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

Reviews in caa.reviews are published continuously by CAA and Taylor & Francis, with the most recently published reviews listed below. Browse reviews based on geographic region, period or cultural sphere, or specialty (from 1998 to the present) using Review Categories in the sidebar or by entering terms in the search bar above.

Recently Published Reviews

Martin K. Foys, Karen Eileen Overbey, and Dan Terkla, eds.
Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press, 2009. 248 pp.; 34 color ills.; 11 b/w ills. Cloth $95.00 (9781843834700)
This compilation of essays comprises the most recent scholarly publication devoted to the eleventh-century embroidery housed in Bayeux and reveals new interpretations and innovative approaches. The essays address, often through a theoretical scope, issues pertaining to gender, authority, materiality, patronage, performativity, and the senses. Before continuing, however, a critical statement must be made concerning semantics and the ascribed title of this celebrated work of art. The editors note in the introduction that some of the contributors to the volume maintain the usage of the term “Bayeux Tapestry,” while other authors, namely Madeline Caviness and Karen Eileen Overbey, have opted to… Full Review
November 3, 2010
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Reed Benhamou
Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 2009. 308 pp. Paper $100.00 (9780729409728)
Few institutions have influenced the course of European art or the writing of art history as decisively as the French Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture. Its pulse animated the visual extravagance of Versailles, the popularity of public art exhibitions, the emergence of art criticism, and the codification of an approach to arts instruction that persists to this day. The Academy’s legacy extends even to the enduring assumption that a centralized system of arts administration distinguishes a functioning nation-state. It is no surprise, then, that the Academy should cast a strong shadow in so many histories of post-Renaissance European art… Full Review
October 27, 2010
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Sarah Sze
Edition of 40.. New York: LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies, Columbia University, 2008. $7500.00
Book artists of all times and types have taken literally the idea that we experience books as buildings. Gutenberg’s first Bible was laid out according to the architectural proportions of the golden rectangle; title pages of many early printed books featured etchings of highly wrought façades. These archways invited readers to step through a manifest “door” and into the imaginary spaces—even entire worlds—that books have always provided. More recently, both architecture and literature have been influenced by the philosophy of deconstruction, and contemporary book artists have been reconstructing the book to give new physical forms to old “volumes.” … Full Review
October 27, 2010
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Finbarr B. Flood
Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009. 424 pp.; 178 b/w ills. Cloth $45.00 (9780691125947)
This densely informative and inspiring book engages two scholarly discourses: namely, the visual histories of the regions broadly known as South Asia (India, Pakistan, eastern Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka) and the Islamic world (mainly referring to the eastern Mediterranean, Mesopotamia, Arabia, and Iran). By moving between these major bodies of knowledge, Finbarr B. Flood demonstrates in a more than usually compelling way that academic specialties are artificial constructs designed by and for the convenience of modern scholars; such specialties are often inadequate to the challenge of treating the fluidly mobile people and things that are, ultimately, the actual subjects/objects of… Full Review
October 20, 2010
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Charlotte Klonk
New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009. 244 pp.; 20 color ills.; 110 b/w ills. Cloth $75.00 (9780300151961)
In Spaces of Experience: Art Gallery Interiors from 1800–2000, Charlotte Klonk traces across three urban centers—London, Berlin, and New York—changing exhibition displays in gallery interiors in relation to shifting aesthetic ideals and their public, as well as larger historical and scientific dialogues. This well-illustrated study seeks to address the phenomenon of the modern gallery space, defined as the white cube, and how it differs from “powerful alternatives” (6) that existed historically. Chapters examine the formation of the National Gallery in London; the German museum reform movement around 1900; German exhibitions in the 1920s; their influence and cooptation in the… Full Review
October 20, 2010
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Sussan Babaie
Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2008. 320 pp.; 24 color ills.; 60 b/w ills. Cloth $150.00 (9780748633753)
