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

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The “Pagan Fables” in Dutch Painting of the Golden Age: Narrative Subject Matter from Classical Mythology in the Northern Netherlands, ca. 1590–1670 is not the first publication of Eric Jan Sluijter’s groundbreaking dissertation on the representation of Ovid’s fables in Dutch painting. Many cherish their copy of the privately produced 1986 edition, with its stamp-size images and unglued pages. Even then Ivan Gaskell expressed the wish that this low-cost issue would soon be followed by a commercial edition, preferably in English. With the present volume this desideratum has been partially fulfilled. Its large format accommodates the original text and leaves… Full Review
December 11, 2002
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Francesco Caglioti
Florence: Leo S. Olschki Editore, 2000. 530 pp.; 357 b/w ills. Cloth (8822249410)
Francesco Caglioti has written a masterful pair of volumes that transform our knowledge about Donatello’s bronze sculptures, the David and the Judith and Holofernes, and consequently our understanding of quattrocento (and cinquecento) Florentine sculpture. The author supports his arguments with an impressive array of documentary discoveries, evidence culled from unpublished contemporary sources, and careful rereading of well-known writers like Giorgio Vasari. Caglioti is equally skilled in stylistic analysis and shows a prodigious command of Renaissance works of art. Despite the focus indicated by the book’s title, its range is in fact much broader, including a… Full Review
December 11, 2002
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Andrew Morrall
Burlington: Ashgate, 2002. 308 pp.; 10 color ills.; 147 b/w ills. Cloth $89.95 (1840146087)
Jörg Breu the Elder (ca. late 1470s–1537) was a leading artist working in Augsburg, Germany, which along with Albrecht Dürer’s Nuremberg became one of the primary commercial centers in the Holy Roman Empire. Breu’s career (and with it Augsburg) certainly has received new life in the past several years, with Andrew Morrall’s recent book complementing Pia Cuneo’s monograph, Art and Politics in Early Modern Germany: Jörg Breu the Elder and the Fashioning of Political Identity, ca. 1475–1536 (Leiden: Brill, 1998). For both writers, Breu’s work is rich in meaning, interacting creatively with the particular circumstances of Augsburg, while also raising… Full Review
December 9, 2002
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David Clarke
Duke University Press, 2002. 224 pp.; 35 color ills.; 100 b/w ills. Paper $27.95 (0822329204)
Despite the proliferation of critical discussion accompanying the body of work known as contemporary Chinese art, there has been little, if any, attention accorded to art produced in Hong Kong. In David Clarke’s new survey, however, he attempts to remedy this situation by introducing a wide array of artists in Hong Kong who operate under what he asserts as “hybridity.” A professor of art history at Hong Kong University and an active scholar on Hong Kong art, Clarke has followed up on his previous work, Art and Place: Essays on Art from a Hong Kong Perspective (Hong Kong: Hong Kong… Full Review
December 6, 2002
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Thomas Y. Levin, Ursula Frohne, and Peter Weibel, eds.
MIT Press, 2002. 655 pp.; 350 color ills.; 600 b/w ills. Cloth $39.95
ZKM Center for Art and Media, Karlsruhe, Germany, October 12, 2001–February 24, 2002.
Ever since Michel Foucault reintroduced Jeremy Bentham's eighteenth-century panopticon into contemporary philosophical discussion in 1975, the project has served as the prototypical example of surveillance and social control in the modern world. The panopticon is both an architectural model--a circular prison engineered to create the semblance of constant prisoner surveillance--and an example of rationalist philosophy--Bentham rejoiced in the belief that prisoners under the potentially omnipotent surveillance of prison guards would learn to self-censor their behavior, or, in more Foucauldian terms, to internalize the disciplinary gaze. As suggested by its title, CTRL [SPACE]: Rhetorics of Surveillance from Bentham to Big Brother… Full Review
November 22, 2002
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David Lomas
Yale University Press, 2000. 280 pp.; 40 color ills.; 85 b/w ills. Cloth $55.00 (0300088000)
David Lomas's meditative study is a résumé of the role of psychoanalytic theory in Surrealism in several ways: as the writing of Sigmund Freud and others was consciously adapted by the Surrealists for their various intellectual ends; as psychoanalytic theory was used to produce the iconographic art history of Surrealism; and as contemporary psychoanalytically-inflected theory (that of Julia Kristeva, Jacques Lacan, Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, Hal Foster, Rosalind Krauss, and Judith Butler) elucidates, and implicitly retroactively legitimates, the projects of Surrealism. Lomas has adopted a focused format: each chapter addresses one artist's work as a way into one psychoanalytic term… Full Review
November 20, 2002
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Gennifer Weisenfeld
Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002. 368 pp.; 16 color ills.; 131 b/w ills. Cloth $55.00 (0520223381)
In Farewell to an Idea: Episodes from a History of Modernism (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999), T. J. Clark imagines the bewilderment of a future archaeologist trying to reconstruct the history of modern art from four fragments: Adolph Menzel’s Moltke’s Binoculars (1871); John Heartfield’s A New Man, Master of a New World (1934); Pablo Picasso’s Italian Woman (1919); and Kasimir Malevich’s Complex Presentiment (Half-Figure in Yellow Shirt) (1928–32). This game sets up Clark’s analysis of “modernism’s changes of face: its inward-turning and outward-reaching; its purism and opportunism; its centripetal and centrifugal force” (Clark 407). One way… Full Review
November 19, 2002
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Stephen Addiss
Trans Jonathan Chaves Columbia University Press, 2000. 174 pp.; some b/w ills. Cloth $27.50 (023111656X)
Fukuda (Haritsu) Kodōjin (1865–1944) was part of the long tradition of Japanese literati poet-painters. While the Chinese literati ideal as it was understood by Japanese painters and poets of the nineteenth century was not particularly concerned with popularity or communicating to the masses, by Kodōjin’s time it must have been clear that the tradition had become an artifact of an earlier era. Was he a last great figure expressing himself in the centuries-old manner of the Chinese literatus, or was he a stubborn Luddite resisting the inevitable changes that were guiding Japan into the modern age? Was his art a… Full Review
November 15, 2002
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Sybil Gordon Kantor
MIT Press, 2001. 496 pp.; 0 color ills.; 83 b/w ills. Cloth $39.95 (0262112582)
Sybil Gordon Kantor’s book is an important contribution to the historiography of twentieth-century American art: It is intellectual and biographical history at its most rigorous. Kantor has scoured archives and primary sources to tell a story of the emergence of modernism in the U.S. through one man who was nevertheless the product of other men and women who had influenced him through their ideas, collections, and personal contacts. As today’s critics and historians bid farewell to modernism as an idea, Kantor’s book reminds us that even though ideas might be defeated or abandoned in the seminar room or at the… Full Review
November 14, 2002
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John Higgitt
University of Toronto Press, 2000. 362 pp.; 11 color ills.; 143 b/w ills. Cloth $80.00 (0802047599)
The Murthly Hours is a little-known and, until recently, little-studied manuscript of the late thirteenth century. Probably produced in Paris, it had found its way to Scotland by the early fourteenth century. The manuscript appears in a number of nineteenth-century inventories of Scottish collections, but its whereabouts were unknown to modern scholars until its rediscovery by John Higgitt in 1980. It was acquired by the National Library of Scotland in 1986 (MS 21000). Higgitt’s recent study of the Murthly Hours is, first of all, an extended catalogue record of the manuscript. The author describes every aspect of… Full Review
November 11, 2002
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