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Browse Recent Reviews
Robert Randolf Coleman and Babette Bohn
Athens:
Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia, 2008.
160 pp.;
many color ills.
Cloth
$38.00
(9780915977628)
Exhibition schedule: Snite Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame, IN, January 11–March 15, 2009; Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia, Athens, May 14–August 7, 2011; Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA, November 19, 2011–February 12, 2012
The Art of Disegno: Italian Prints and Drawings from the Georgia Museum of Art, during its stop at the Crocker Art Museum, presented a panoramic display of drawing as an art form from the sixteenth to eighteenth century in Italy. It also included a fine selection of intaglio and woodcut prints. Drawn from the collection of Giuliano Ceseri—who has loaned his collection to the Georgia Museum of Art—and from the collection of the Georgia Museum, the exhibition, curated by Robert Randolf Coleman and Babette Bohn, presented a wide-ranging approach to works on paper from the period, and did so…
Full Review
August 30, 2012
Jonathan Hay
London:
Reaktion Books, 2010.
440 pp.;
223 color ills.;
6 b/w ills.
Cloth
£35.00
(9781861894083)
In Sensuous Surfaces: The Decorative Object in Early Modern China, Jonathan Hay strives to understand how the human body senses and interacts with ornament, or “pleasurable things,” as the essayist and comic writer Li Yu (1610–1680) put it. Hay imagines how the hand and eye connected with the shape and texture of a decorated cup or figurine, how a moving body experienced an “object landscape” in a residential interior where luxury goods were displayed and used. Moving outside conventional studies in connoisseurship and technology, Hay juxtaposes objects made from a variety of materials, ranging from ceramics and paintings to…
Full Review
August 30, 2012
Judith Bettelheim and Janet Catherine Berlo
Exh. cat.
Los Angeles:
Fowler Museum at UCLA, 2011.
216 pp.;
101 color ills.;
9 b/w ills.
Paper
$35.00
(9780977834471)
Exhibition schedule: Fowler Museum at UCLA, Los Angeles, September 18, 2011–January 8, 2012; Miami Art Museum, Miami, May 11–September 2, 2012
The newly commissioned, site-specific installation, Figura que defina su propio horizonte (Figure Who Defines His Own Horizon), by the Cuban-born artist José Bedia is an apt centerpiece to his career survey, Transcultural Pilgrim: Three Decades of Work by José Bedia. A diminutive figure in dark bronze—a trickster as well as a reference to the artist himself, with a horned head and smoking a cigarette—is chained by the ankle to a tree stump. The chain and stump are a restraint, but in the context of Bedia’s idiosyncratic iconography, they are also an umbilical or tether that links the artist to…
Full Review
August 24, 2012
Renée Ater
Berkeley:
University of California Press, 2011.
214 pp.;
8 color ills.;
63 b/w ills.
Cloth
$49.95
(9780520262126)
When she died at the age of 91 in 1968, Meta Warrick Fuller left behind a long and productive life as a sculptor, but she also bequeathed a formidable challenge to art historians. In 1910, a warehouse fire destroyed her early sculptures, including the student work she made while at the Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Arts and the sculptures from her three years (1899–1902) studying in Paris. The formative works stored in that warehouse are known today only through black-and-white photographs. Further complicating the scholar’s task is the fact that Fuller’s most public sculptures were made for fairs…
Full Review
August 24, 2012
Maurice Berger
Exh. cat.
New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2010.
224 pp.;
37 color ills.;
53 b/w ills.
Cloth
$39.95
(9780300121315)
Martin A. Berger
Berkeley:
University of California Press, 2011.
249 pp.
Paper
$27.50
(9780520268647)
Two recent books on visual culture and civil rights envision the pathway through race and nation as an endeavor privileging the visual and utilizing the corporeal. However, these books diverge at the point of “seeing,” with Maurice Berger investing in the expansive range of twentieth-century visual culture as it pertains to African Americans and Martin Berger zeroing in on what he calls “the complex social dynamics of the civil rights movement” (4). The latter, in other words, examines how images aided and abetted racial hegemony and comfort, racial expectation, and national investment.