In describing the arrival of Shah ‘Abbas to his capital city, Isfahan, in 1595, the court historian, Afushteh Natanzi, wrote about the marvelous architectural contraptions and other wonders that were designed by the “masters of the arts . . . artists of pure creativity, and devisers of sublime disposition” who were “assembled in the City of Kingship of Iraq [Isfahan] from all parts of Iraq and Fars” (R. D. McChesney, “Four Sources on Shah ‘Abbas's Building of Isfahan,” Muqarnas 5 (1988): 103–134, 107). They were displayed in the main plaza, Maydan-i Naqsh-i Jahan (“Image of the World”), which represented the… Full Review
October 20, 2010
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Anthony Gerbino and Stephen Johnston
Exh. cat. Oxford and New Haven: Museum of the History of Science, Yale University Press, and Yale Center for British Art, 2009. 192 pp.; 120 color ills. Cloth $65.00 (9780300150933)
Exhibition schedule: Museum of the History of Science, Oxford, June 16–September 6, 2009; Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, February 18–May 30, 2010
Compass and Rule: Architecture as Mathematical Practice in England, 1500–1750 tells a story of social class played out in math class. In the exhibition and catalogue, Anthony Gerbino and Stephen Johnston chart the rise of the professional architect in the early modern era by presenting the tools of the trade. Subtitle notwithstanding, Compass and Rule does not focus on architecture itself but rather on architectural drawing, describing the development of drafting techniques and instruments which led to a division between the design and construction phases of building. Although Gerbino and Johnston are not the first scholars to make this argument… Full Review
October 13, 2010
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Barbara Lane
Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols, 2010. 390 pp.; 32 color ills.; 302 b/w ills. Cloth $203.00 (9781905375196)
Barbara Lane’s Hans Memling: Master Painter in Fifteenth-Century Bruges explores the life and oeuvre of Hans Memling, one of the most important Flemish artists of the fifteenth century. In it, Lane argues that despite various exhibitions of the artist’s works, “many of the tantalizing problems surrounding Memling’s life and work remain unresolved” (10). She offers her book as a remedy to the lingering gaps in Memling scholarship and provides a comprehensive treatment of the artist by dividing her study into four main sections. Section 1, “Wanderjahre,” traces Memling’s early career from his apprentice days through his journeyman years… Full Review
October 13, 2010
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Alessandro Franceschini, Luciana Giacomelli, Mauro Hausbergher, and Armando Tomasi, eds.
3 vols. . Trent: Provincia autonoma di Trento, 2009. 265 pp.; 223 b/w ills. Cloth €100.00 (9788889706671)
Lydia Salviucci Insolera
Ed Richard Bösel Exh. cat. Rome: Artemide, 2010. 320 pp.; 178 ills. €50.00 (9788875751067)
Exhibition schedule: Istituto Nazionale per la grafica, Rome, March 5, 2010–May 2, 2010
An elegant facsimile edition from Trent and a sophisticated exhibition in Rome are two of the events that celebrate the third centenary of the death of Andrea Pozzo (born Trent, 1642), the renowned Jesuit architect and theoretician whose written work and artistic creations are the focus of this review’s attention. Another exhibition was held in Trent, at the Diocesan Museum, dedicated principally to painting, but is not reviewed here: Eugenio Bianchi et al., eds., Andrea Pozzo (1642–1709) (Trent: Tipografia Editrice e Temi, 2009). The centennial celebrations began in 2009 when Pozzo’s treatise, published in Rome in two versions or… Full Review
October 13, 2010
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Roald Nasgaard and Ray Ellenwood
Exh. cat. Vancouver and Unionville, ON: Douglas & McIntyre and Varley Art Gallery of Markham, 2010. 160 pp.; 60 color ills.; 20 b/w ills. Cloth $50.00 (9781553653561)
Exhibition schedule: Varley Art Gallery, Markham, ON, October 21, 2009–February 28, 2010; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, March 19–May 30, 2010
When visiting most major art collections in Canada—be it the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts or the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa—one is likely to encounter the distinctive abstractions created by artists affiliated with “Automatisme,” a Montreal-based modernist movement active during the early 1940s through the 1950s. The Automatistes consisted of a group of young painters who gathered around Paul-Émile Borduas, united by their sympathies for European abstraction and outrage over Montreal’s pervasive cultural and political conservatism. The core of this group included Marcel Barbeau, Marcelle Ferron, Roger Fauteux, Fernand Leduc, Jean-Paul Mousseau, Pierre Gauvreau, Louise Renaud, and Jean-Paul… Full Review
October 6, 2010
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Gemma Blackshaw and Leslie Topp, eds.
