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Browse Recent Reviews
Claire Farago, ed.
Burlington, VT:
Ashgate, 2009.
652 pp.;
5 color ills.;
170 b/w ills.
Cloth
$124.95
(9780754665328)
This impressive, generously illustrated collection of essays edited by Claire Farago developed from a symposium held in London in 2001 that focused on the historical reception of Leonardo da Vinci’s Trattato della pittura. Twenty-three studies, including introductory remarks and an annotated bibliography, by twenty authors (three scholars make multiple contributions) examine the transnational fortune of the treatise and consider Leonardo’s influence on the institutionalization of artistic production in early modern Europe. The focus on reception leads to consideration of fundamental issues regarding Leonardo’s legacy, such as the development of the modern conception of artistic genius, as well as broader…
Full Review
August 3, 2011
Patricia Hills
Berkeley:
University of California Press, 2010.
368 pp.;
112 color ills.;
205 b/w ills.
Cloth
$49.95
(9780520252417)
Jacob Lawrence is best known for his multi-panel series The Migration of the Negro (1940–41), with the Philips Collection in Washington, DC, owning the odd-numbered panels, and the Museum of Modern Art, the even-numbered ones. In November 1941, Fortune magazine published twenty-six of the works, and in December of the same year Edith Halpert showed the entire series at her Downtown Gallery. With this exposure, Lawrence became, at the age of twenty-four, a nationally recognized artist. The sixty small paintings that document the wave of black migrants from the rural South to the urban North have been widely reproduced and…
Full Review
July 28, 2011
Heather Campbell Coyle, ed.
Wilmington:
Delaware Art Museum, 2010.
16 pp.;
4 ills.
(9780977I64424)
Exhibition schedule: Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, September 26, 2010–January 9, 2011
Monumental color woodcuts were the most striking feature of the work of Leonard Baskin (1922–2000) displayed in a single large, light-filled room at the Delaware Art Museum. Although Baskin thought of himself primarily as a sculptor, the only freestanding sculpture included was Lazarus (1960), and his legacy will rest on the superb craftsmanship and expressionist power of his relief prints and letterpress books. The solo show was comprised of the seventy-six works created between1952 and 1974 that Alfred Appel, Jr. (1934–2009) collected during the 1960s and gave to the museum in 2009.
In her “Director’s Statement” in the catalogue,…
Full Review
July 28, 2011
Serge Lemoine and Guy Cogeval, eds.
Exh. cat.
Paris:
Musée d’Orsay and Réunion des musées nationaux, 2008.
175 pp.;
110 ills.
Cloth
€39.00
(9782711855605)
Exhibition schedule: Musée d'Orsay, Paris, October 8, 2008–February 1, 2009
Sequestered in the darkness of storage more often than not, a consequence of the friability of the light-sensitive, powdery medium, pastels are rarely exhibited on a regular basis by museums. It was an unusual and welcome happening, then, when the Musée d’Orsay staged in the fall of 2009 what must have been a visually sumptuous installation of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century pastels drawn from its unparalleled permanent collection. The project was initiated by Serge Lemoine, the outgoing former director of the Musée d’Orsay, and seen to completion under the direction of his successor, Guy Cogéval. It was accompanied by a…
Full Review
July 28, 2011
David A. Aston
Contributions to the Chronology of the Eastern Mediterranean, vol. 21. .
Vienna:
Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2009.
497 pp.;
48 b/w ills.
Cloth
$190.00
(9783700140030)
Burial Assemblages of Dynasty 21–25 is an impressive, comprehensive work dealing with the development of funerary customs in the Third Intermediate Period (ca. 1100–650 BCE), one of the most misunderstood time periods in ancient Egyptian history. The work precedes the founding of “TiMe, Transformation in the Mediterranean: 1200–500 BC,” an international study group, and is incorporated into the Austrian Academy of Sciences’s series Contributions to the Chronology of the Eastern Mediterranean.
The major focus of this book, a reworking of David A. Aston’s doctoral dissertation awarded in 1987 from the University of Birmingham, is the analysis of the…
Full Review
July 28, 2011
Susan Sidlauskas
Berkeley:
University of California Press, 2009.
368 pp.;
18 color ills.;
65 b/w ills.
