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Browse Recent Book Reviews
Stephen C. Pinson earned his PhD degree from Harvard University in 2002 with a dissertation on Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre that forms the nucleus of this book, nourished by over fifteen years of research and elaboration in several articles. Speculating Daguerre has been eagerly awaited; the last book-length study of Daguerre’s art, in any language, was Helmut and Alison Gernsheim’s L. J. M. Daguerre: The History of the Diorama and the Daguerreotype, first published in 1956 and revised in 1968 (New York: Dover). As Pinson notes, the Gernsheims’ book was primarily biographical and documentary. Like several smaller publications, it relied heavily…
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December 20, 2012
Greg M. Thomas’s comprehensive Impressionist Children: Childhood, Family, and Modern Identity in French Art intelligently expands upon ground recently covered by others in scholarly literature: images of French nineteenth-century childhood. The finest parts of the book are his discussions of works by Berthe Morisot and Mary Cassatt, about which he unearths new factual detail, and provides persuasive original readings of paintings both familiar and not. Drawing upon a wide socio-historical framework, Thomas analyzes images from the world of commodities associated with childhood, especially toys. His overarching thesis, that Impressionist images of childhood reveal the fundamental dilemma of the modern subject—“trying…
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December 20, 2012
Altered and Adorned: Using Renaissance Prints in Daily Life was produced in conjunction with the exhibition of the same title at the Art Institute of Chicago, which drew from the resources of that museum and other Chicago-area collections. The catalogue study is an important addition to the growing volume of literature that considers prints as functional, three-dimensional objects, rather than simply as flat images. The first footnote, in fact, offers a good overview of this specialized literature. The study’s primary author, Suzanne Karr Schmidt, completed her doctoral dissertation on similar material in 2006 (Yale University), Art—A User's Guide: Interactive and…
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December 19, 2012
The phrase “the medicine of photography” may very well draw a blank in the minds of even the most experienced photographic historians. Photography’s development through the latter half of the nineteenth century is not usually told in terms of medicine, but in terms of art, with the camera styled as a “solar pencil” able to match painting’s aesthetic capabilities. Yet in this highly original book, Tanya Sheehan showcases a vast, alternative narrative in which cameras were seen as scalpels, developing chemicals as therapeutic drugs (3), and photographers as “doctors of photography” (30) possessing the ability to inspect, diagnose, and rehabilitate…
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December 19, 2012
Peter Cornelius Claussen’s Die Kirchen der Stadt Rom im Mittelalter 1050–1300 is a supplement to the author’s path-breaking book on Roman marble workers, Magistri doctissimi romani (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1987). Magistri is the first volume of the ambitiously conceived Corpus Cosmatorum, the second volume of which is an alphabetically organized compendium of the “high medieval” churches in which the marble workers were active. The second volume has appeared to date in three parts: part 1, with entries on twenty-nine churches from S. Adriano to S. Francesca Romana (Stuttgart: Franz Streiner Verlag, 2002); part 3 (S. Giacomo alla Lungara to…
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December 14, 2012
For nearly six hundred years castles lay at the heart of England’s social and political life. Whether located in cities or the country, along land frontiers or sea-bound shores, they served as strongholds, centers of government, residences, markers of social status, and political showpieces. Introduced at the Norman Conquest in 1066 (with more than five hundred constructed in the first decade after the Battle of Hastings), castles outlasted the Middle Ages, the Reformation, the Renaissance, and succumbed only in the Civil War of the 1640s. Such longevity might be expected to ensure exhaustive coverage in the literature, but oddly this…
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December 14, 2012
The discovery of the Book of Hours of Duchess Catherine of Cleves in the 1960s caused many art historians to change their views on fifteenth-century northern Netherlandish book illumination in a positive way. Instead of being regarded as a rather provincial school, Dutch book illumination was appreciated much more after the Cleves Hours had the chance to reveal her beauty to the world. The Book of Hours, made around 1440, has weathered the centuries in remarkable condition—missing only a few leaves—but was divided into two parts in the middle of the nineteenth century. Both parts miraculously found their way…
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December 12, 2012
Jenifer Neils’s lavishly illustrated new book aims to provide non-specialist readers with an introduction to the women of the ancient world as they are revealed through images and other artifacts held in the British Museum. The “ancient world” here is broadly defined, stretching from the Neolithic period to the late Roman empire and from Italy and northern Africa to modern Iran, although the discussion generally concentrates on the periods and regions for which there exists the best evidence. Neils does not pretend to cover her topic comprehensively; the evidence is too incomplete, and as she notes in the introduction, what…
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December 5, 2012
In this pioneering study, Alison McQueen examines an important and yet largely overlooked phenomenon: the engagement with the visual arts of Empress Eugénie, wife of Napoleon III. McQueen draws upon her extensive work in the archives throughout Europe and years of sustained consideration of this subject to argue that Eugénie’s patronage and collecting activities were distinctly political in nature, critical to the fashioning of her private and public personae, and central to the art world. A declared aim of this book is to challenge “the coherence of studies on art in nineteenth-century France” (5) by showing how Empress Eugénie’s involvement…
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December 5, 2012
In the ancient world, gods were seen, the experience of their presence conceptualized in visual terms. In a departure from more traditional, philological treatments of religious phenomena, Verity Platt’s Facing the Gods: Epiphany and Representation in Graeco-Roman Art, Literature and Religion highlights the visuality of epiphany. Engaging also with related cognitive and hermeneutic issues, she brings a new perspective to the recent wave of scholarly attention to the subject of epiphany in Graeco-Roman culture. In each of the book’s eight chapters, Platt places particular emphasis on viewing practices and their representation in images and texts. She explores how epiphany can…
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December 5, 2012
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