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

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Keith L. Eggener, ed.
New York and London: Routledge, 2004. 464 pp.; 98 b/w ills. Paper $45.00 (0415306957)
In judging a photograph, one distinguishes between the quality of the image and that of the object shown, and so it is with a literary anthology. American Architectural History, edited by Keith Eggener, is a compilation of essays published between 1981 and 2002 that presents a vivid and faithful image of the discipline today. What it reveals about that discipline is, of course, a different question altogether. American Architectural History was designed to free the instructor from the burdensome task of making a reading packet to supplement a survey text. One can do this with a set of… Full Review
February 6, 2008
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Laura Mulvey
London: Reaktion Books, 2006. 216 pp.; 37 b/w ills. Paper $24.95 (9781861892638)
Near the end of Roland Barthes’s Camera Lucida, he describes the effect of seeing a scene from Fellini’s film Casanova, in which the protagonist dances with an automaton. Barthes is overwhelmed by the beautiful simulacrum of a young woman, discussing how the combination of “desperate” inertness and apparent affection touched him in the same way as the “punctum” in photography. Mulvey recalls this scene in her book Death 24x a Second, as she engages in a dialogue with Barthes, for whom cinema was normally free from the elegiac effects that he described in photography. The project of… Full Review
February 6, 2008
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Stephen F. Teiser
Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2007. 336 pp.; 14 color ills.; 74 b/w ills. Cloth $60.00 (9780295986494)
At the outset of Reinventing the Wheel, Stephen Teiser recounts an episode from Rudyard Kipling’s Kim that sets into motion the primary theme of his study. In this episode, the British curator of the Lahore Museum and a Tibetan lama exchange views in which the former presents Buddhism as a sweeping phenomenon framed by the panorama of book knowledge, while the latter intimates that the true fruits of the religion are found more locally in one’s own awareness and experience. Likewise, the modern scholar must negotiate similar tensions in the study of Buddhist art. While the undeniable similarities of… Full Review
January 31, 2008
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Ashley Callahan, ed.
Athens: Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia, 2005. 176 pp.; 29 color ills.; 83 b/w ills. Paper $20.00 (0915977567)
Georgia Inside and Out: Architecture, Landscape, and Decorative Arts follows the publication in 2003 of the First Henry D. Green Symposium—The Savannah River Valley to 1865: Fine Arts, Architecture, and Decorative Arts, also edited by Ashley Callahan. The symposium series is named in honor of Henry D. Green (1909–2003), who beginning in the 1930s established himself as a pioneer in the appreciation and study of Southern heritage, particularly Southern decorative arts. Under Callahan’s direction, the Georgia Museum of Art at the University of Georgia in Athens brings a welcome focus on its home state. For decades the study… Full Review
January 29, 2008
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Ella Shohat
Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2005. 409 pp.; 60 b/w ills. Paper $24.95 (0822337711)
Ella Shohat’s Taboo Memories, Diasporic Voices is a collection of essays written largely over a two-decade period spanning the 1980s and 1990s. Shohat contributed prolifically to discussions in the emerging knowledge domains of multiculturalism, postcolonial studies, and transnational feminisms; moreover, she did so in a rigorous and self-conscious manner, always probing the new paradigms in a critical way. The essays here record this engagement with transformations in the North American academy over the past couple of decades, and they demonstrate the work of an author who has vigilantly critiqued the post-Enlightenment legacies of an enduring Eurocentricism. Indeed, the collection functions… Full Review
January 24, 2008
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Kathleen James-Chakraborty, ed.
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2006. 246 pp.; 59 b/w ills. Paper $25.00 (9780816646883)
John V. Maciuika
New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. 386 pp.; 129 b/w ills. Cloth $91.00 (9780521790048)
Was the Bauhaus a great equalizer? Perhaps that idea was beside the point for its visionary founders, but they did have to confront modernity’s democratically inclusive trajectory, which has consistently pitted mass production and its resultant “low” culture against a reductive aesthetic resistant to populist incursions into the “high” art realm. It fell to the Bauhaus, that iconic institutionalization of avant-garde theory and practice, to attempt a fusion through an educational structure that sought to reconcile art and commerce (with a decided bent for the former). Always a subject for modernist art historians, the Bauhaus is under fresh scrutiny from… Full Review
January 23, 2008
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Louis Kaplan
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2005. 248 pp.; 11 color ills.; 61 b/w ills. Paper $26.00 (0816645701)
Blake Stimson
Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2006. 230 pp.; 50 b/w ills. Paper $19.95 (026269333X)
Since the 1936 publication of Walter Benjamin’s groundbreaking essay “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,” the revolutionary impact of the photographic medium has been widely acknowledged, while the extent and nature of this impact has been much debated. Following Benjamin, some scholars have focused on photography’s effect on the nature and status of the art object; others have concentrated on its role in spectacle, on its ability to aestheticize everyday life, including the realm of politics, which is what Benjamin observed, and feared, in 1930s Germany. Part of this aestheticization of politics involved the visualization of… Full Review
January 15, 2008
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Jean A. Givens
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2005. 256 pp.; 8 color ills.; 63 b/w ills. Cloth $85.00 (9780521830317)
It goes without saying that “naturalism” has played an absolutely central role in art-historical discourse. This is true in two broad senses. On one hand, there is artistic practice: artists have, in various ways, relied on the observation of the visible world in the creation of images. On the other, there is the standard art-historical narrative, articulated by scholars from Pliny through Vasari to the present, which posits a diagnostic role to the perception of naturalism, gauging the degree of an image’s naturalism to discern intention and meaning, and assigns particular works to one or another art-historical epoch. Jean Givens’s… Full Review
January 4, 2008
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John Oliver Hand and Ron Spronk, eds.
Cambridge, Mass. and New Haven: Harvard University Art Museums in association with Yale University Press, 2006. 256 pp.; 14 color ills.; 95 b/w ills. Paper $40.00 (9780300121407)
Essays in Context: Unfolding the Netherlandish Diptych serves as an excellent companion to the exhibition catalogue for Prayers and Portraits: Unfolding the Netherlandish Diptych, also edited by John Oliver Hand and Ron Spronk, along with Catherine Metzger (Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art; and New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006). The product of two roundtable discussions, its thirteen fine scholarly essays present a rich array of related topics. In the first essay, Victor Schmidt addresses the development of diptychs prior to 1400. He begins by showing that the term “diptychum” or “diptycha” originally referred to a set of… Full Review
January 3, 2008
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Griselda Pollock, ed.
Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2006. 247 pp.; 26 b/w ills. Paper $36.95 (1405134615)
“Imagine you are lying on Freud’s couch. What can you see?” This is the question that opens “Collector, Naturalist, Surrealist,” John Forrester’s classic essay on the collecting habits of Sigmund Freud (Dispatches from the Freud Wars, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997, 107). In “The Image in Psychoanalysis and the Archaeological Metaphor,” the lead essay in her edited collection Psychoanalysis and the Image, Griselda Pollock returns to this scene, turning Forrester’s question around to muse: “As Freud sat in his analyst’s chair, what did he see?” (16) The one thing that neither the patient nor Freud could… Full Review
December 20, 2007
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