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The Memory Palace of Isabella Stewart Gardner
 
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The Memory Palace of Isabella Stewart Gardner [Paperback]

Patricia Vigderman (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 1, 2007

“A searching, sensitive, and engagingly witty meditation.” —Lyndall Gordon
 
“What a great pleasure this gorgeous little book has given me! It should be offered everywhere indeed, and at every museum shop on earth.”—Honor Moore
 
A fascinating meditation on art and personality, Patricia Vigderman’s exploration of Isabella Stewart Gardner’s famous Boston museum radiates out from its subject to investigate Garnder’s legacy of luxury and willfulness.  Isabella Gardner’s high spirits and aesthetic pleasure, her women friends and female power, her friendships with the adventurers and aesthetes of her world, are gathered into this engrossing investigation of patronage and passion.  Blending biography, memoir, philosophy, and detective story, The Memory Palace is more than a tribute to the museum and the woman; it is an altogether new genre.  Vigderman’s witty and intimate quest for her subject sets a literary precedent for the appreciation of artistic imagination.  Loosening up the past, entering its mysteries and its memories, she reminds us that we change our lives when we begin a relationship with art.  

Patricia Vigderman grew up in Washington, D.C., and Europe. She graduated from Vassar College, after which a circuitous course led her through editing, translating, freelance journalism, teaching, marriage, motherhood, divorce, a doctoral dissertation (on nineteenth-century novels as film, as history, and as autobiography), and a lot of time in museums. Her recent writing has appeared in The Georgia Review, Harvard Review, The Iowa Review, The Kenyon Review, Mid-American Review, Northwest Review, Raritan, Seneca Review, and Southwest Review. She divides her year between Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Gambier, Ohio, where she teaches in the English department at Kenyon College. She is married to the writer Lewis Hyde.


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Customers buy this book with The Gardner Heist: The True Story of the World's Largest Unsolved Art Theft $10.19

The Memory Palace of Isabella Stewart Gardner + The Gardner Heist: The True Story of the World's Largest Unsolved Art Theft


Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Vigderman takes the reader on a museum tour unlike any other. Gardner--wealthy, cultured, and flamboyant--built Fenway Court in Boston in 1902, a lavish mansion and museum showcasing her impressive art collection, a yin-yang of West and East. Gardner stipulated that after her death, every object and artwork remain precisely as she left it, an edict Vigderman finds provocative. In a quest to understand Gardner and her aesthetics, Vigderman explores Gardner's "memory palace," considers her acquisitions, and profiles the women in her circle, especially Clover Adams, Henry's intelligent, irreverent, and ultimately suicidal wife; Mary Berenson, art advisor Bernard's indispensable better half; and Mary McNeil Scott, married to Asian expert Ernest Fenollosa and a cultural force in her own right. The result is a fresh and graceful narrative of discovery along the lines of Patricia Hampl's superb Blue Arabesque (2006). Seemingly insouciant yet thrillingly incisive, Vigderman is a dream docent, offering gossip, detection, and arresting and unexpected insights into art's place in our lives, and the struggles of prevote women to liberate themselves. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author

Vigderman grew up in Washington, D.C. and Europe. She graduated from Vassar, after which a circuitous course led her through editing, translating, journalism, teaching, a doctoral dissertation (on nineteenth-century novels as film, as history, and as autobiography), and a lot of time in museums. She divides her year between Cambridge, Massachusetts and Gambier, Ohio, where she teaches.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 152 pages
  • Publisher: Sarabande Books (February 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1932511431
  • ISBN-13: 978-1932511437
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #286,205 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A meditation on identity, August 30, 2009
By 
mojosmom (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: The Memory Palace of Isabella Stewart Gardner (Paperback)
Neither a biography nor a guide to the collection, but rather a meditation on the identity, the soul, of Isabella Stewart Gardner, this small volume is Vigderman's attempt to understand, through her collection, why Gardner collected what she did, why she displayed it the way she did, why she left it to the public the way she did.

This is a stroll through the Museum, pausing here and there, thinking about this piece or that. How does it fit with that piece over there? What might it have meant to Mrs. Gardner? Who urged her to acquire it and how was that person important to ISG? That is the structure of the book, in three parts, each broken down into smaller sections headed with the title of a work, its author and date. Something about that work inspires and speaks of the words that will follow. Thus, Helleu's Woman Threading a Needle calls forth thoughts of how Gardner "threaded the needle" through a world where wealth and status did not necessarily allow a woman to "make her way into the kingdom of books" to one where she found "pleasant lifelong learning".

As Vigderman wanders through those rooms and corridors, she talks to us about Bernard Berenson, whose career ISG helped launch. We learn of art politics, and in-fighting in the lofty rooms of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. And, finally, Vigderman, joins old Boston and the clutter of Victoriana with the simplicity and grace of the Japanese tea ceremony through the figure of Okakura Kakuzo, first head of the MFA's Asian Arts department, and author of that book of philosophy, The Book of Tea. (The postscript, An Invitation to Tea, follows the form of the other three parts, but each subsection is headed with a caption of an illustration from the Kodansha International edition of that book.)

In the end, do we know more of Gardner than we did before we began? I think we do. Vigderman's digressive musings help to understand how ISG was both a product of, and a rebel against, her time and place.

Why this book is not available at the Gardner Museum's bookshop is beyond my comprehension.
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