century and Dance’s Ontology in the Museum
As I walked through Tate Modern’s “Witty, Sexy, Gimmicky: Pop 1957–67” gallery on May 15, 2015, I encountered Frédéric Seguette removing T-shirt after T-shirt in a performance of Jerôme Bel’s Shirtology (1997). Seguette’s performance was part of Boris Charmatz’s 20 Dancers for the XX Century, a performative exhibition of selected moments in the history of twentieth-century dance; this work was previously staged at the Museum of Modern Art in 2013 and subsequently reincarnated at…
Full Review
September 8, 2016
Exhibition schedule: Tate Modern, London, May 15–16, 2015
[See the multimedia version on Scalar.]
Unauthorized Performance in the Turbine Hall
Boris Charmatz’s If Tate Modern Was Musée de la danse? transformed Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall into a space for the display of movement. (Previous inhabitations of Turbine Hall have had similar aims. An indicative list might be found in the series of installations that made up Tate’s Unilever Series [2000–8].) Dancers performed choreography at scheduled moments, and a twice-daily disco—titled Adrénaline: A Dance Floor for Everyone—invited the museum audience to dance together. During the two days of programming, ebbing and flowing groups…
Full Review
September 8, 2016
Exhibition schedule: Tate Modern, London, May 15–16, 2015
[See the multimedia version on Scalar.]
Adrénaline: A Dance Floor for Everyone
Adrénaline: A Dance Floor for Everyone, an open disco hour reminiscent of a pop-up dance club, emerged twice a day at Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall, under a shimmering giant disco ball. Led by the enticing sets of DJ Oneman and DJ Jonjo Jury, respectively, this event was undoubtedly democratic and welcoming, fulfilling the premise of a communal celebration of the act of dancing. (I write about Saturday, May 16, 2015, which featured DJ Oneman during the first Adrénaline hour [5:15 pm–6:15 pm]…
Full Review
September 8, 2016
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