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

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Hermione de Almeida and George H. Gilpin
Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2006. 352 pp.; 60 color ills.; 180 b/w ills. Cloth $150.00 (075463681X)
Indian Renaissance: British Romantic Art and the Prospect of India offers a welcome examination of the work of the many British artists active in India during the late eighteenth and into the nineteenth century—including Johann Zoffany, William Hodges, Thomas and William Daniell, Tilly Kettle, James Baillie Fraser, Arthur William Devis, and Robert Home—as well as a double-barreled thesis. The art that these men produced on the subcontinent stimulated the Romantic Movement in England, the authors believe, and, in turn, was transformed into the “cultural imperatives” of the Victorian era in Great Britain, these assertions thereby necessitating a look at artists… Full Review
April 19, 2007
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Amy Reigle Newland, ed.
Boston: Hotei Publishing, 2005. 600 pp.; 300 color ills. Cloth $304.00 (9074822657)
Hotei Publishing is a commercial press established in Leiden in the mid-1990s as a specialized publisher of finely designed and beautifully illustrated English language books on Japanese ukiyo-e prints. In recent years it has expanded to publish books on various Japanese arts, mainly of the Edo (1615–1868), Meiji (1868–1912), and Taishō (1912–26) periods. Catering at first primarily to the large numbers of ukiyo-e print collectors in the West, its ukiyo-e publications are nevertheless distinguished by the rigorous scholarship of its authors, both collectors and academics. Consequently, its publications have immensely enriched scholarly understanding of the ukiyo-e tradition. Building on… Full Review
April 19, 2007
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Peter C. Sutton
Exh. cat. Yale University Press, 2006. 256 pp.; 110 color ills.; 70 b/w ills. $65.00 (0300119704)
Exhibition schedule: Bruce Museum, Greenwich, CT, December 16, 2006–January 10, 2007; Rijkmuseum, Amsterdam, February 1–April 30, 2007
Of the diverse artistic specialties that developed in the Dutch Republic during the seventeenth century, architectural painting was the last, fully emerging only during the 1650s. Interior and exterior views of major local buildings—real or imagined—along with depictions of the larger built environment of the rapidly growing Dutch cities allowed artists to celebrate national power and prosperity while examining aspects of visual experience also explored in many landscapes and genre paintings of the period: space and the interaction of solids and voids as revealed within varying conditions of natural light. Particular artistic problems are posed, however, by the need to… Full Review
April 19, 2007
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Exhibition schedule: Busch-Reisinger Museum, Cambridge, MA, September 9–December 10, 2006
Of the myriad exhibitions mounted worldwide to mark the four-hundredth anniversary of Rembrandt’s birth, Rembrandt and the Aesthetics of Technique at Harvard University’s Busch-Reisinger Museum stands out for its serious consideration of the very basis for such celebrations: the category of genius. Ivan Gaskell, Margaret S. Winthrop Curator in the Department of Painting, Sculpture, and Decorative Arts; William Robinson, Maida and George Abrams Curator of Drawings at the Fogg Art Museum; and their assistants deserve praise for resisting the temptation merely to trot out the museum’s Rembrandt holdings, or to organize yet another exhibition fixated on discriminating the hand of… Full Review
April 18, 2007
Camille Morineau, ed.
