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Browse Recent Reviews
Hilliard T. Goldfarb, ed.
Exh. cat.
Paris:
Éditions Hazan, 2013.
240 pp.;
200 color ills.
Cloth
$65.00
(9780300197921)
Exhibition schedule: Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal, October 12, 2013–January 19, 2014; Portland Art Museum, Portland, OR, February 15–May 11, 2014 (under the title Venice: The Golden Age of Art and Music)
Splendore a Venezia: Art and Music from the Renaissance to Baroque in Venice at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts included 120 works of art, music manuscripts, and musical instruments as a means to explore the connections between music and art in the Serenissima between 1488 and the fall of the Venetian Republic in 1797. Curator Hilliard T. Goldfarb states the premise of the exhibition in the catalogue: “the remarkable interface of these forms of artistic expression that rose to such extraordinary and influential creative heights during the period . . . have not been previously explored in a single…
Full Review
December 17, 2014
Timothy Anglin Burgard, Steven A. Nash, and Emma Acker
Exh. cat.
New Haven:
Yale University Press in association with Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 2013.
256 pp.;
200 color ills.;
15 b/w ills.
Cloth
$60.00
(9780300190786)
Exhibition schedule: de Young Museum, San Francisco, June 22–September 29, 2013; Palm Springs Art Museum, Palm Springs, October 26, 2013–February16, 2014
Exhibition schedule: College of Marin Fine Arts Gallery, Kentfield, CA, September 30–November 14, 2013; Natalie and James Thompson Gallery, San Jose State University, San Jose, April 15–May 17, 2014; Katzen Arts Center, American University, Washington, DC, November 8–December 14, 2014; Sonoma Valley Museum of Art, Sonoma, June 6–August 23, 2015; Montana Museum of Art and Culture, University of Montana, Missoula, September 24–December 12, 2015
Born in Portland, Oregon, in 1922, Richard Diebenkorn grew up in San Francisco, and went on to attend Stanford University and the University of California, Berkeley. After serving in the Marines between 1943 and 1945, Diebenkorn returned to the Bay Area and enrolled for a semester on the GI Bill at the San Francisco Art Institute (then the California School of Fine Arts) where he would become an instructor from 1947 to 1950, while living in Sausalito. After a few years elsewhere, by 1953 Diebenkorn, his wife, Phyllis, and their children arrived in Berkeley. Perhaps because of this biography as…
Full Review
December 17, 2014
Debra Diamond, ed.
Exh. cat.
Washington, DC:
Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, 2014.
360 pp.;
250 ills.
Cloth
$55.00
(9781588344595)
Exhibition schedule: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Washington, DC, October 19, 2013–January 26, 2014; Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, San Francisco, February 22–May 25, 2014; Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, June 22–September 7, 2014
Yoga, and the variety of practices that can be subsumed under that heading, is identifiable in sculptures, paintings, photographs, and films representing virtually every region of the Indian subcontinent over the course of more than three millennia—from third-century depictions of Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain ascetics, to the transgressive rituals of medieval yoginis, to the recognizable asanas practiced today in yoga studios worldwide. Deities engaged in yogic practice and instruction populate the walls of temples in Bengal in the east, Rajasthan in the west, Uttar Pradesh in India’s north, and Tamil Nadu in the south. Revered (and feared) human practitioners…
Full Review
December 11, 2014
Marilyn Kushner, Kimberly Orcutt, and Casey Nelson Blake, eds.
Exh. cat.
London and New York:
D Giles Limited in association with New-York Historical Society, 2013.
512 pp.;
160 color ills.;
160 b/w ills.
Cloth
$79.95
(9781907804045)
Exhibition schedule: New-York Historical Society, October 11, 2013–February 23, 2014
For far too many scholars the 1913 International Exhibition of Modern Art, which has since come to be known as the Armory Show, was not simply a watershed event in the story of international modernism; it was rather a pioneering event in American modernism. The exhibition is generally regarded as the moment when contemporary American artists first emerged from under whatever rock they were hiding and made their presence known to a public at large, bolstered and legitimized by a large contingent of European modernism, including some of the most recent work being produced overseas at that time. During the…
Full Review
December 11, 2014
Pamela A. Patton
University Park:
Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012.
220 pp.;
23 color ills.;
59 b/w ills.
Cloth
$79.95
(9780271053837)
Pamela A. Patton’s Art of Estrangement: Redefining Jews in Reconquest Spain makes an important contribution to the already rich field of medieval art and Jewish-Christian relations. Scholars such as Bernhard Blumenkranz, Michael Camille, Ruth Mellinkoff, Heinz Schreckenberg, Sara Lipton, Debra Higgs Strickland, Mitchell Merback, Vivian Mann, Nina Rowe, Herbert Kessler, and David Nirenberg, among others, have examined the ways in which Christian art expresses perceptions of Jews and Judaism.[1] As Patton points out, these studies focus primarily on northern European art. Patton expands the scope of this current scholarship by demonstrating that Iberian Christian imagery incorporated, altered, or resisted northern…
Full Review
December 3, 2014
Stephanie Smith, ed.
