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

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John F. Moffitt
Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Company, 2004. 268 pp.; 22 b/w ills. Paper $49.95 (0786419598)
Caravaggio is most often represented as a hot-headed painter who preferred the seedy side of Rome—its bars, street brawls, and prostitutes—to the refined life of his wealthy patrons. Thus, one might be tempted to assume that the artist was vehemently opposed to all that was intellectual, especially the stuffy classicism of Rome’s humanist circle. This popular perception of the artist sets up two interesting dichotomies, one that pits naturalism against classicism and another claiming that a painter who had a weakness for violence and promiscuity could not also have interests in literary or theoretical matters. John Moffitt takes issue with… Full Review
February 4, 2009
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Lisa Strong
Exh. cat. Fort Worth and Norman: Amon Carter Museum in association with University of Oklahoma Press, 2007. 238 pp.; 100 color ills. Cloth $45.00 (9780883601051)
Exhibition schedule: Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, September 20, 2008–January 11, 2009; Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, February 7–May 10, 2009
Like the proto-ethnographic works of his better-known contemporaries Karl Bodmer and George Catlin, Baltimore-born painter Alfred Jacob Miller’s views of the American West both shaped and reflected the myriad histories and identities that formed the United States during the first half of the nineteenth century. Miller is perhaps most closely associated with such paintings as The Lost Greenhorn (1851) and The Trapper’s Bride (1846), both of which appear in the deftly curated Sentimental Journey: The Art of Alfred Jacob Miller, recently on view at Fort Worth’s Amon Carter Museum. The exhibition brought together for the first time in over… Full Review
January 28, 2009
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Robert Hoozee
Exh. cat. Brussels and Ghent: Mercatorfonds and Museum voor Kunsten Gent, 2008. 424 pp.; 350 color ills. Cloth $75.00 (9780801446948)
Exhibition schedule: Museum voor Kunsten Gent, October 6, 2007–January 13, 2008
British Vision: Observation and Imagination in British Art, 1750–1950 is the catalogue of the first major exhibition installed at the newly renovated Museum of Fine Arts in Ghent—an occasion for continentals to examine a distinctly British artistic tradition. Conceived by the museum's director, Robert Hoozee, the exhibition aimed to trace and highlight links between works from the mid-eighteenth century (when, for the first time, native artists publicly staked out their own reputation) through to the 1950s (at which point Modernism overrode the notion of a national tradition). In his opening essay Hoozee explains the organizing principle of the… Full Review
January 28, 2009
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Barbara Burlison Mooney
Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2008. 400 pp.; 147 b/w ills. Cloth $65.00 (9780813926735)
In Prodigy Houses of Virginia: Architecture and the Native Elite, Barbara Burlison Mooney provides a critical, Marxist analysis of Virginia’s Tidewater plantation houses as expressions of Virginia’s eighteenth-century gentry culture. Mooney seeks to demonstrate that analyzing members of Virginia’s colonial gentry can reveal much about the mansions they created. As a result, the book deals less with issues of architectural design than with the social and cultural context in which the architecture was created. Rather than architectural history, her study is more a work of social history as it relates to architecture. In her introduction, Mooney establishes… Full Review
January 28, 2009
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Ian Warrell, ed.
Exh. cat. London: Tate Publishing, 2007. 272 pp.; 250 ills. Paper $35.00 (9781854375698)
Exhibition schedule: National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, October 1, 2007–January 6, 2008; Dallas Museum of Art, February, 10–May 18, 2008; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, June, 24–September 21, 2008
The exhibition J. M. W. Turner, recently on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, was the first large-scale exhibition of the artist's work presented in the United States since the 1960s, and viewers paid the price, with a show that was too big and broad for most appetites. On my visits, the exhibition seemed to be challenging the stamina of all but the most devoted tourists and art historians. The problem was not only one of stamina. Seen in such quantity, Turner’s uniqueness is eclipsed. As is well known, Turner was famous for his performances during… Full Review
January 28, 2009
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Bertrand Tillier and et al.