Exh. cat. Paris: Editions du Centre Pompidou, 2006. 320 pp.; 260 color ills.; 130 b/w ills. Cloth (2844263046)
Exhibition schedule: Centre Pompidou, Paris, October 5, 2006–February 5, 2007; Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien, Vienna, March 9–June 3, 2007
If large-scale exhibitions are a measure of an artist’s lasting success, then Yves Klein has admittedly fared better than some of his more neglected French peers. This is the third major exhibition of Klein’s work in a Paris museum since his death in 1962, and the second exhibition the Pompidou Center has devoted to the artist. Perhaps best known for his signature International Klein Blue (IKB) two-and-three dimensional works and his Anthropométries (1960–61), paintings resulting from his use of the nude female model as a “human paintbrush,” Klein still remains a contested figure despite the recognition he has received in… Full Review
April 18, 2007
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Holly Flora
Exh. cat. New York: The Frick Collection, 2006. 52 pp.; 42 color ills.; 1 b/w ills. $15.95 (001912114339)
Exhibition schedule: Frick Collection, New York, October 3–December 31, 2006
Over the last few years, our knowledge of Tuscan painting in the late duecento has expanded considerably. In Siena, the recent unveiling of frescoes in the crypt of the cathedral has challenged our assumptions about late medieval Italian art. Previously unknown panel paintings have come to light as well, among them a dazzling small panel of the Enthroned Virgin and Child, recently acquired from a private collection by the National Gallery in London, and attributed to Cimabue by the National Gallery’s curator of early Italian art, Dillian Gordon. Gordon went on to associate the new acquisition with the closely related… Full Review
April 17, 2007
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Francesca Piqué and Dusan C. Stulik, eds.
Los Angeles: Getty Conservation Institute, 2005. 288 pp.; 87 color ills.; 82 b/w ills. Paper $37.50 (0892367822)
Conservation of the Last Judgment Mosaic, St. Vitus Cathedral, Prague consists of a selection of papers presented at a symposium organized by the Getty Conservation Institute and the Office of the President of the Czech Republic. The theme centered on the completion of a twelve-year collaborative project to restore and preserve the Last Judgment mosaic in Prague’s St. Vitus Cathedral. The volume is divided into three sections: The first section contains seven chapters describing the art-historical context of the mosaic. In chapter 1, Marie Kostílková analyzes the documentation available on the making and repair of the mosaic between… Full Review
April 13, 2007
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Susan M. Bielstein
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006. 188 pp.; 35 b/w ills. Paper $15.00 (0226046389)
In today’s litigious ownership society, there are more visual arts permissions hurdles than ever before for both publishing and artistic expression. Publishers or individual authors are confronted with astronomical fees for copyright permissions and use fees for photo reproductions provided by museums or image providers. There are also enormous costs in time and in administering the photo research process. Living artists who draw on popular culture may face lawsuits from corporations or from other artists. Artists who strive to have their works published and documented may be excluded from publications because their rights managers have requested huge sums from a… Full Review
April 13, 2007
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William B. Jordan
Exh. cat. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005. 312 pp.; 75 color ills.; 170 b/w ills. Cloth $70.00 (0300113188)
Exhibition schedule: Palacio Real, Madrid, October 24, 2005–January 28, 2006; Meadows Museum, Dallas, March 2–May 28, 2006
The figure of Diego Velázquez has dominated discourse on painting at Philip IV’s court since at least the late seventeenth century. Jusepe Martínez (ca. 1675), Antonio Palomino (1724), and other writers emphasized and reinforced Velázquez’s preeminence in the decades following his death. Yet in the 1620s, when Velázquez was a recent arrival in Madrid, fellow artists and connoisseurs often compared his works unfavorably with those of other painters. Scholars have recently shown that the rivalries surrounding Velázquez shed broader light on artistic theory and practice in Madrid. William Jordan’s Juan van der Hamen y León and the Court of Madrid… Full Review
April 13, 2007
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Wendy Jean Katz
Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2002. 280 pp.; 50 b/w ills. Cloth $47.95 (0814209068)
Published in 1832, Fanny Trollope's Domestic Manners of the Americans was a sensation in England and a scandal in the United States. Basing her remarks on observations she made during the two years she spent in Cincinnati, Trollope claimed that "in America that polish which removes the coarser and rougher parts of our nature is unknown and undreamed of." The greatest difference between England and America, according to Trollope, was "the want of refinement." By all appearances, Cincinnati's aspiring middle class took Trollope's criticism to heart. Wendy Jean Katz argues that during the antebellum period Cincinnati artists participated "in… Full Review
April 13, 2007
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