Exh. cat. Surrey, UK: Lund Humphries, 2009. 166 pp.; 76 color ills.; 44 b/w ills. Cloth $70.00 (9781848220201)
Exhibition schedule: Wellcome Collection, London, April 1–June 28, 2009
Madness and Modernity is an exceptionally well-conceived group effort that succeeds in avoiding the more speculative generalities often found in studies of “madness and art” in the twentieth century. By tracing the effects of specific contacts and commissions, the book offers a persuasive account of the intermingling of the city’s intellectuals and artists at such modern sites as “the coffeehouse, the cabaret, the sanatorium, and the secession building” (8). The result is a sound defense for including the sanatorium in any list of Vienna’s intriguing new modern attractions. Madness and Modernity originated as a research project begun by Lesley Topp… Full Review
October 6, 2010
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Massumeh Farhad, ed.
Exh. cat. Washington, DC: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, 2009. 348 pp.; 204 color ills.; 1 b/w ills. Paper $40.00 (9780934686044)
Exhibition schedule: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Washington, DC, October 24, 2009–January 24, 2010
The second half of the sixteenth century in Iran and Turkey brought with it great interest in the art of bibliomancy and the utilization of pictures for prognostication. This is made abundantly clear by the recent splendid exhibition at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington, DC, which centered around four illustrated manuscripts (three written in Persian, one in Ottoman Turkish) dedicated to the art of divination. These four magnificent books contain a large number of paintings that were the focal point of the exhibition and catalogue. Throughout the show they were referred to as: the Dispersed Falnama, which… Full Review
October 6, 2010
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Janet Wolff
New York: Columbia University Press, 2008. 200 pp.; 20 ills. Cloth $40.00 (9780231140966)
With this welcome volume, Janet Wolff, author of a number of studies bringing an expanded sociological perspective to the study of the visual arts, delivers a salutary reminder of a fact often sensed but rarely articulated: the uncertain, the indirect, and the oblique are especially at home in our contemporary context of artistic creation and interpretation, and we would do well to investigate them for what they are in and of themselves, rather than seeing them merely as obstacles to be gotten beyond in pursuit of something more perceptually stable and, we too easily think, epistemologically worthy. Wolff… Full Review
September 29, 2010
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Richard Cándida Smith
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009. 256 pp.; 35 b/w ills. Cloth $39.95 (9780812241884)
Beginning in the late 1980s and continuing well into the 1990s, a number of academics, critics, and curators turned to the question of California modernism asking, in short, if there was such a thing and, if so, to what did it owe its unique place in the annals of American art. Anne Bartlett Ayres, Bram Dijkstra, Susan Ehrlich, Paul Karlstrom, Susan Landauer, Peter Selz, and Richard Cándida Smith, among others, suggested, in a generous collection of books, essays, and exhibitions that not only did California modern art reveal a distinctive form and content but that it was far closer to… Full Review
September 29, 2010
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Marjorie Devon, Bill Lagattuta, and Rodney Hamon
New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2009. 320 pp.; 224 color ills.; 23 b/w ills. Cloth $85.00 (9780810972421)
Tamarind Techniques for Fine Art Lithography significantly updated the chemistry, technology, and aesthetics that The Tamarind Book of Lithography (1971) offered. I am fortunate to have had the chance to introduce both books.To me, then and now, Tamarind represents an “informed energy,” not a tradition built on rote and recipes. The core problem is still the same: how to differentiate what is merely novel from an aesthetic advance of long-term importance. (From the foreword.) —June Wayne Tamarind Techniques for Fine Art Lithography continues the legacy of “informed energy” that June Wayne (founder and director of the Tamarind Institute)… Full Review
September 23, 2010
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