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Browse Recent Book Reviews
William E. Jones’s artists’ book Selections from “The Anatomy of Melancholy” by Robert Burton is an intelligent, well-executed triple appropriation synthesized into a multi-layered, transhistorical meditation on 1970s-era leather culture. It is the third of four Jones books published by 2nd Cannons, along with Is It Really So Strange? (2006), Tearoom (2008), and Heliogabalus (2009). All reflect a dominant theme in the artist’s considerable body of work: interrogating the socially constructed nature of homosexuality through appropriation of its representations in historical and contemporary media.
As such the book is an excellent complement to Jones’s time-based work in film, video,…
Full Review
July 21, 2010
Photography, Roland Barthes argued, is most potent when considered through the lens of death. Or as Geoffrey Batchen’s new edited collection suggests, photography is most potent when considered through the lens of Roland Barthes’s death. As this elegant volume makes evident, contemporary photography studies is simultaneously enervated by Barthes’s continuing, towering presence and yet not ready to let him go. Such is the interminable work of mourning.
As the title implies, Photography Degree Zero: Reflections on Roland Barthes’s “Camera Lucida” gathers together writing that is specifically focused on Barthes’s last book to be published during his lifetime. If …
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July 14, 2010
Philip B. Betancourt’s Introduction to Aegean Art, as its title suggests, presents a concise, up-to-date introduction to the art and culture of the Greek Bronze Age, ca. 3000–1000 BCE. Prehistoric Aegean art encompasses three distinct cultural realms: Minoan, Cycladic, and Helladic/Mycenaean. Narrative explanations of the origin of Western art often depict the art of these cultures as a vital link between the early artistic works of Ancient Near Eastern and Egyptian civilizations and the later achievements of Classical antiquity. Yet Aegean prehistory itself remains a complex and rapidly evolving field of study too often accessible only to the specialist…
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July 14, 2010
Asylum: Inside the Closed World of State Mental Hospitals poses an immediate challenge: what is the audience for a coffee table book about a miserable subject? It is as oxymoronic as a junker limousine or a hairless cat, but contradiction is the essence of this nonetheless earnest book.
Christopher Payne is a photographer who specializes in depicting industrial architecture. His previous book illustrated the substations that power the New York City subway. In Asylum, he continues to publish his photos of unusual and outsized architecture, here with the benefit of a preface written by internationally renowned neurologist…
Full Review
July 7, 2010
In 1872, Victorian readers were presented with Charles Darwin’s Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals. The work notably attempted to extend the great naturalist’s theory of evolution through natural selection to understanding the developmental history of expression. In support of Darwin’s attempt to provide evolutionary explanations for the physical manifestation of emotions, the book made considerable use of photographic material; and so it became one of the first scientific works to deploy the technology, despite being published just over three decades since both Louis Daguerre and William Fox Talbot had announced their discoveries to a broader public…
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July 7, 2010
Emily McVarish is one of a handful of artists whose primary artistic output takes the form of books, books that she writes, designs, and prints—artists’ books. The publication of The Square offers the opportunity to experience a new work by this artist, a product of her long-running and deep engagement with the book as an artistic vehicle.
The Square is typographically sophisticated and superbly well-produced, but its objective is not a celebration of craft, nor is it intended to be a luxury product for high-end consumption. It is an original, inventive, and transformative work of art that offers…
Full Review
July 7, 2010
In his seminal collection of essays The Souls of Black Folks (1903), W. E. B. Du Bois, preeminent educator, scholar, and founder of the NAACP, traced a genealogy of black life in the United States as a way to demystify for his readers “the strange meaning of being black here in the dawning of the Twentieth Century.” Assembling a collage of narratives that wove poignant personal recollections with a collective history of slavery, racial oppression, civil rights, race leadership, religion, social progress, and black cultural expression, Du Bois solemnly concluded that “the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem…
Full Review
July 1, 2010
Rare is the traveler who won't admit that one of the joys of exploring a "new world" is bringing home cherished souvenirs. Conversely, sometimes access to a place is limited to an armchair traveler's fantasies about a precious relic, which signifies, imaginatively, a distant land. Such was the case for the Medici in Florence, who are known to have collected feather cloaks from Brazil, and for Albrecht Dürer, who marveled at objects exhibited in Brussels from "the new land of gold" (13). As Edward J. Sullivan discusses in The Language of Objects in the Art of the Americas, objects…
Full Review
July 1, 2010
Jakarta, today a metropolis of twelve million inhabitants, was once the center of the Dutch colonial empire. Known in the seventeenth century as Batavia, the “Queen of the East,” the city headquartered the Dutch East Indies Company, one of the world’s first multinational corporations. Following Indonesian independence in 1945, it became the “exemplary center” of Sukarno, the first president of the decolonized nation, who turned the main boulevard of Jakarta into an exhibit of modernist buildings and urban spaces. Today, like many capital cities of Asian countries, Jakarta is a world city and the center of Indonesia’s government, business activity…
Full Review
July 1, 2010
In 1823, two British architects, Samuel Angell and William Harris, ventured to excavate at Selinunte in the course of their tour of Sicily, and came upon many fragments of sculptured metopes from the Archaic temple now known as “Temple C.” Although local officials tried to stop them, they continued their work, and attempted to export their finds to England, destined for the British Museum. Now in the shadow of the activities of Lord Elgin, Angell and Harris’s shipments were diverted to Palermo, where they remain to this day in the Archaeological Museum.
The three better-preserved metopes (depicting a…
Full Review
June 30, 2010
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