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Browse Recent Book Reviews
In A Delicate Matter: Art, Fragility, and Consumption in Eighteenth-Century France, materiality is the message. Oliver Wunsch explores the shifting, often competing meanings of physical fragility in eighteenth-century French art. Originally an aspect of courtly social aesthetics, delicacy (délicatesse) became an aspect of objecthood as well as personhood, a commodified material quality that was diversely cultivated, savored, criticized, and resisted. In an expanding, speculative market animated by artists seeking recognition and newly wealthy collectors seeking cultural legitimacy, “delicacy structured debates over morality, status, and power” (12). Wunsch links the creation and reception of materially unstable artworks with…
Full Review
August 19, 2024
The Virginia Museum of Fine Art’s (VMFA) Elegy is an exhibition by MacArthur Fellow Dawoud Bey and curated by the incomparable Valerie Cassel Oliver. Developed by Bey in Louisiana, Virginia, and Ohio between 2017 and 2023, Elegy presents three distinct and intertwined collections of large-scale black-and-white photographs alongside two immersive multi-channel color video installations. This cohesive triad highlights held narratives of enslavement and emancipation along a journey that follows rivers and trails up and across the American landscape. Bey’s photographs frame terrestrial marks of US history in black and white, accentuate the sadness and the triumphs pressed into…
Full Review
August 14, 2024
Claudine A. Chavannes-Mazel and Linda IJpelaar’s edited volume, The Green Middle Ages: The Depiction of Plants in the Western World, 600–1600 begins with a caveat: the title may center on the word “green,” but the text does not tackle ecology in the modern sense. Instead, this translation of their 2019 Dutch language volume De Groene Middeleeuwen: Duizend jaar gebruik van planten 600–1000 explores the impact of plants on European book traditions from late antiquity through early modernity. These interactions are manifold and diverse, ranging from the representation of plants in pharmacological texts to the use of plants themselves as art…
Full Review
August 13, 2024
From the endearing oddness of its cover, which presents an image of Thomas Jefferson’s recognizable head on the body of a strutting rooster, Alison M. Stagg’s Prints of a New Kind: Political Caricature in the United States, 1789-1828 draws the reader into an often-unfamiliar world of early American political caricature filled with human-animal hybrids, petty personal grievances, and dizzying literary and historical references. Discussing prints made and distributed in the United States during the early republic, Stagg uses exhaustive research into archival and published sources to uncover new details about the creation and dissemination of early American political prints. This…
Full Review
August 12, 2024
The title of Teotihuacan, The World Beyond the City, an important volume edited by Kenneth G. Hirth, David M. Carballo, and Barbara Arroyo, could well serve as an object lesson in the meaningful use of the humble comma. Since the advent of concerted archaeological and art historical research on Teotihuacan, Mexico, the earlier of the two largest urban centers of Mesoamerica, the culture’s inscrutability has been in proportion to its singular significance. An abbreviated list of things unknown about the city would include its primary language, its internal social and governance structures (evaluated here by Carballo, 57–96), and why…
Full Review
August 7, 2024
The Vitae patrum records the lives of the Desert Fathers and Mothers. They included early Christian ascetics, such as saints Elias, Onuphrius, and Mary of Egypt, who went off into the wilderness, where they underwent extreme acts of contemplation, deprivation, and penance to achieve a closer connection with God. The most well-known visualizations of these eremitic saints appear in large-scale paintings, such as the monumental fourteenth-century Thebaid fresco in the Camposanto, Pisa. Denva Gallant’s Illuminating the Vitae patrum: The Lives of the Desert Saints in Fourteenth-Century Italy focuses instead on the lesser-studied imagery in the Morgan Library’s Ms M.626, the…
Full Review
July 31, 2024
The Comitán Valley: Sculpture and Identity on the Maya Frontier expands the scope of Classic Maya art beyond the now-familiar canon based on sites from the Guatemalan Peten, Yucatan, and Belize. The Comitán Valley, located in the Mexican state of Chiapas, is on the western edge of the continuous distribution of Maya societies. Covering four distinct settlements, Caitlin Earley provides the first regional-scale examination of sculpture from the area, showing how the frontier location fostered diverse developments that explored different potentials within Classic Maya culture. Each chapter provides clear illustration of the known sculptures, their settings, and comparisons with thematically…
Full Review
July 24, 2024
Lisa E. Bloom’s Climate Change and the New Polar Aesthetics: Artists Reimagine the Arctic and Antarctic is a sequel. In 1993, Bloom published Gender on Ice: American Ideologies of Polar Expeditions, which examined the construction of heroic male subjectivity vis-à-vis people seeking to reach the North and South Poles during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A prescient work, Gender on Ice, located thematic overlaps involving gender, race, empire, nation, science, and environment that remain current topics in the academy three decades later, so why is there a need for the sequel? There are two ways to…
Full Review
July 22, 2024
Four, slim volumes covered in soft, matte black paper set inside the recess of a black, rectangular box, Louise Nevelson’s Sculpture: DRAG, COLOR, JOIN, FACE tangibly announces its subject. Julia Bryan-Wilson’s study focuses on the sculpture for which Nevelson is best known: monochromatic found-object wood assemblages, frequently consisting of modular (if not always movable), rectangular, “shadowbox” reliefs, which Nevelson built continuously from the early 1950s until her death in 1988. If this “signature” visual language brings to mind some of the central tenets of Euro-American modernism (for instance, the grid, abstraction, individualism), Bryan-Wilson argues that the colors…
Full Review
July 15, 2024
For the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Tree and Serpent: Early Buddhist Art in India exhibition of South Asian art, an array of one hundred forty breath-taking major works dated ca. 200 BCE to 400 CE made their way across the world, perhaps never to be seen again in the US during our lifetimes. The Tree and Serpent curator John Guy centered the exhibition on the art that arose from the first lived tradition of Buddhism in the world. The exhibition shifted our understanding of early South Asian art in two critical ways—first, away from Buddha images as bodily representations to…
Full Review
July 10, 2024
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