Concise, critical reviews of books, exhibitions, and projects in all areas and periods of art history and visual studies

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Glyn Davies and Kristin Kennedy
London: V&A Publishing, 2009. 320 pp.; 350 color ills. Cloth $80.00 (9781851775798)
This sumptuously produced and lavishly illustrated volume celebrates the reopening of the Victoria and Albert Museum’s Medieval and Renaissance galleries. It is not a traditional catalogue; readers in search of entries on specific objects are referred to the museum’s website. The director’s forward mentions several aims for the book, among them “to provide a stimulating introduction to the material culture of medieval and renaissance Europe” and to stand as a “new and original contribution to the literature on the art of the Middle Ages and Renaissance.” In these ambitious goals, presumably addressing the casual visitor and the specialist respectively, Glyn… Full Review
December 1, 2011
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Malcolm Jones
New Haven: Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art in association with Yale University Press, 2010. 352 pp.; 30 color ills.; 220 b/w ills. Cloth $95.00 (9780300136975)
Until recently, the printed image in early modern England—the period 1500–1700 covered by Malcolm Jones’s The Print in Early Modern England: An Historical Oversight—has been the victim of neglect by scholars, leading to the false impression that early modern English culture was predominantly a textual instead of a visual one. It has been accepted as conventional wisdom that there were very few English prints from this era, and those that do exist are crude when compared to the staggering developments in other Northern European regions such as the German-speaking territories, France, and the Netherlands. Furthermore, English trained art historians… Full Review
November 23, 2011
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Mark Haworth-Booth
Exh. cat. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2010. 160 pp.; 113 color ills. Cloth $40.00 (9781606060254)
Who really was Camille Silvy? This is one of the thorny questions that remains after reading Mark Haworth-Booth’s enthusiastic biography, Photography of Modern Life: Camille Silvy. Like most commercial photographers who set up portrait studios in the 1850s, Silvy combined elements of entrepreneur, charlatan, genius, and hack. French by birth, Silvy lived in London during most of his ten years of photographic activity where he carved out a reputation based on the hundreds of cartes de visite that he successfully marketed to London’s fashionable world and on a couple of landscapes that he exhibited to much acclaim in 1859… Full Review
November 23, 2011
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Thomas F. X. Noble
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009. 496 pp. Cloth $65.00 (9780812241419)
This is a big book in every sense. In seven long and detailed chapters Noble offers nothing less than a survey and analysis of Byzantine and Carolingian theology around the question of the place of images in religious worship, with a dash of historiography thrown in for good measure. It is a thought-provoking study which places the issues in historical, political, and social contexts, and raises crucial questions about the relationships between Byzantium and the West. It is a book that should change the ways that we think about issues concerning art in the eighth and ninth centuries. Images,… Full Review
November 17, 2011
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Karen Fiss
University of Chicago Press, 2009. 296 pp.; 95 b/w ills. Paper $37.50 (9780226252018)
From the onset of the world economic crisis in 1929 until the end of the Second World War in 1945, artists in Europe and the Americas took positions in the struggles between parliamentary democracies, fascist dictatorships, and left-wing regimes. The single best-known artistic product of that historical moment is undoubtedly Picasso’s Guernica, which was hung in the modernist pavilion of the embattled Spanish Republic at the World Exposition in Paris in the summer of 1937. However, the Spanish display was overshadowed at that time by the towering neoclassical pavilion of National Socialist Germany and the dynamic masses of its… Full Review
November 10, 2011
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Deborah Mauskopf Deliyannis
New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010. 464 pp.; 15 color ills.; 103 b/w ills. Cloth $99.00 (9780521836722)
In her important work, Ravenna in Late Antiquity, Deborah Deliyannis provides a detailed synthesis of the available material on Ravenna from the Roman period through until AD 850. As she briefly mentions at the end of her review of earlier scholarship, “There has as yet been no sustained scholarly treatment of Ravenna, in English, and this book is intended to address that void” (13). Deliyannis does exactly this, combining textual, archaeological, and artistic evidence in a clear and sophisticated way for readers who were perhaps put off by the extensive German text of F. W. Deichmann’s earlier synthesis (F… Full Review
November 10, 2011
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Jeffrey W. Cody and Frances Terpak, eds.
Exh. cat. Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute, 2010. 220 pp.; 61 color ills.; 75 b/w ills. Cloth $45.00 (9781606060544)
Exhibition schedule: Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, February 8–May 1, 2011
Terry Bennett
History of Photography in China, vol. 1.. London: Bernard Quaritch, Ltd, 2009. 242 pp.; 150 ills. Cloth £50.00 (9780956301208)
Terry Bennett
History of Photography in China, vol. 2.. London: Bernard Quaritch, Ltd, 2010. 420 pp.; 400 ills. Cloth £70.00 (9780956301215)
It is not a coincidence that these three recent publications on photography in China all begin with a lament on the obstacles involved with studying this subject. Indeed, since there is rarely a concentrated archive of photo studios or photographers in China, information can only be gleaned from newspaper advertisements, travel writing, correspondence, and ephemera. Actual photographs are not abundant either, as political chaos over the past century resulted in their significant loss and destruction. The extant photographic materials in Chinese public collections are generally inaccessible; those in private collections are increasingly visible, thanks to the popular Old Photographs series… Full Review
November 10, 2011
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Greg Hill, ed.
Exh. cat. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada, 2010. 140 pp.; many color ills. Paper $56.95 (9780888848765)
Exhibition schedule:National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, October 21, 2010–January 16, 2011; Museum of Anthropology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, April 7–May 29, 2011; Winnipeg Art Gallery, June 30–September 11, 2011; National Museum of the American Indian, New York, October 29, 2011–April 15, 2012; MacKenzie Art Gallery, Regina, Saskatchewan, September–November 2012; Thunder Bay Art Gallery, Thunder Bay, January–March 2013
In my first Native art history class in the mid-1990s, my professor introduced the work of Carl Beam, theretofore unknown to me. She presented Self Portrait in My Christian Dior Bathing Suit (1978–1980), which depicts the artist in a Speedo-style swimsuit, standing legs apart with one hand on his hip and inscribed with a handwritten statement expressing his authority and claim to the work. It conveys humor, irony, incisiveness, and defiance. To my mind, then gripped by postcolonial and feminist cultural critiques, the painting crystallized issues of representation and refusal, and did so in beautifully executed washes of watercolor. I… Full Review
November 3, 2011
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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
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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
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