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Browse Recent Reviews
Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, November 5, 2021–January 30, 2022
Jane Jin Kaisen: Parallax Conjunctures, the first solo exhibition in the United States by the South Korean–born visual artist and filmmaker (Danish, b. 1980), presented three media works that uncover repressed histories of postwar Korea and its diaspora. Two video installations, The Woman, the Orphan, and the Tiger (2010) and Sweeping the Forest Floor (2020), were presented on either side of the exhibition hall, and a photographic installation Apertures | Specters | Rifts (2016) was mounted in the center. Comprising an array of various historical references, political innuendos, and temporalities spanning the past hundred years, each work crafted a narrative…
Full Review
March 16, 2022
Rachel McGarry
Exh. cat.
Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 2021.
160 pp.;
81 color ills.;
37 b/w ills.
Paper
$39.95
(9781517910518)
Minneapolis Institute of Art, October 16, 2021–June 26, 2022
Visitors facing the entrance to Envisioning Evil: “The Nazi Drawings” by Mauricio Lasansky are offered only one glimpse of what they can expect if they choose to enter: a decorated Nazi officer raises his arm in a Hitler salute while blood-like drops fall from his wrist and smear the page. On his head is a terrifying bestial skull that appears both fixed and projected on the man’s scalp. A close look reveals smudges, partial erasures, hard pencil strokes, and tears to the paper. This work is steeped in rage. Mauricio Lasansky’s (1914–2012) torment is on full display upon entering the…
Full Review
March 14, 2022
Sophie Cras
Trans Malcolm DeBevoise
New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2019.
244 pp.;
50 color ills.;
35 b/w ills.;
85 ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9780300232707)
The 1960s are often art historicized as a period when artists began to shift their practices away from materiality and toward forms of abstract thought. According to the economist-turned-art-historian Sophie Cras, it also turns out to have been a decade when financial abstraction came to the forefront, and not just for artists who suddenly found themselves flung from the garret into a boom market, but for the public as a whole, heralding a cultural obsession with inflation, speculation, and arbitrage. Across the Cold War West, and specifically in the France and United States explored by Cras, this was a time…
Full Review
March 11, 2022
Maja Fowkes and Reuben Fowkes
World of Art Series.
London:
Thames and Hudson Inc., 2020.
232 pp.;
156 color ills.
Paper
$24.95
(9780500204375)
At a 1993 festival in Timisoara, four years after protests in the city sparked a nationwide revolution that overthrew the dictatorship of Nicolae Ceaușescu and his Romanian Communist Party, the artist Dan Perjovschi tattooed the word “Romania” on his left arm. Ten years later, in Removing Romania (2003), Perjovschi underwent laser treatment to erase the national label from his skin. This process, the artist explains, did not so much remove the ink as disperse its pigmented molecules throughout his body. Traces of Romania remained embedded in his cells and tissue, invisible but ever present. On the one hand, Perjovschi’s…
Full Review
March 9, 2022
Amy R. Bloch and Daniel M. Zolli, eds.
Cambridge, UK:
Cambridge University Press, 2020.
454 pp.;
112 color ills.
Cloth
$99.99
(9781108428842)
This pathbreaking volume features nineteen substantial research studies that burrow deep into individual examples of the physical, geographical, aesthetic, philosophical, political, and historical circumstances that led to the creation, appreciation, alteration, destruction, restoration, reassembly, and constant reinterpretation of sculpture produced in fifteenth-century Italy. While these essays are all clearly addressed to fellow Renaissance scholars, a remarkable twentieth essay, the introduction by coeditors Amy R. Bloch and Daniel M. Zolli, provides an overview of the field that is so highly accessible and original in the range of media and topics addressed that it should become standard reading for both advanced undergraduates…
Full Review
March 7, 2022
Kristina Wilson
Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 2021.
264 pp.;
74 color ills.;
80 b/w ills.
Cloth
$39.95
(9780691208190)
In the past few decades, design history has productively turned toward investigations of gender. Partly as a result of this emphasis, proportionately little attention has been paid to issues of race in the United States. This lacuna has become painfully salient in the wake of the protests sparked across the nation following the murder of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer in the summer of 2020. Kristina Wilson’s Mid-Century Modernism and the American Body: Race, Gender, and the Politics of Power in Design serves as a timely corrective. Integrating themes of race and gender—and noting their…
Full Review
March 4, 2022
Glenn Adamson and Jen Padgett
Exh. cat.
Fayetteville, AR:
University of Arkansas Press, 2021.
208 pp.;
119 ills.
Cloth
$49.95
(9781682261521)
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR, February 6–May 31, 2021
Crafting America, an expansive exhibition organized by Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas, explored the role of craft within the broader field of post–World War II creative production in the United States. The first room posed the exhibition’s organizing question: “What is Craft?” In the spaces that followed, the curators answered by means of more than a hundred objects by ninety-eight artists that provided a rich understanding of craft as an array of strategies of making. Some of the works remained comfortably within traditional approaches to the category, while others took a more experimental and politically…
Full Review
March 3, 2022
Victoria Lyall and Jorge F. Rivas Perez, eds.
Exh. cat.
Denver and Munich:
Denver Art Museum in association with Hirmer Publishers, 2021.
176 pp.;
80 color ills.
Cloth
$25.00
(9783777434346)
Denver Art Museum, October 24, 2021–July 17, 2022
As its title suggests, ReVisión: Art in the Americas seeks to revise traditional approaches to the visual history of the Americas and provide a distinct perspective. Its principal method for doing so is to challenge the separate treatment in scholarship and museum practices of visual production from before and after the arrival of Europeans in Latin America—specifically, by collapsing chronology and showing works of ancient, colonial, modern, and contemporary Latin American art side by side in a thematic presentation. As curators Victoria Lyall and Jorge Rivas Pérez state in the exhibition’s catalog, rather than seeking to present a “comprehensive history…
Full Review
March 2, 2022
Ana María León
Austin:
University of Texas Press, 2021.
288 pp.;
60 b/w ills.
Cloth
$50.00
(9781477321782)
Some might caution that writing a book focused almost entirely on unbuilt projects by a lesser-known architect of the modernist movement would be tantamount to relegating one’s work to the margins of scholarship. However, using this exact formula is what makes Ana María León’s Modernity for the Masses: Antonio Bonet’s Dreams for Buenos Aires the valuable contribution to architectural history and Latin American studies that it is. Focused on the intersection of spatial politics and the politics of the Argentine state through the lens of Catalan architect Antonio Bonet, León reveals the intertwined histories of modern architecture and statecraft through…
Full Review
February 25, 2022
Nevada Museum of Art, Reno, June 26, 2021–January 2, 2022.
What is the value of staging an exhibition on Land art in the 2020s? The Nevada Museum of Art (NMA) in Reno posed this question over a year’s worth of programming on the topic during an acute year of climate crisis. Reno sits at the crossroads of two major ecosystems: the Great Basin and the Sierra Nevada. It is the third-largest city in a state where 80 percent of the land is nominally public while its extractive economy is decidedly privatized. Land art, too, historically embraces such complexity. The 1960s-born genre originally claimed its removal from commercial art…
Full Review
February 23, 2022
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