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

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Anastasia Drandaki, Demetra Papanikola- Bakirtzi, and Anastasia Tourta, eds.
Exh. cat. Athens: Benaki Museum and Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports, 2013. 363 pp. Cloth $75.00 (9789604761302)
Exhibition schedule: National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, October 6, 2013–March 2, 2014; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, April 9–August 23, 2014; Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, September 27, 2014–February 15, 2015
“We knew not whether we were in heaven or on earth. For on earth there is no such splendour or such beauty and we are at a loss how to describe it. We only know that God dwells there among men.” —Description by Russian visitors to the Byzantine Church of Hagia Sophia, Constantinople/Istanbul. The Russian Primary Chronicle: Laurentian Text, eds. and trans., Samuel H. Cross and Olgerd Sherbowitz-Wetzor, Cambridge, MA: Mediaeval Academy of America, 1953, 110–11. A clumsy cross etched into the forehead of a serene sculpted head of Aphrodite; a small amulet case that could… Full Review
October 22, 2014
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Erin B. Coe, Bruce Robertson, and Gwendolyn Owens
Exh. cat. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2013. 200 pp.; 84 color ills.; 40 b/w ills. Cloth $40.00 (9780500093740)
Exhibition schedule: Hyde Collection, Glens Falls, NY, June 15–September 15, 2013; Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe, October 4, 2013–January 26, 2014; de Young Museum, San Francisco, February 8–May 11, 2014
The March 1968 cover of Life magazine featured a large black-and-white photograph of Georgia O’Keeffe above a headline declaring her a “pioneer painter.” O’Keeffe is pictured in profile, her face lined and back curved as she leans forward with arms crossed, dressed simply in black. She sits in front of an adobe chimney, and behind her a wide, open sky and stark desert landscape stretch uninterrupted. The Life magazine cover helped cement O’Keeffe’s public image as an iconic American painter of the Southwest, a popular understanding of the artist that has persisted into the present day. Modern Nature:… Full Review
October 22, 2014
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Patricia Wengraf
Exh. cat. London: Paul Holberton Publishing, 2014. 376 pp.; 250 color ills. Cloth $100.00 (9781907372636)
Exhibition schedule: Frick Collection, New York, January 28‒June 15, 2014
The Frick Collection has positioned itself as one of the premier forums for the study and exhibition of Renaissance and Baroque bronze sculpture. Past exhibitions have focused on single artists as well as on individual collections: Willem van Tetrode (2003), Andrea Riccio (2008), Antico (2012), the private Quentin collection (2004), and a selection from the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (2005). With Renaissance and Baroque Bronzes from the Hill Collection, curated by Patricia Wengraf, the Frick adds to this impressive list with the first public exhibition of the formidable bronze collection of Janine and J. Tomilson Hill. The collection… Full Review
October 17, 2014
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San Francisco: Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in association with San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, 2014.
Exhibition schedule: Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, February 21–June 29, 2014
Public Intimacy: Art and Other Ordinary Acts in South Africa presents work by twenty-three South African artists and artistic collaborators. The several dozen works in the exhibition span sixty years worth of production in media ranging from photography and performance documentation to installation, print, and drawing. The exhibition places contemporary South African artists in conversation with several apartheid-era photographers including Ian Berry, Ernest Cole, and David Goldblatt. This dialogue proposes intimacy—a concept as complex and open to interpretation as the countless lives that enact it—as an aesthetic instrument prevalent in contemporary South African art and prefigured in these earlier photographic… Full Review
October 17, 2014
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Conference at the University of Vermont, Burlington, October 18, 2013.
In the time since Sarah Blake McHam lamented the relative dearth of scholarship on Italian Renaissance sculpture in her introduction to Looking at Italian Renaissance Sculpture (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998) (click here for review), the field has been enriched by a number of voices and publications, as well as the application of new interpretive methodologies. The same period has also seen a striking number of international exhibitions devoted to Italian sculpture in marble, bronze, and terra cotta, so these extraordinarily heavy and unwieldy works have been transported and recontextualized, at least temporarily, as indeed frequently happened… Full Review
October 17, 2014
Mary Morton
Exh. cat. Washington, DC: 180 pp.; 102 ills. Cloth $45.00 (9780894683862)
Exhibition schedule: Museo dell’Ara Pacis, Rome, October 23, 2013–February 23, 2014; Legion of Honor, San Francisco, March 29–August 3, 2014; McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, September 3, 2014–January 4, 2015; Mitsubishi Ichigokan Museum, Tokyo, February 7–May 24, 2015; Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, October 1, 2015–January 10, 2016
Intimate Impressionism from the National Gallery of Art is an exhibition of small pictures. By the same token, it is an exhibition about small pictures. Scale matters. Only, for it to matter, for it to develop as an orientation, we have first to break with the usual connotations that accrue to it as a criterion of judgment. Small pictures have their way of drawing us in, of revealing different kinds of relations of people to things; they ask that we view them up close, intimately. In a word, small pictures belong to the interior. That, it would seem, is the… Full Review
October 8, 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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Eve Meltzer
University of Chicago Press, 2013. 256 pp.; 36 color ills.; 62 b/w ills. Cloth $45.00 (9780226007885)
Eve Meltzer’s Systems We Have Loved: Conceptual Art, Affect, and the Antihumanist Turn returns readers to the structuralist adventure in art history. To recall something of the stakes and texture of that adventure, consider the following exchange in 1976 between Robert Morris, an artist, and A. A., a blind woman hired to assist him with a series of drawings entitled Blind Time II. [R. M.:] “Letting the page stand as a ground for yourself, an analog, letting the space of the page stand as an analog for yourself—” [A. A.:] “Where are you getting this?” … Full Review
October 8, 2014
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Anne Ellegood and Johanna Burton
Exh. cat. New York and Los Angeles: Prestel in association with Hammer Museum, 2014. 288 pp.; 174 color ills.; 63 b/w ills. Cloth $60.00 (9783791353425)
Exhibition schedule: Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, February 9–May 18, 2014
An ambitious statement about American art, Take It or Leave It: Institution, Image, Ideology examines the intersection of institutional critique, a practice entailing a structural analysis of museums and the art market, and appropriation, a mechanism of recontextualizing found images and ideas. Curators Anne Ellegood and Johanna Burton show that the two, despite having originated from distinct strategies of practice and consecutive historical periods (the 1970s and 1980s), have overlapped significantly, as reflected in their reception by the generation of artists that followed. Although the two movements have typically been understood as extending from Conceptual art, the exhibition highlights the… Full Review
October 3, 2014
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Anne Umland, ed.
Exh. cat. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2013. 256 pp.; 194 color ills.; 56 b/w ills. Paper $50.00 (9780870788985)
Exhibition schedule: Museum of Modern Art, New York, September 28, 2013–January 12, 2014; Menil Collection, Houston, February 14–June 1, 2014; Art Institute of Chicago, June 29–October 12, 2014
Exhibition schedule: Menil Collection, Houston, February 14–July 13, 2014
The work of the painter René Magritte is well known, if not as art, then at least as image. Magritte himself claimed that looking at a reproduction of his works was every bit as good as looking at a painting. The exhibition Magritte: Mystery of the Ordinary, 1926–1938 sets out to disprove this notion, foregrounding the materiality of Magritte’s work alongside his conceptual preoccupations. Foremost among those preoccupations is the resistance—even refusal—of Magritte’s painted objects to operate according to their material constrictions. And so the Menil has set up an appropriately counterintuitive project—the exhibition is physically grounded in our perception… Full Review
October 3, 2014
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