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Browse Recent Reviews
Bernadine Barnes
Renaissance Lives.
Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 2017.
240 pp.;
40 color ills.;
20 b/w ills.
Cloth
$22.50
(9781780237404)
What flight of fancy, delusion of grandeur, or insidious demonic force could tempt a contemporary author to write yet another book on Michelangelo (1475–1564)? The depth of Michelangelo’s genius has elicited sustained inquiry in modern art historical research for well over a century. One may ask, is there anything left to see or say? Bernadine Barnes’s new book entitled Michelangelo and the Viewer in His Time yields the answer yes on both counts. This book is not only worth reading, it has the necessary ingredients to remind contemporary Michelangelo scholars of a desirable style of writing and research that places…
Full Review
August 1, 2018
Robert Bird, Christina Kiaer, and Zachary Cahill, eds.
Exh. cat.
Milan:
Mousse Publishing, 2018.
768 pp.;
365 b/w ills.
Paper
$30.00
(9788867492947)
Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, September 14, 2017–January 14, 2018.
Marking the centenary of the Russian Revolution, 2017 was a year rife with crises and controversies that cast 1917’s legacy as both strikingly familiar and impossibly remote. Alongside a rising tide of authoritarianism and Russia again donning the mantle of American adversary (with the charges led this time not by red-baiting conservatives, but by Democrats and liberal pundits seeking to remedy an election gone terribly wrong), alongside the ongoing fight for women’s rights and civil rights, for equal pay and a living wage, the twentieth century hardly seems to have come and gone, its passage marked instead by a return…
Full Review
July 30, 2018
Marcus Milwright
Edinburgh:
Edinburgh University Press, 2017.
352 pp.;
14 b/w ills.
Paper
$39.95
(9781474409193)
Marcus Milwright’s Islamic Arts and Crafts: An Anthology stakes an implicit—and sometimes explicit—claim for the place of objects and their production in the eastern Mediterranean and the larger Iranian world. Following the author’s work on a related topic, An Introduction to Islamic Archaeology (2010), it illustrates his mastery of written sources as well as the diverse materials, processes, and objects they discuss. With substantial scholarly apparatus in the form of notes, bibliography, index, and appendix, it will help shape the growing field of Islamic material culture as well as that of Islamic art. Milwright, in the introduction, makes clear the…
Full Review
July 27, 2018
Eva Respini, ed.
Exh. cat.
New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2018.
316 pp.;
236 color ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9780300228250)
Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston, February 7–May 20, 2018
The exhibition Art in the Age of the Internet, 1989 to Today at the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (ICA/Boston) helped to contextualize the history of the internet’s development in light of how it is shaping our interconnected present and, as a consequence, contemporary art practices. Importantly, the exhibition revolved around the concept that the internet is a cultural product. Such a concept is a fundamental step toward departing from the assumption that technological progress is neutral. The exhibition reflected on the fact that the internet has permeated other artistic practices. As consequence, not only new media art is…
Full Review
July 25, 2018
Morgan Pitelka and Alice Y. Tseng, eds.
Routledge Studies in the Modern History of Asia.
New York:
Routledge, 2016.
188 pp.;
29 b/w ills.
Hardcover
$116.00
(9781138186613)
What to do with a retired emperor? Soon after Emperor Akihito announced his intention to abdicate in April 2019, this question captured headlines across Japan. Not merely a response to the unusual circumstances—the last imperial retirement occurred in 1817—the inquiry was advanced as part of a bold appeal: so that he not overshadow his successor, Akihito should leave Tokyo for Kyoto. The proposal was perhaps the most ambitious of many made by Kyoto political groups in recent years to reclaim from Tokyo cultural, political, and economic institutions taken over the course of centuries. The campaign is unlikely to succeed, but…
Full Review
July 23, 2018
Roger Gastman, Trina Calderon, and Caleb Neelon
Exh. cat.
Berkeley:
Gingko Press Inc., 2015.
354 pp.;
800 ills.
Hardcover
$49.95
(9781584236016)
Nora Burnett Abrams, ed.