Exh. cat.
Chicago:
Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, 2013.
380 pp.;
320 color ills.
Paper
$45.00
(9780935573527)
Exhibition schedule: Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, Chicago, February 16–June 10, 2012; Blaffer Art Museum, University of Houston, Houston, August 31, 2013–January 5, 2014; SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe, February 1–May 17, 2014; Gund Gallery, Kenyon College, Gambier, OH, July 25–November 30, 2014; Weisman Art Museum, University at Minnesota, Minneapolis, January 31–May 10, 2015
Over the last twenty-five years, meals constructed by artists as art have flourished through a range of itinerant arts initiatives in public and private spaces and become recent programmatic mainstays in galleries and museums around the world, giving the impression that these works are a contemporary trend. Yet, in the 1930s the Italian Futurists generated a body of work about food that predated these artist projects—opening a restaurant, La Taverna del Santopalato (Tavern of the Holy Palate), in Turin, Italy, for example, that was forty years ahead of Food, the restaurant founded in New York by Gordon Matta-Clark, Caroline Goodden…
Full Review
December 3, 2014
Exh. cat.
Houston:
Contemporary Art Museum Houston, 2013.
144 pp.;
50 color ills.;
40 b/w ills.
Cloth
$39.95
(9781933619385)
Exhibition schedule: Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Houston, November 17, 2012–February 16, 2013; Grey Art Gallery, New York University, New York, September 10–December 7, 2013; Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, November 14, 2013–March 9, 2014; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, July 24, 2014–January 4, 2015
Curated by Valerie Cassel Oliver, senior curator, Contemporary Art Museum Houston (CAMH), Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art was presented in New York over two venues: Grey Art Gallery and Studio Museum in Harlem. Timed to coincide with Performa 13 (the biennial performance art festival held in New York in November), this pioneering exhibition was activated by a number of performance commissions and bridged two legendary neighborhoods long associated with artists: Harlem and Greenwich Village.
The exhibition press release stated that it was the first “to survey over fifty years of performance art by visual artists of African…
Full Review
December 3, 2014
Glenn Willumson
Berkeley:
Ahmanson-Murphy Fine Arts, 2013.
254 pp.;
few b/w ills.
Cloth
$60.00
(9780520270947)
Glenn Willumson’s Iron Muse: Photographing the Transcontinental Railroad begins with a discussion of a photograph by Andrew Joseph Russell titled East and West Shaking Hands at Laying Last Rail (no. 227) (1869), also known as Meeting of the Rails, Promontory, Utah, 1869. The photograph features workers and executives from the Central Pacific Railroad and the Union Pacific Railroad celebrating the completion of the transcontinental line. Willumson starts by analyzing how Russell’s photograph is often reproduced as historical illustration, but its original context is rarely considered. To read the image as symbolic of technological superiority and the triumph of national…
Full Review
November 26, 2014
Eduardo Cadava and Gabriela Nouzeilles, eds.
Princeton:
Princeton University Art Museum, 2013.
240 pp.;
135 color ills.;
71 b/w ills.
Cloth
$45.00
(9780300174366)
Exhibition schedule: Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, September 7, 2013–January 19, 2014
There is a kind of fatigue in recent literature on photography. The ritual of declaring a ubiquitous abundance of photographic images, both historical and contemporary, is usually accompanied by a compulsion to address this situation and a requirement to analyze them. But how, in what framework, and to what ends?
Understanding photography as a journey, as a set of “itinerant languages,” is one way to respond to this challenge. The Itinerant Languages of Photography, edited by Eduardo Cadava and Gabriela Nouzeilles, offers itself as the product of a double voyage of conferences and workshops in different locations…
Full Review
November 26, 2014
Catherine Zuromskis
Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press, 2013.
264 pp.;
77 b/w ills.
Cloth
$34.95
(9780262019293)
Selfies, Instagram feeds, photo tagging: whatever value we may have once placed on the privacy of our photographs seems gone forever. The incorporation of digital cameras into cell phones has created this condition, launching us into a post-camera, post-print era where we press the button and a messaging service does the rest. The “rest” is to render instantly our private moments into public documents that can be neither reversed nor regulated. As many critics of new media have proclaimed, it is the end of photography as we once practiced it and the end of privacy as we once felt it…
Full Review
November 26, 2014
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