From Publishers Weekly
The dogmatic overviews of art that are the traditional texts for students in college-level survey classes and the occasional museum-goer are overthrown by this refreshing and accessible survey. Instead of foregone conclusions, renowned art historian Kemp and his 50 contributors (representing a diversity of backgrounds and specialties) offer an elasticized look at art and an understanding that poses as many questions as it answers. Instead of taking a purely visual approach (i.e., organized by style and medium along a linear chronology), Kemp focuses on social, religious and political history, occasionally showing art in situ and juxtaposing photos by subject matter, but without ignoring standard art historical pedagogy. The first section, for example, focuses on the classical art of ancient Greece and Rome, but includes a subsection on "Ancient Paradigms from Augustus to Mussolini." The final section, "Modernism and After," extends the book's western reach to include the art of the Soviet Union, Latin America and India, and discusses the roles of art museums and galleries and the evolving discipline of art history. "Ultimately, there is no reason to look at art," Kemp writes in the epilogue, "but many of us cannot stop doing it, and it clearly meets fundamental human needs visually, intellectually, and psychologically. This book is designed to assist in meeting those needs." And so it does. (Oct. 31)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
There have been numerous single-volume histories of Western art that squeeze 2,500 years of creativity into less than half that number of pages, using essentially the same chronological outline. Art historian Kemp and his 50 contributors have taken a more fluid and inclusive approach by establishing the context within which art is created and exhibited and eschewing conventional period designations for more socially oriented perspectives and thematic groupings. Specific media, such as prints, painting, stained glass, and altarpieces, are considered independently, and there is an in-depth discussion of the shift from the influence of the church to that of nations. Kemp and company do a tidy job of chronicling the rapid evolution in innovative form and image that took place between 1770 and 1914, the "era of revolutions"; and the section on the impact of the conquest of the Americas on both indigenous and European art is eye-opening. The modern era is intelligently sampled, with a strong photography section, but inevitably many facets are reduced to tantalizing glimpses, which, it is hoped, will instigate further study.
Donna SeamanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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