Both For All the World to See…
Full Review
August 24, 2012
Fabio Gabbrielli
Siena:
Protagon Editori Toscani, 2010.
344 pp.;
258 color ills.
Paper
€40.00
(9788880242802)
Siena has long been recognized as one of the best-preserved medieval cities in Europe, and it is for this reason that in 1995 its entire historic center was added to the World Heritage List of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Between the advent of the commune in the twelfth century and the fall of the Guelph regime of the Nine Governors in 1355, the Sienese authorities erected architectural monuments of great significance, including the Palazzo Pubblico, new ramparts and gates, and several large-scale fountains, while the aristocratic and merchant elite constructed towers, tower-houses (casetorri), and…
Full Review
August 16, 2012
George T. M. Shackelford and Xavier Rey
Exh. cat.
Boston:
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2011.
241 pp.;
180 color ills.;
22 b/w ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9780878467730)
Exhibition schedule: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, October 9, 2011–February 5, 2012; Musée d’Orsay, Paris, March 12–July 1, 2012
No Impressionist was more innovative than Edgar Degas. Oblique glimpses of dancers in limelight, candid vignettes of brothel mores, and roughshod runs over respectable standards of finish still provide grist to students of Degas, whether in the library or studio. At the same time, the grounding of his art in expertise at drawing the nude sets him apart as the most traditional of the Impressionist group. Thus, his discomfort with being called an Impressionist, after Degas’s associates adopted the name derisively coined in Louis Leroy’s satirical review of the 1874 exhibition of the Société anonyme des artistes peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs…
Full Review
August 16, 2012
John Shannon Hendrix and Charles H. Carman, eds.
Visual Culture in Early Modernity. .
Burlington, VT:
Ashgate, 2010.
258 pp.;
18 b/w ills.
Cloth
$119.95
(9781409400240)
The title Renaissance Theories of Vision immediately brings to mind a myriad of representational systems known collectively as perspective but more specifically labeled by type: atmospheric, single-point and multiple-point (also referred to as linear, scientific, and mathematical), intuitive, oblique, and reverse. Simultaneously, it conjures recollected textbook images of converging orthogonals superimposed on schematized masterworks like Fra Angelico’s San Marco Altarpiece (ca. 1438–40) and Pietro Perugino’s Sistine Chapel fresco Delivery of the Keys to St. Peter (1482). These fifteenth-century visions of carefully structured spaces inhabited by figures placed in calculated spatial and proportional relationship to one another as well as to…
Full Review
August 16, 2012
College Art Association, 2012.
Their story is legendary in Miami. Don and Mera Rubell began collecting art in 1967, when they lived in New York City. Their modest budget came from Mera’s salary as a Head Start teacher, and their acquisitions strategy consisted largely of purchasing work that excited their passions. The untimely passing of Don’s brother, Steve Rubell, in 1989, left them with a considerable inheritance with which to expand their collecting, and in 1996, they opened the Rubell Family Collection to the public in their adopted home, Miami.
The Rubell Family Collection pioneered a new institutional model of private art collections…
Full Review
August 9, 2012
Cathleen A. Fleck
Burlington, VT:
Ashgate, 2010.
370 pp.;
4 color ills.;
71 b/w ills.
Cloth
$124.95
(9780754669807)
At the close of The Clement Bible at the Medieval Courts of Naples and Avignon: A Study of Papal Power, Royal Prestige, and Patronage, Cathleen Fleck observes that the history of the Clement Bible can be understood in part through the pleasure and privilege of leafing through it, an experience that those who have sat turning its folios in the British Library, including the present reviewer, have shared with its earlier owners. Tracking the production and use of the codex through a series of inventories that reveal how highly valued ownership of the manuscript was, Fleck also makes a…
Full Review
August 9, 2012
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