Cloth
$49.95
(9780520257450)
Susan Sidlauskas’s fascinating, well-researched, and important new book, Cézanne’s Other: The Portraits of Hortense, analyzes nearly thirty paintings Paul Cézanne made of his wife, Hortense Fiquet Cézanne, between 1883 and 1894. In this ambitious undertaking, Sidlauskas advances new and provocative perspectives on Cézanne and his art. Crucial is Sidlauskas’s presentation of a Fiquet Cézanne distinct from the historical image of the uncooperative spouse (the counter-muse), a largely misogynist view that has dominated the Cézanne literature for more than a century. Sidlauskas draws on an impressive array of sources and methodologies, ranging from nineteenth-century philosophical and scientific texts through the…
Full Review
July 21, 2011
Karen Strassler
Objects/Histories: Critical Perspectives on Art, Material Culture, and Representation. Ed. Nicholas Thomas..
Durham, NC:
Duke University Press, 2010.
387 pp.;
32 color ills.;
95 b/w ills.
Paper
$24.95
(9780822346111)
Refracted Visions is a substantial and well-researched study of contemporary popular photography in Indonesia, a result of anthropologist Karen Strassler’s extensive fieldwork in Java since the mid-1990s, which covers a period when analog photography was still dominant. While the book provides adequate historical background into the consolidation of popular photography since the colonial era, its focus is on six genres, each given a separate chapter treatment: amateur photography (chapter 1), studio portraiture (chapter 2), identity photographs (chapter 3), family ritual photography (chapter 4), student photographs of demonstrations (chapter 5), and photographs of charismatic political leaders (chapter 6). Strassler draws from…
Full Review
July 21, 2011
Richard Hornsey
Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 2010.
328 pp.;
44 b/w ills.
Paper
$24.95
(9780816653157)
If the observation that modern conceptions of homosexuality were deeply interwoven with the forms and experiences of the modern city is now a commonplace, queer London has emerged as a privileged site of analysis. Cultural and social historians have mapped its contours in impressive detail, drawing on the extensive police documentation of sodomy arrests from the late nineteenth century onward, the numerous high-profile court cases inaugurated by the notorious trial of Oscar Wilde, and the popular press’s apparently unlimited appetite for sexual scandal. The latest contribution to this textured historiography is The Spiv and the Architect: Unruly Life in Postwar…
Full Review
July 21, 2011
John M. D. Pohl and Claire L. Lyons
Exh. cat.
Los Angeles:
J. Paul Getty Museum, 2010.
112 pp.;
38 color ills.;
9 b/w ills.
Cloth
$25.00
(9781606060070)
Exhibition schedule: J. Paul Getty Museum, Getty Villa, Malibu, March 24–July 5, 2010.
Khristaan D. Villela
Ed Mary Ellen Miller
Los Angeles:
Getty Research Institute, 2010.
344 pp.;
22 color ills.;
144 b/w ills.
Cloth
$49.00
(9781606060049)
A brainchild of former Getty Museum Director Michael Brand and scheduled to commemorate the bicentennial of Mexican independence from Spain, The Aztec Pantheon and the Art of Empire was the most ambitious exhibition undertaken by the Getty Villa since its reopening in 2006. A “museum and educational center dedicated to the study of the arts and cultures of ancient Greece, Rome, and Etruria” (according to its website), the Getty’s Roman-style villa proved a provocative and unexpectedly resonant site for the presentation of Aztec culture.
One of the goals of the Spanish conquest (1519–21) was to loot this rich…
Full Review
July 21, 2011
Clive F. Getty
Madison, NJ:
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2010.
125 b/w ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9780838642009)
Clive Getty's scholarship has long held a central place within the secondary literature on the French caricaturist and illustrator Grandville (Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard, 1803–1847). Alongside important studies in French by Annie Renonciat and Philippe Kaenel, Getty's work has served as a necessary corrective to the ahistorical, Surrealistic, and Freudian interpretations of Grandville's art that dominated study of the artist for much of the twentieth century. While the art historian and painter Laure Garcin together with the artist Max Ernst revived interest in Grandville, whose reputation was neglected for nearly a century after his death, they also perpetuated the myth…
Full Review
July 14, 2011
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