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

Reviews in caa.reviews are published continuously by CAA and Taylor & Francis, with the most recently published reviews listed below. Browse reviews based on geographic region, period or cultural sphere, or specialty (from 1998 to the present) using Review Categories in the sidebar or by entering terms in the search bar above.

Recently Published Reviews

Simon Hewitt
London: Unicorn Publishing Group, 2021. 352 pp.; 200 color ills. Paper $37.95 (9781912690572 )
An overwhelming display of selfish ambition, treachery, betrayal, and megalomania defines the art—from small works to large—commissioned by Ludovico Sforza and analyzed by Simon Hewitt in Leonardo da Vinci and the Book of Doom: Bianca Sforza, the Sforziada & Artful Propaganda in Renaissance Milan. A dedication to detail characterizes Hewitt’s chronicle, opening with synopses of the lives of those persons central to the volume, which are extremely helpful, given the historical complications of the text. Next, “Notes on Names” tracks the genealogy of the Sforza-Viscontis, identifying monikers so that readers will not be confused, as intricate genealogical connections are… Full Review
April 25, 2022
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Roland Betancourt
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2020. 288 pp.; 8 color ills.; 50 b/w ills. Cloth $35.00 (9780691179452)
I intend to engage the book under review with the respect and sympathy its challenging, adventurous spirit requests. This encounter was, indeed, a transformative experience; Byzantine Intersectionality: Sexuality, Gender, and Race in the Middle Ages not only made me examine assumptions of my own positionality as a scholar of Byzantine art history, but also asked me to read more deeply—to listen in to—the writings of excellent scholars in the field of intersectional studies. Byzantine art history needs interventions such as this book. It is known as a field that has made small steps toward reckoning with contemporary trends in art… Full Review
April 22, 2022
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Museum of Latin American Art, Long Beach, CA, July 2021–March 2022
A row of framed black-and-white photographs of artist Judy Baca hang on a hot-pink wall. Titled Judith F. Baca as La Pachuca (1976), this series depicts Baca styled as a “Pachuca,” a Mexican American female stereotype from the 1950s. In the photos, Baca wears a white, collared, button-up top, with a pack of Marlboros tucked into the cuff of her rolled-up sleeve. Her dark hair is teased, her painted eyebrows are dramatically arched, her eyeliner winged, her lips outlined, and a scarf is knotted around her neck. In each photograph, she puffs on a cigarette poised between long-nailed fingers, with… Full Review
April 20, 2022
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Stephanie O'Rourke
Cambridge Studies in Romanticism. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2021. 260 pp. Cloth $99.99 (9781316519028)
To describe a piece of culture as “mesmerizing” or “electrifying” is so commonplace today that you might, like me, have heard these phrases countless times without giving much thought to how and why they became critical clichés. Mesmerism and electricity both emerged as subjects of scientific inquiry in the eighteenth century—the same period when art criticism itself was coming into existence—so perhaps it is not surprising that this language seeped into the cultural lexicon at the time, to become part of the repertoire of terms that we continue to use to characterize aesthetic experience. But it would be a mistake… Full Review
April 18, 2022
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Sonya Rhie Mace and Bertrand Porte, eds.