Denver:
MCA Denver, 2017.
128 pp.
Cloth
$24.95
(9781616895754)
Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, February 11–May 14, 2017
The stairwell leading down to the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver’s (MCA) first floor simulates the visual experience of a New York City subway. The walls are lined with DIY graffiti, written in a variety of colors and styles, offering the passage as a prologue for its exhibition, Wall Writers: Graffiti in Its Innocence. Graffiti historian, urban anthropologist, and guest curator Robert Gastman exhaustively examines the history of the early graffiti scene in New York and Philadelphia. Beginning in 1967 as youth started to routinely make marks on the streets, the study sets out to illuminate the…
Full Review
July 20, 2018
Jennifer Doyle
Durham:
Duke University Press, 2013.
232 pp.;
45 color ills.
Paper
$23.95
(9780822353133)
Diana Taylor
Durham:
Duke University Press, 2016.
240 pp.;
74 ills.
Paperback
$24.95
(9780822359975)
Performance art has become a hot topic of research in art history, and it has surged in popularity judging by the number of performance art classes, conferences, and performance studies departments in UK and US universities. This review will consist of appraising two texts that reckon with performance: Diana Taylor’s Performance (2016) and Jennifer Doyle’s Hold It Against Me: Difficulty and Emotion in Contemporary Art (2013). Taylor, a performance studies and Spanish professor, focuses strictly on performance art—specifically rethinking aspects of it; the field has been re-formed through new theories. On the other hand, Doyle, an English professor, focuses on…
Full Review
July 18, 2018
Margarita Tupitsyn
New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2017.
288 pp.;
148 color ills.;
129 b/w ills.
Hardcover
$55.00
(9780300179750)
It is difficult to assess Margarita Tupitsyn’s new book, Moscow Vanguard Art, 1922–1992, because of its strong spirit of partisanship. It covers wide historical ground and brings in a lot of new material gathered from primary sources, but it is also unabashedly selective, its choices circumscribed by the author’s personal history. A well-known art historian and curator of Russian and Soviet avant-garde art, Tupitsyn belongs to the generation of intellectuals who came of age during the period of stagnation and decline of the Soviet Union. The history she narrates belongs to this period fully and inextricably. Her important contribution…
Full Review
July 16, 2018
E. Patrick Johnson and Ramón H. Rivera-Servera, eds.
Durham:
Duke University Press, 2016.
584 pp.;
23 b/w ills.
Cloth
$124.95
(9780822360506)
According to E. Patrick Johnson and Ramón H. Rivera-Servera, the terms “performance,” “queer,” and “blacktino” in the title of their coedited book Blacktino Queer Performance signal collaborations: queer as non-normative sexualities; performance as a lens to examine sociocultural phenomena; and blacktino analytics as a “critical optic [which] allows us to maintain the goals of queer-of-color-critique and to ground it in [. . .] black and brown intergroup relations” (7). On the volume’s cover is a seminal moment in queer blacktino performance: Sylvia Riviera and Marsha P. Johnson, foremothers of blacktino transgender activism, at the Christopher Street Liberation Day Gay Pride…
Full Review
July 10, 2018
Massimiliano Gioni and Micola Brambilla, eds.
Exh. cat.
Milan:
La Triennale di Milano and Electa, 2017.
312 pp.;
100 color ills.
Paper
€45.00
(9788891814081)
Triennale di Milano Foundation, Milan, Italy, April 28–August 20, 2017
The Restless Earth, curated by Massimiliano Gioni and organized by the Nicola Trussardi Foundation, was an ambitious exhibition that brought together more than sixty artists from over forty countries. It presented an exceptional ensemble of personal and collective works, which describe some of the most critical and debated issues of our society—migration, the current refugee crisis, and the phenomenon of globalization. The exhibition was on display at the Triennale di Milano Foundation, a center that explores the experimental languages of contemporary art, architecture, and design. The Restless Earth was displayed in a series of rooms, galleries, and corridors, which occupied…
Full Review
July 2, 2018
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