Vol. 164 / No. 1433
Vol. 164 / No. 1433
There is an obvious problem about making recommendations for
holiday reading for art historians: most of the books they are eager to read
are simply too big – too heavy for a holiday suitcase and too unwieldy for the
beach. Much as one admires such landmark publications as David Ekserdjian’s The Italian Renaissance Altarpiece (Yale
University Press), reviewed by Nicholas Penny in our April issue, it is fair to
say that its author did not have a deckchair in mind when writing it. Like most
such books, it is not published in digital form. The following suggestions for
books to take on holiday are therefore based not solely on merit but also on
them being either in a relatively compact format or available as an e-book. A
sterling example of the former is Thames & Hudson’s paperback World of Art series, which was relaunched
in 2020. The latest title is Paul Joannides’s Raphael. Timed to coincide with the recent exhibition at the
National Gallery, London, it is a distillation of a career thinking about the
artist that packs in 232 illustrations (and is also published as an e-book).
The practical value of a Kindle is evident also for anyone hesitating to take
away the fourth volume of John Richardson’s great biography of Picasso, The Minotaur Years 1933–43 (Jonathan
Cape), given that it weighs 1.1 kilograms (the e-book is in addition less than
a third of the price of the hardback). A scarcely less anticipated biography,
Sheila Barker’s Artemisia Gentileschi,
the latest in Lund Humphries’ Illuminating
Women Artists series, is as yet published solely in hardback but at only 133
pages it will not weigh down a suitcase unduly.
It is always tempting to choose holiday reading that is
relevant to the destination. Martin Bailey’s Van Gogh’s Finale: Auvers and the Artist’s Rise to Fame (Frances
Lincoln), reviewed by Rachel Esner in the July issue, is the third in the
author’s trilogy of books on the artist and would be ideal to accompany a
holiday in the Oise region of France or indeed in Provence, where Van Gogh
spent the preceding years, discussed by Bailey in his earlier volumes. Many
people will be going to Venice this year because of the Biennale: a reading
list for that event, never mind the city itself, could easily occupy all this
page, but one place to start is a monograph on this year’s British
representative, Sonia Boyce: Feeling her
Way, by Emma Ridgway and Courtney J. Martin (Yale). The genre of telling
the history of a culture through a concise choice of objects, popularised over
a decade ago by Neil MacGregor’s bestselling History of the World in 100 Objects (Penguin), has just received a
useful addition, T. Richard Blurton’s India:
A History in Objects (Thames & Hudson), which encompasses Pakistan,
Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka as well as India in 479 illustrations. And one
must remember also places that are currently inaccessible: Deyan Sudjic’s Stalin’s Architect: Power and Survival in
Moscow (Thames & Hudson), the story of the Ukrainian-born Boris Iofan
(1891–1976), intertwines the history of a tyrant with that of architecture and
urban design.
The concatenation of airport chaos, cancelled flights and
heatwaves across Europe may well convince people to stay at home. Our British
and Irish readers can find plenty of suggestions for visits to little-known
corners of their countries in Christopher Lloyd’s Masterpieces: An Art Lover’s Guide to Great Britain and Ireland
(Thames & Hudson), first published in 2011 and reissued this year with a
revised text in a new compact size. Another imaginative use of a small format
is John Goodall’s The Castle: A History
(Yale). This broadens the approach taken by the author in his mighty The English Castle 1066–1650 (Yale 2011)
to analyse the many roles played by castles in both British history and the
imagination and take their story up to the twenty-first century. Country houses
under siege are the subject of Terence Dooley’s Burning the Big House: The Story of the Irish Country House in a Time
of War and Revolution (Yale), which explores the reasons why some three
hundred country houses were destroyed during Ireland’s years of revolution and
civil war, 1912–23. A highly original addition to country house studies – and
more – is Todd Longstaffe-Gowan’s English
Garden Eccentrics: Three Hundred Years of Extraordinary Groves, Burrowings,
Mountains and Menageries (Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art).
Holidays are also a time for in-depth reading about some of
the pressing issues of the day. As climate activists glue themselves to works
of art in museums to protest against sponsorship by oil companies, Stacy
Boldrick’s Iconoclasm and the Museum
(Routledge), reviewed by Thomas E. Stammers in our February issue, invites
reflection on the recurring phenomenon of such iconoclasm. Perhaps some of
those activists will read another recent title in Thames & Hudson’s World of Art series, Art and Climate Change, by Maja and
Reuben Fowkes. Loot: Britain and the
Benin Bronzes by Barnaby Phillips (Oneworld Publications), reviewed by Mark
Evans in the current issue (pp.823–25), is a balanced account of this
contentious issue and also considers the afterlife of the bronzes. Easily
slipped into cabin bags are the titles in Lund Humphries’ Hot Topics in the Art World series, Alexander Herman’s Restitution: The Return of Cultural
Artefacts, Georgina Adam’s The Rise
and Rise of the Private Art Museum and Melanie Gerlis’s The Art Fair Story: A Rollercoaster Ride.
Puzzled by NFTs, blockchain and crypto art? Then try Domenico Quaranta’s Surfing with Satoshi (Aksioma), which
can be sampled in the extract published in June on Burlington Contemporary (contemporary.burlington.org.uk).
If all this seems too much like hard work for holiday
reading, there are also novels of special interest to art historians. Fakes and
deception are the subject of Maria Gainza’s Portrait
of an Unknown Lady (Penguin); Rachel Cusk’s Second Place (Faber & Faber), a much-praised psychodrama about
a famous artist, is just out in paperback; and James Cahill’s raunchy Tiepolo Blue (Sceptre) will be read with
particular pleasure by anyone who knows much about the art history department
at the University of Cambridge or has visited Dulwich Picture Gallery. Not
quite fiction, but not non-fiction either, Celia Paul’s Letters to Gwen John (Penguin) is an imagined correspondence
between two female artists with much in common.
Finally, there are the recent titles by our own
book-publishing arm, the Burlington Press. Richard Spear’s Caravaggio’s Cardsharps on Trial is a possibly unique combination
of courtroom drama and authoritative art history. Anthony Geraghty’s account of
the widow of Napoleon III in exile, The
Empress Eugénie in England: Art, Architecture, Collecting, tells the story
of her house at Farnborough, Hampshire, reconstructs its long dispersed art
collection and describes the magnificent mausoleum for the exiled imperial
family that she commissioned. It will be followed this autumn by Charles Hope’s
Titian: Sources and Documents,
published by Ad Illisvm with the Burlington Press in five volumes. Even the
most dedicated art historian may find that it challenges the concept of beach
reading.