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Browse Recent Book Reviews
James H. Rubin’s newest book is a luxurious survey of Édouard Manet’s life and work, sumptuous in its three hundred color reproductions and lavish in its generous length of more than four hundred pages that allows the author to elaborate on his ideas about the artist. Intended for both the professional scholar and the non-specialist reader, Manet: Initial M, Hand and Eye traces the artist’s impact on his own generation and analyzes the variety of interpretations to which his art has been subjected up to the present day. Rubin decided not to focus exclusively on any one methodology, in order…
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November 20, 2012
Alexander Nagel’s The Controversy of Renaissance Art is nothing if not ambitious. Winner of the College Art Association’s 2012 Charles Rufus Morey Book Award, it proposes no less than a reconfiguration of how we study the art of Italy from the first half of the sixteenth century. Italian High Renaissance art has certainly not been neglected in the discipline of art history, but Nagel opens his book with the observation that contesting “the centrality of the Renaissance in the history of art used to be a call arms. Now the battle is largely over” (1). Instead of seeking to recenter…
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November 16, 2012
In 1972, Garry Neill Kennedy, then president of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD) in Halifax, wrote a short text for a themed issue of Studio International focused on “aspects of art education.” Kennedy’s one-page description of NSCAD is a dense block of type that lists, among other things, basic physical and historical facts about the college and Canada; the names of the college’s students, faculty, staff, visiting artists, and administrators; and details of its finances as well as exhibition and publishing programs. He includes a range of playful data points: the total weight of the student…
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November 16, 2012
In 1863, Hudson River School landscape painter Albert Bierstadt embarked on an expedition to California and the Pacific Northwest. Influenced by the photographs of Carleton Watkins and accompanied by the journalist Fitz Hugh Ludlow, who chronicled the voyage for the New York Evening Post and the Atlantic Monthly, Bierstadt and his companion spent more than a month in the Yosemite Valley before traveling by steamboat, horseback, wagon, and rail into the new state of Oregon and through the Washington Territory. Seven years later, in his Manhattan studio, the artist produced a dramatic, large-scale painting of the western coastal scenery…
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November 16, 2012
What conceptual, political, and artistic foundation stood behind Tony Conrad’s decision in 1965 to create The Flicker, an enervating, even mind-altering, real-time visual experience which would both contest and manifest a newly configured regime of power presiding over the contemporary subject? This is the question, and, in a sense, the pretext for Branden W. Joseph’s Beyond the Dream Syndicate: Tony Conrad and the Arts After Cage, a thoroughgoing revision of the artistic terrain of the 1960s and its historicization. Joseph’s sub-subtitle, “(A ‘Minor’ History),” itself bracketed and internally qualified with quotation marks, points to the author’s means: meticulous…
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November 13, 2012
Liz Wells is best known for editing two of the most frequently used anthologies in courses devoted to the history and practice of photography: The Photography Reader (New York: Routledge, 2002) and Photography: A Critical Introduction (New York: Routledge, 2009). She is also a coeditor of the journal Photographies, launched in 2008, and has curated several exhibitions of contemporary landscape photography. Her first monographic publication, Land Matters: Landscape Photography, Culture and Identity collects six of Wells’s essays on photography’s intersection with landscape as both representation and lived experience.
Land Matters draws upon a lengthy catalogue of previous…
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November 13, 2012
Eager to ascertain the pure motives of and exact origins for modernism, early twentieth-century architectural scholarship left behind the untenable notion of architecture’s absolute departure from historic ideals as its practitioners moved resolutely toward a functionalist aesthetic. Historians of the past decade have attempted to correct such a narrow perspective by broadening their inquiry into the roots of modernism. Their expansion of the field of analysis to include nineteenth-century intellectual and visual culture as a whole has allowed modern architecture to emerge as a rich and complex phenomenon that transcended mere material and technical considerations.
Lauren S. Weingarden’s…
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October 24, 2012
There are rare instances in which portraiture succeeds in conveying not only an individual’s personality, but also something greater, something like what John M. Rosenfield calls “the immediacy of life itself” (11). The striking portrait sculpture of the Japanese monk Shunjōbō Chōgen on the cover of Rosenfield’s Portraits of Chōgen: The Transformation of Buddhist Art in Early Medieval Japan meets these lofty standards. Produced around the time of its subject’s death in 1206, the work embodies the artistic transformation in Japan occurring over the last decades of the twelfth century and into the early thirteenth century, when the otherworldly idealism…
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October 24, 2012
In Titian, Colonna and the Renaissance Science of Procreation: Equicola’s Seasons of Desire, Anthony Colantuono examines erotic images of seminal importance to Renaissance iconography and sensibility. His investigations encompass a wide-ranging spectrum of literary and artistic sources concerned with mythology, medicine, witchcraft, and astrology, many of which have not been previously explored in this context. The book’s basic premise is that the theme of Mario Equicola’s program for the Camerino d'Alabastro, commissioned by Duke Alfonso d'Este in 1511, and of Francesco Colonna’s Hypnerotomachia Poliphili (1499), Equicola's source of inspiration according to Colantuono, is the neo-Aristotelian theory of the…
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October 24, 2012
The opening sentence of this lavishly produced book authoritatively announces that it intends to look at the one hundred and eighty or so surviving churches that were built in Ireland between the arrival of Christianity in the fifth century and the early stages of the Romanesque period—around 1100. As Tomás Ó Carragáin points out in his introduction, which is really a brief historiography of the subject, scholars have previously relied on the pivotal publications by George Petrie, the Earl of Dunraven, Arthur Charles Champneys, and Harold G. Leask.[1] Churches in Early Medieval Ireland: Architecture, Ritual and Memory is a welcome…
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October 19, 2012
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