This book review focuses on Jennifer Cooke’s careful and incisive analysis of the different methodological approaches adopted by Millard Meiss in his art-historical writing. Her extensive research in Meiss’s personal letters allows for an intimate portrait of his scholarly interactions, including over thirty years of correspondence with Erwin Panofsky. The originality and importance of Cooke’s perspective on the reception of Meiss’s work in Italy is acknowledged, but it is also suggested that a fully balanced appraisal would have to include the profound influence Meiss had in North America
Review of: José Emilio Burucúa, Historia, Arte, Cultura. De Aby Warburg a Carlo Ginzburg, Buenos A...
Terry Smith characterizes Art to Come as a work of art historiography. The eleven chapters that comp...
Since Michel Foucault\u27s seminal essays on the asylum, prison, and hospital in the Age of Reason, ...
The volume under review here investigates how politics in post-1945 Europe affected the academic, cr...
The volume under review here investigates how politics in post-1945 Europe affected the academic, cr...
Sam Rose’s book analyses techniques that art historians and art critics use when they write about ar...
This is the first book by Julius Schlosser to appear in English. Written in 1907, it offers an excel...
A Socialist Realist History? Writing Art History in the Post-War Decades, edited by Krista Kodres, K...
Lisa Jardine and Jerry Brotton, Global Interests: Renaissance Art between East & West. Ithaca, New Y...
Book review of The Renaissance Restored: Paintings Conservation and the Birth of Modern Art History ...
Review of Klaus Meister, Studien zur griechischen Geschichtsschreibung: von der Klassik bis zur Sp...
The title of this volume refers to the course of the Open University entitled Renaissance Art Recons...
The past decade has witnessed the appearance of a number of excellent edited essay collections deali...
The recent documenta 14 (2017) addressed the question of art theft and war spoliations, taking as it...
Matthew Hayes’ volume examines the influence of nineteenth-century scholarship on the activities of ...
Review of: José Emilio Burucúa, Historia, Arte, Cultura. De Aby Warburg a Carlo Ginzburg, Buenos A...
Terry Smith characterizes Art to Come as a work of art historiography. The eleven chapters that comp...
Since Michel Foucault\u27s seminal essays on the asylum, prison, and hospital in the Age of Reason, ...
The volume under review here investigates how politics in post-1945 Europe affected the academic, cr...
The volume under review here investigates how politics in post-1945 Europe affected the academic, cr...
Sam Rose’s book analyses techniques that art historians and art critics use when they write about ar...
This is the first book by Julius Schlosser to appear in English. Written in 1907, it offers an excel...
A Socialist Realist History? Writing Art History in the Post-War Decades, edited by Krista Kodres, K...
Lisa Jardine and Jerry Brotton, Global Interests: Renaissance Art between East & West. Ithaca, New Y...
Book review of The Renaissance Restored: Paintings Conservation and the Birth of Modern Art History ...
Review of Klaus Meister, Studien zur griechischen Geschichtsschreibung: von der Klassik bis zur Sp...
The title of this volume refers to the course of the Open University entitled Renaissance Art Recons...
The past decade has witnessed the appearance of a number of excellent edited essay collections deali...
The recent documenta 14 (2017) addressed the question of art theft and war spoliations, taking as it...
Matthew Hayes’ volume examines the influence of nineteenth-century scholarship on the activities of ...
Review of: José Emilio Burucúa, Historia, Arte, Cultura. De Aby Warburg a Carlo Ginzburg, Buenos A...
Terry Smith characterizes Art to Come as a work of art historiography. The eleven chapters that comp...
Since Michel Foucault\u27s seminal essays on the asylum, prison, and hospital in the Age of Reason, ...