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Browse Recent Reviews
Judith B. Hecker
Exh. cat.
New York:
Museum of Modern Art, 2011.
96 pp.;
72 color ills.
Paper
$29.95
(9780870707568)
Exhibition schedule: Museum of Modern Art, New York, March 23–August 29, 2011
Lynne Cooney
Exh. cat.
Boston and Balgowan, South Africa:
Boston University School of Visual Arts and Caversham Centre for Artists and Writers, 2011.
100 pp.;
59 color ills.
Paper
$25.00
(0977720136)
Three Artists at the Caversham Press: Deborah Bell, Robert Hodgins and William Kentridge. Exhibition schedule: Boston University Art Gallery, February 8–March 27, 2011; South Africa: Artists, Prints, Community: Twenty-five Years at the Caversham Press. Exhibition schedule: 808 Gallery, Boston University, February 8–March 27, 2011
Two recent exhibitions, one in Boston and the other in New York City, highlighted the central role that printmaking has played in South African art for the past half century and provided an exciting introduction to its varied achievements. In South Africa, where art has frequently served as a vehicle for protesting political oppression, printmaking has been valued for producing multiples that can be widely disseminated by resistance organizations. In addition, in a country where the majority of the population has until recently been provided with a “bantu” education, certain processes, such as linocut, have provided an inexpensive vehicle for…
Full Review
November 3, 2011
Meredith Martin
Harvard Historical Studies, vol. 176..
Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 2011.
336 pp.;
82 color ills.;
8 b/w ills.
Cloth
$45.00
(9780674048997)
Among the most fanciful objects commissioned by the French monarchy is a pair of Sèvres porcelain pails designed for Marie-Antoinette’s pleasure dairy at the Château de Rambouillet. They are shaped like tinettes—wooden buckets used on ordinary dairy farms for making fresh cheese—and painted with wood grain to imitate their rustic models. Like Marie-Antoinette’s mock hamlet at Trianon, the Rambouillet pails are outlandish inventions of the pastoral movement in literature and art, which celebrated naturalness with contrived theatricality. As the ill-fated monarch so cruelly experienced, bourgeois sensibilities soon lashed out at this noble ostentation. To pre-Revolutionary critics of the society…
Full Review
November 3, 2011
Erik Fischer, Ernst Jonas Bencard, Mikael Bøgh Rasmussen, and Marco Iuliano
4 vols..
Copenhagen:
Vandkunsten Publishers, 2009.
956 pp.;
828 ills.
Cloth
€300.00
(9788791393617)
Sumptuous in format and timely, given recent attention to European-Ottoman exchanges, the four volumes considered here benefit from Erik Fischer’s lifelong engagement with Melchior Lorck (also Lorichs), the scholarship of Ernst Jonas Bencard and Mikael Bøgh Rasmussen, and a contribution by Marco Iuliano. Volume 1 consists of a complete survey of the artist’s oeuvre in the form of thumbnail images, a biographical essay, and documents. The second and third volumes consist of a facsimile of The Turkish Publication, published posthumously in 1626, and a catalogue raisonné, with woodcuts, engravings, drawings, and paintings generated from the artist’s sojourn in Istanbul…
Full Review
November 3, 2011
Elizabeth Siegel
New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2010.
216 pp.;
49 b/w ills.
Paper
$50.00
(9780300154061)
The title of Elizabeth Siegel’s Galleries of Friendship and Fame: A History of Nineteenth-Century American Photograph Albums derives from an unsigned article, “Photomania,” published in Harper’s Weekly (February 16, 1861), and cited by Siegel as evidence of the popular appeal of the carte de visite album in the United States. As the article crowed, the album sold by savvy “makers of fancy goods” was allowing collectors of cartes de visite “to create their own ‘gallery of friendship and fame.’” The mania for albums was widespread, “making them ‘quite universal, and as fast as they are brought to us are taken…
Full Review
October 21, 2011
Desmond Shawe-Taylor
Exh. cat.
London:
Royal Collection Publications, 2009.
191 pp.;
157 color ills.;
14 b/w ills.
