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Browse Recent Reviews
Lois H. Silverman
New York:
Routledge, 2010.
208 pp.;
23 b/w ills.
Paper
$44.95
(9780415775212)
The Social Work of Museums offers exactly what the title implies: a comprehensive survey of museums as a social work context. Lois Silverman, who is trained as both a social worker and museum scholar, undertook this work because, “it is long past time for museums to survey, organize, and integrate systematically from a theoretically grounded social work perspective the growing body of museum knowledge and practice currently scattered around the globe” (39). The result is no dry encyclopedia but a sympathetic call to action. Silverman artfully weaves together a number of seemingly disparate threads: international case studies of practice, including…
Full Review
January 28, 2011
Allison Louise Cort and Paul Jett, eds.
Exh. cat.
Washington, DC:
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, 2010.
160 pp.
Paper
$40.00
(9780295990422)
Exhibition schedule: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, May 15, 2010–January 23, 2011; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, February 22–August 14, 2011
In 2005 the National Museum of Cambodia opened its metal conservation laboratory after having received training and support from experts at the Freer and Sackler galleries of the Smithsonian Institution and the Getty Conservation Institute. That laboratory was the first of its kind to be built in Cambodia after the devastation of the preceding decades and has trained a generation of specialists in the treatment and preservation of ancient metalwork. For the past five years the conservation laboratory has been fulfilling its mission of maintaining the cultural legacy of the Cambodian people, and this exhibition originated as a way to…
Full Review
January 20, 2011
Carrie Lambert-Beatty
Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press, 2008.
384 pp.;
83 b/w ills.
Cloth
$34.95
(9780262123013)
Few readers, I imagine, were surprised to discover that Yvonne Rainer’s stunning 2006 memoir, Feelings Are Facts: A Life (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press)—a sprawling book intertwining the artist’s early personal and artistic developments, rendering them inseparable—would conclude with an epilogue. Such a coda typically affords authors an opportunity to wrap up their ideas and cast a retrospective gaze over the whole of a book once its myriad elements have settled into shape. Rainer’s conclusion would seem only to follow protocol, in a sense. And yet this particular postscript, like so much of her production, effectively displaces expectations around such conventions…
Full Review
January 19, 2011
Charlotte Cotton and Alex Klein, eds.
New York:
Aperture Foundation, 2010.
510 pp.
Paper
$24.95
(9781597111423)
From the time of its invention, photography has caused trouble for art. Now, in a belated stroke of reciprocity, art is causing trouble for photography. Early signs included photography’s absorption into museum collections and its embrace by the art market. Then came art historians, fueled by the writings of Walter Benjamin and Roland Barthes, arguing that photography had eclipsed painting and sculpture to become art’s medium ne plus ultra. One of the most recent and influential contributions to this line of argument, Michael Fried’s Why Photography Matters as Art as Never Before (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008) (click…
Full Review
January 19, 2011
Lisa Melandri, ed.
Exh. cat.
Santa Monica:
Santa Monica Museum of Art, 2010.
64 pp.;
35 color ills.;
32 b/w ills.
Paper
$30.00
(9780974510873)
Exhibition schedule: Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa Monica, California, September 11–December 18, 2010
Widely celebrated in the United States during the 1950s, Italian artist Alberto Burri (1915–1995) was subsequently forgotten. Forgotten by U.S. institutions, at least, as the nation solidified its claim as the cultural center in the era of Pop. Not so in Italy, where his place in the twentieth century as a key, postwar artist is now firmly established. In Rome, there is no shortage of catalogues to consult and exhibitions to visit. But in Los Angeles (or in English), many have never heard of him. Combustione: Alberto Burri and America, at the Santa Monica Museum of Art, sought to…
Full Review
January 19, 2011
Alessia Trivellone
Collection d'études médiévales de Nice, vol. 10. .
Turnhout:
Brepols, 2010.
493 pp.;
36 color ills.;
166 b/w ills.
Paper
€50.00
(9782503528380)
To begin with, I confess that I have some difficulties accommodating myself to wide art-historical surveys such as Alessia Trivellone’s L’Hérétique imaginé, which covers a span of six centuries with the aim of tracing a coherent development of a sole subject, the heretic. I am not stating that my skepticism will diminish if the survey is chronologically narrower or comprehending more subjects; the point is, rather, that I find serious problems with every sort of “coherent development.”
The division of the volume into four sections corresponds more or less with what Trivellone maintains to be a coherent…
Full Review
January 13, 2011
Patrizia Cavazzini
University Park:
Pennsylvania State University Press, 2009.
256 pp.;
24 color ills.;
47 b/w ills.
Cloth
$80.00
(9780271032153)
Richard Spear and Philip Sohm, eds.
New Haven:
Yale University Press, 2010.
30 color ills.;
120 b/w ills.
Cloth
$85.00
(9780300154566)
These two books, which describe how painters made a living in seventeenth-century Rome, Florence, Bologna, Venice, and Naples, synthesize the work of many dedicated scholars, including some by the authors themselves. As Patrizia Cavazzini notes in her introduction, most research on Italian painting has favored major painters and their patrons, neglecting the large supporting cast who also made a living as painters and decorators in Rome and elsewhere. Some worked assisting painters charged with covering extensive wall surfaces with religious or mythological scenes, providing illusionistic architectural frameworks [quadratura], or adding generic landscape vistas or patches of al antica…
Full Review
January 13, 2011
Patricia G. Berman
New York:
Vendome Press, 2007.
272 pp.;
288 color ills.
Cloth
$75.00
(9780865651814)
Patricia G. Berman’s In Another Light: Danish Painting in the Nineteenth Century is a beautiful book about an area of nineteenth-century art that is little known outside of Denmark. Although Robert Rosenblum and Kirk Varnedoe laid the groundwork for understanding the work in a larger European context, the scholarship and publications in English have been modest. Berman rectifies this situation with her well-illustrated and comprehensive book. In Another Light offers an overview of a range of discourses in Danish art, which Berman analyzes as she locates the works in their broader socio-cultural context. When applicable, Berman brings in examples of…
Full Review
January 11, 2011
The Oxford English Dictionary defines the verb “emerge” as: “to come forth into view . . . from an enclosed space.” This definition has implications for the study of landscapes, especially those of the productive English countryside. Tidy patchwork fields and hedgerows have come to be regarded as quintessentially—and innately—English. However, what is not necessarily part of this perception (even though it has long been studied by historians, geographers, and archaeologists) is how such a renowned topography quite literally emerged from systematic enclosures over the past few hundred years. In other words, the English landscape as it is perceived today…
Full Review
January 11, 2011
Peter Murray, ed.
Exh. cat.
Cork and Dublin:
Crawford Art Gallery in association with Gandon Editions, 2008.
256 pp.;
233 color ills.;
36 b/w ills.
Cloth
$82.50
(9780948037665)
Exhibition schedule: Crawford Art Gallery, Cork, Ireland, October 24, 2008–February 14, 2009
The art of Daniel Maclise (1806–1870) engaged the most crucial historical, religious, political, and literary issues about national identity in Britain with a rigor and breadth scarcely rivaled in the history of nineteenth-century British art. His work covered diverse historical subjects, including intimate easel paintings devoted to courtly love and large governmental murals celebrating chivalry and the Battle of Waterloo. The attempt by contemporary art historians to revise the canon of nineteenth-century art has encouraged scholars to study Maclise, but such serious attention to his work is new. Until recently, the lack of scholarly engagement with Maclise has partially resulted…
Full Review
January 11, 2011
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