Exh. cat. Cleveland Masterworks Series, vol. 5. Cleveland, OH: D. Giles Limited in association with Cleveland Museum of Art, 2021. 192 pp.; 142 color ills. Paper $28.95 (9781911282785)
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH, November 14, 2021–January 30, 2022
An exquisite but incomplete stone sculpture of the god Krishna, found at Phnom Da, Cambodia, close to the pre-Angkorian capital city Angkor Borei, was acquired by the Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA) in 1973. Krishna is depicted as a vital youth raising up Mount Govardhana with a single arm. In this myth, first articulated in the early centuries of our era, Krishna holds up the mountain for seven straight days and seven nights. Rain and winds lash the landscape all around. Men, women, children, and animals huddle beneath the mountain. Through his effortless strength the boy-god shelters his… Full Review
April 15, 2022
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Romy Golan
Brooklyn: Zone Books, 2021. 312 pp.; 8 color ills.; 136 b/w ills. Cloth $35.00 (9781942130505)
Romy Golan’s book, Flashback, Eclipse: The Political Imaginary of Italian Art in the 1960s, proposes a new methodological approach to thinking about art made during that volatile decade. Rather than a chronological account of the period, Golan puts forth the theoretical and temporal models of the flashback, eclipse, and mise en abyme as a means to draw out the ambiguities and ellipses that characterized its art. Such a strategy reveals, she suggests, suppressed memories of Italian fascism as well as “various liberatory moments of political and cultural resistance,” or what the author terms the “political imaginary” of artists, curators… Full Review
April 13, 2022
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Beatrice E. Kitzinger
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2019. 304 pp.; 148 color ills. Cloth $79.99 ( 9781108428811)
Beatrice Kitzinger’s book, The Cross, The Gospel, and the Work of Art in the Carolingian Age, examines the cross as both a concept and an image in northern Europe from the eighth to the tenth centuries. Her book is a welcome addition to the field of early medieval art history because of its innovative approach and because it considers many objects and artworks that have received little attention before now. Kitzinger includes a wealth of materials that have been previously neglected due to their apparently lower quality and artistic skill when compared to the higher-status illuminated productions that have… Full Review
April 11, 2022
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Elina Gertsman
University Park: Penn State University Press, 2021. 256 pp.; 58 color ills.; 62 b/w ills. Cloth $124.95 (9780271087849)
How can one represent the unrepresentable? This question has been at the center of numerous artistic debates in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, parallel to philosophical and semiotic discourses on memory and loss, gaps and erasures, voids and material traces that remain. Reflections on absence and the essence of nothing have enormous creative potential—a fact long recognized in modern and contemporary art—but, as Elina Gertsman argues in her book on lacunae in medieval books, are rarely made fruitful and systematically studied in medieval art. Gertsman aims to challenge the conventional notion of the horror vacui of Gothic decorative art, an… Full Review
April 6, 2022
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Marden Fitzpatrick Nichols
Greek Culture in the Roman World series. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017. 238 pp.; 8 color ills. Cloth £75.00 (9780511758591)
Marden Fitzpatrick Nichols’s study marks a fresh approach to Vitruvius’s De architectura (On Architecture, ca. 20s BCE). It is a revision of the author’s 2009 PhD dissertation at the University of Cambridge, entitled Vitruvius and the Rhetoric of Display: Wall Painting, Domestic Architecture and Roman Self-Fashioning, whose arguments have been partly presented in other publications. In this important study, Nichols tackles the ten books of Vitruvius’s work on architecture to provide a systematic overview and comprehensive analysis of his authorial persona. She focuses on books six and seven to offer a deeper understanding of Vitruvius’s approach to houses… Full Review
April 4, 2022
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Eve Straussman-Pflanzer and Oliver Tostmann, eds.