Paper
$30.00
(9781905686070)
Exhibition schedule: Queen's Gallery, Palace of Holyroodhouse, Edinburgh, March 27–September 20, 2008; Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, London, October 30, 2009–February 14, 2010
Sir Philip Sassoon organized the first exhibition of the English conversation piece in 1930. Describing this type of painting as “a representation of two or more persons in a state of dramatic or psychological relation to each other,” Sassoon displayed over 150 eighteenth-century pictures in his own house. Following Sassoon’s identification of the genre, books and exhibitions about the conversation piece appeared steadily between the 1930s and 1980s. More recently, studies on the emergence of the modern consumer society and the bourgeois public sphere have renewed interest in the picture type because of its depictions of fine material possessions and…
Full Review
October 21, 2011
Molly Emma Aitken
New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2010.
352 pp.;
65 color ills.;
173 b/w ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9780300142297)
“Why Rajput paintings look the way that they do” is the enormous concept that Molly Emma Aitken addresses in The Intelligence of Tradition in Rajput Court Painting. Fortunately for readers entering into her innovative and complex thinking, Aitken is especially gifted in her word choice, graphically evocative, and the book is filled with well-reproduced images of stunning Rajput paintings. Her descriptions of the paintings and the artists who produced them give both the seasoned scholar and uninitiated reader a series of intriguing ideas to ponder.
Aitken’s premise is concisely explained in her introduction: conventions used in Rajput painting…
Full Review
October 21, 2011
Marjorie Garber
Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 2008.
272 pp.;
1 b/w ills.
Cloth
$24.95
(9781400830039)
The issues at stake in Marjorie Garber’s Patronizing the Arts could not be more pressing. Published in 2008, this short overview of America’s government, university, corporate, and private donor-based arts patronage structures—together with some of their European precursors and global alternatives—arrives at a moment when the House Republican Study Committee (among others) has proposed the elimination of the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities, and the governors of Kansas, Texas, and South Carolina are advocating a complete defunding of the arts at the state level.
It is precisely this context, however, that makes it difficult to embrace Garber’s…
Full Review
October 13, 2011
Cornelia H. Butler and Alexandra Schwartz, eds.
New York:
Museum of Modern Art, 2010.
Many color ills.;
Many b/w ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9780870707711)
Because it is the first wide-ranging account of its kind to be produced by the Museum of Modern Art, I particularly wanted Modern Women to be a milestone for feminist art history. I was thus all the more disappointed when it fell slightly short of this goal. Cornelia Butler, the MoMA curator and co-editor (with Alexandra Schwartz) of the volume, encourages readers to think in such optimistic feminist terms in her introductory essay, and Aruna D’Souza, in considering MoMA’s feminist future, even suggests that the museum might consider how it could become a “site for community-building and for the utopian…
Full Review
October 13, 2011
David Kunzle, ed.
Trans David Kunzle
Jackson:
University Press of Mississippi, 2007.
672 pp.;
376 b/w ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9781578069460)
David Kunzle
Jackson:
University Press of Mississippi, 2007.
224 pp.;
115 b/w ills.
Paper
$25.00
(9781578069484)
If Rodolphe Töpffer (1799–1846) can be called the “Father of the Comic Strip,” then David Kunzle is surely its godfather, for it is to him that we owe the establishment of the comic strip as a subject for scholarship. His two-volume History of the Comic Strip (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973–90), today a collector’s item, is still unsurpassed as the basic text about this art form, and he has now published two additional books that also are destined to become basic reference works. The first, Father of the Comic Strip: Rodolphe Töpffer, is a monograph on the artist…
Full Review
October 13, 2011
David Cast
University Park:
Pennsylvania State University Press, 2009.
272 pp.;
16 color ills.;
28 b/w ills.
Cloth
$95.00
(9780271034423)
If only Giorgio Vasari were as clear and straightforward as Nicolas Poussin. When the French theorist Paul Fréart de Chambray petitioned the artist for his definition of painting, Poussin replied: “It is an imitation made with lines and colors on some surface of everything that is seen under the sun, its end is delight (délectation)” (Lettres et propos sur l’art, Anthony Blunt, ed., Paris: Hermann, 1989, 174). Poussin’s response was deceptively simple, perhaps even coy in answering his somewhat pedantic interlocutor. Both doubtless understood delight to encompass, beyond sensual delectation, the goals of instruction and edification that had…
Full Review
October 13, 2011
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