Exh. cat. Ostfildern-Ruit and New York: Hatje Cantz Verlag and Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2008. 480 pp.; 470 color ills.; 36 b/w ills. Cloth $50.00 (9783775721097)
Exhibition schedule: Grand Palais, Paris, October 13, 2007–January 28, 2008; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, February 27–May 18, 2008; Musée Fabre, Montpellier, June 13–September 28, 2008
Looming before the visitor entering the recent Gustave Courbet exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art was an enlargement of the artist’s striking The Desperate Man (1844–45), an image effectively representative of the artist’s intense effort to secure artistic fame without sacrificing his personal vision. Once inside the exhibition, the paintings themselves provided the chief drama in a curatorial endeavor that “sought to relocate Courbet’s work in the context of his time” instead of “attempting to formulate new hypotheses” (15). Organized thematically in roughly chronological order, Gustave Courbet began with the early role-playing self-portraits and ended with works produced during… Full Review
January 20, 2009
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Janet W. Foster
New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2006. 240 pp.; 231 color ills.; 25 b/w ills. Cloth $50.00 (9780810930858)
There is much to appreciate in Janet W. Foster’s The Queen Anne House: America’s Victorian Vernacular. First among these is the broad focus in her celebration of American residential architecture of the third quarter of the nineteenth century, which encompasses buildings across the country in a variety of geographic and social circumstances. Foster’s celebration is amply documented in the high graphic quality of this publication, particularly in the many full-page color photographs by Radek Kurzaj that lavishly present all of the twenty-two properties chosen for the catalogue portion of her project. One of the virtues of the… Full Review
January 14, 2009
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Tracy Miller
Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Asia Center, 2007. 265 pp.; 40 color ills.; 22 b/w ills. Cloth $45.00 (9780674021534)
The Memorial Shrines ritual complex of Jinci in Shanxi province is located at a sacred site where three mountain springs emerge to sustain the surrounding land and people. The Jinci complex is examined in The Divine Nature of Power through multiple methodological perspectives stemming from modern fields of archaeology; anthropology; art and architectural history; and political, social, and religious history. Through a careful reading and interpretation of surviving textual and physical materials, Miller reconstructs part of the complicated cultural history of this ritual complex. She uses a female water spirit of the Jin Springs and the historical/mythical figure of Shu… Full Review
January 14, 2009
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Karen Lang
Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2006. 304 pp.; 50 b/w ills. Paper $24.95 (9780801488559)
Philippe-Alain Michaud
Trans Sophie Hawkes New York: Zone Books, 2004. 404 pp.; 100 ills. Cloth $37.95 (9781890951399)
In 1886, the twenty-year old Aby Warburg, scion of the Hamburg banking family, began to keep records of his book purchases. In the same year, he enrolled as a student at the University of Bonn to study art history, archaeology, classical mythology, and the philosophy of history. He spent 1888–89 in Florence, assisting August Schmarsow in the founding of a German art-historical institute. Apart from a subsequent stint at the University of Strassburg, he spent most of his life as a private scholar in Hamburg, with the exception of a long journey to the United States and specifically to the… Full Review
January 14, 2009
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Paul Rehak
Ed John G Younger Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2006. 288 pp.; 46 b/w ills. Cloth $60.00 (0299220109)
Paul Rehak’s Imperium and Cosmos: Augustus and the Northern Campus Martius was unfinished at the time of the author’s lamentably premature death in 2004. The manuscript was subsequently prepared for publication by his longtime partner and colleague at the University of Kansas, John Younger. In its present version, the book offers a concise study of the major Augustan monuments of the northern Campus Martius in Rome, particularly the Mausoleum, the Ustrinum (cremation site) of Augustus, the Solarium (sun calendar), and the Ara Pacis, the emperor’s famous altar of Peace. It advances the thesis that this part of the city was… Full Review
January 7, 2009
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