Exh. cat. Detroit and New Haven: Detroit Institute of Arts in association with Yale University Press, 2021. 208 pp.; 141 ills. Cloth $40.00 (9780300256369)
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT, September 30, 2021–January 9, 2022; Detroit Institute of Arts, MI, February 6–May 29, 2022
By Her Hand, an exhibition cocurated by Eve Straussman-Pflanzer and Oliver Tostmann at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, brought together works by sixteen Italian women artists from 1500 to the late eighteenth century. Some of these artists are well known to art historians and increasingly to the broader public, particularly Artemisia Gentileschi, whose work was celebrated in a blockbuster monographic exhibition in 2020 at the National Gallery in London. Several others will likely be new to many: Roman printmaker Anna Maria Vaiani or Bolognese painter Ginevra Cantofoli, for instance. After the Wadsworth, the exhibition traveled to the Detroit Institute… Full Review
March 30, 2022
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Victoria & Albert Museum, London, England, November 20, 2021–May 8, 2022
The Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) has flung open its doors following the cultural doldrums that marked the past year with a lavish exhibition that is striking for both its narrative and content. Visitors who have followed every Fabergé display and publication since the landmark 1977 blockbuster at the V&A marking the queen’s silver jubilee, and even those most familiar with the latest scholarship, are challenged from the threshold of the gallery’s enfilade. Surprisingly, there is not an imperial egg in sight when we first enter. Instead, we are greeted by miniature models of the Russian imperial regalia, the diamond-set… Full Review
March 28, 2022
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Stephanie Sparling Williams
Oakland: University of California Press, 2021. 264 pp.; 16 color ills.; 44 b/w ills. Cloth $50.00 (9780520380752)
The year 2020–21 was a banner one for artist Lorraine O’Grady, who earned a long-overdue retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum, published an edited volume of her writings, and saw the first scholarly monograph of her work, Speaking Out of Turn: Lorraine O’Grady and the Art of Language. In this book, Stephanie Sparling Williams offers a timely rejoinder to the artist’s historical neglect, situating O’Grady’s peripatetic practice in her longstanding investment in language—first as a writer, linguist, and translator, and then as an artist.  The book’s interpretive grounding in language—in its conceptual, communicative, and structural dimensions—offers an in-depth complement to… Full Review
March 25, 2022
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Exh. cat. Santa Fe, NM: IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts and Radius Books, 2021. 240 pp.; 160 ills. Cloth $60.00 (9781942185901)
Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Fe, NM, August 20, 2021–Sun, January 23, 2022
August 2021 saw the opening of Exposure: Native Art and Political Ecology at the Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (MoCNA) in Santa Fe, New Mexico—a leading art venue in the global contemporary Native art scene. The show was an unprecedented response by fifty-four Indigenous artists (twenty of them in the APY Art Collective, an Australian Indigenous group) to the impact on Native peoples and the environment of the nearly seventy-six years of the Atomic Age. The 3,500-square-foot exhibition, spread out over four galleries, is an interdisciplinary mixture of forms and genres, and includes sculpture, video installation, photography, collage, glasswork, metalwork… Full Review
March 23, 2022
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Katherine Jentleson
Exh. cat. New York: DelMonico Books, 2021. 276 pp.; 283 color ills.; 11 b/w ills. Cloth $49.95 (9781636810287)
High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA, September 3, 2021–January 9, 2022; Springfield Museum of Art, Springfield, OH, March 19–July 10, 2022
In the thirty-six years between the Corcoran Gallery of Art’s Black Folk Art in America, 1930–1980 (1982) and the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s History Refused to Die: Highlights from the Souls Grown Deep Foundation Gift (2018), Black vernacular art from the southern United States became securely established within the “canon” of American art. Nellie May Rowe (1900–1982) was an abiding presence in these and other definitive exhibitions of that era. Viewers embraced her as a prolific visual poet who elevated the intimacies of domestic life to an angelic hierarchy of sublime memories, insightful portraiture, tenderly empathic tributes and elegies, and… Full Review
March 21, 2022
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Stephanie Pearson
Image & Context 20. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2021. 272 pp.; 35 color ills.; 28 b/w ills. Cloth $114.99 (9783110700404)
This book explores the use of Egyptian objects in the Italian peninsula during the Late Roman Republic (ca. 146–31 BCE) and the Julio-Claudian dynasty. Rather than focusing on production and initial use, the author examines the longer-term use and display of objects, particularly how imports and spoils were curated and received in multiple media. Pearson is interested in the ways these objects were perceived as art; that is, how Romans collected and used Egyptian objects, and how they valued them. The book argues that Roman economics, religion, and understandings of the foreign created a multifaceted sense of luxury that… Full Review
March 18, 2022
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