Vol. 160 / No. 1386
Vol. 160 / No. 1386
It is an old joke that art dealers are people for whom a
silver lining is simply an excuse for a dark cloud. Much the same could be said
of publishers, and in particular those who specialise in books on the history
of art. Art books are more abundant than ever, routinely printed to standards
unimaginable a generation ago and affordable to a wide audience. Yet the litany
of publishers’ complaints is long: sales are in decline, reproduction fees
charged by museums are punitive and the future of physical books has been
thrown into the shade by the bright screens of the digital age. It may,
therefore, seem surprising that The Burlington Magazine should choose this
moment to launch its own imprint. The first title, Roger Fry and Italian Art,
by our former Editor Caroline Elam, is scheduled to appear later this year,
published in collaboration with Ad Ilissum. (An article based on the research
for the book appears on pp.727–33 of the current issue.) Although a modest
enterprise – we envisage publishing no more than three or four titles a year,
on subjects chosen to appeal to readers of this Magazine – it embodies a
commitment to the future of books on art history.
That means physical books. The business-school truism that
people always overestimate the short-term impact of technological change and underestimate
its long-term effects is perfectly exemplified by book publishing. It is easy
to envisage a time in which all publications are digital but as far as
illustrated books are concerned, that day is still some way off. Publishers’
apprehension about the impact of digital technologies on art books now has
quite a long history. For example, many spent substantial sums in the 1990s
developing CD-ROM publications, a technology that now seems almost as
antiquated as hot-metal typesetting. The arrival of e-books at the end of the
1990s proved to be the way forward, but although illustrated e-books exist they
have been slow to evolve and are unlikely to offer serious competition to art
books in the near future.
What is more, in almost every field, including fiction, for
which e-books are best suited, digital publishing seems to have lost steam: in
the United Kingdom, for example, revenues from the sale of physical books rose
by five per cent in 2017 (to £3.1bn) whereas revenues from digital book sales
declined by two per cent (to £543m).1 Even in an art-historical genre in which
it was assumed that digital media would definitively overtake print, the
publication of catalogues raisonnés, the reality has proved to be more complex.
The resources needed to assemble such a catalogue are so expensive in terms of
human resources (and often reproduction fees) that the additional cost of
printing a few hundred physical copies in addition to online publishing is
usually comparatively small. This is also a reflection of the revolution in
printing technology in the past generation – in particular advances in offset
lithography, in speed as well as quality – that has made colour printing as
good and as inexpensive as it has ever been.
Yet the quandary for publishers of academic art history is
inescapable. How can a typical book on this subject, such as a monograph,
consisting of around 100,000 words and 200 illustrations, be made to work? Reproduction
fees are one significant issue. Although it is true that some museums are
making more images freely available, especially for academic publication, in
the United Kingdom they have been remarkably reluctant to do so, blaming the
need to sustain revenues in a time of declining public subsidy. Not only are
authors increasingly expected to shoulder this financial burden, they are now
also often expected to supply their text for nothing, or a nominal fee. Deplorable
as this undoubtedly is, it reflects the economic reality of publishing a
serious art history title. For such a book to be viable it either needs to be
subsidised – by a charitable foundation or an academic institution if not the
author – or it has to sell around 3,000 copies. That is a very tall order for a
specialised academic title, which in most subjects typically sell fewer than
1,000 copies.
One problem is that art history books are too cheap. That is
in part a reflection of the industry-wide pressure on book prices created by
the ending in the mid-1990s of the Net Book Agreement (which had made it
impossible for booksellers to discount book prices). The result of the Agreement’s
demise was not just cheaper books, but a growing consumer resistance to high
prices for specialised titles. Few art books retail for more than £50, a price
that is often barely sufficient to cover their costs. The abolition of the Net
Book Agreement also led to the disappearance of book clubs (which had offered
discounted titles to their members), whose orders used to add substantial
numbers to a print run, bringing down the cost of the individual books. In all
this it needs to be borne in mind that bookshops expect a fifty or sixty per
cent discount on a book’s retail price, a figure that rises to fifty-five or
sixty-five per cent for export sales.
Information about print runs is hard to obtain, but there is
no doubt that in one category, exhibition catalogues, the sale figures for
academic art history can be impressive. In the past year alone, sales of the
catalogues of Michelangelo: Divine Draftsman and Designer at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York, and Raphael: The Drawings at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford,
and Albertina, Vienna, would make publishers in any field envious. That
explains why institutions that have closed their bookpublishing arms in recent
years, such as the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, have continued to
publish their own exhibition catalogues, as the profits are reasonably well
guaranteed. It must surely be the case, however, that the demands on museum
curators to stage such ambitious and expensive exhibitions make it increasingly
difficult for them to find time to write books with no exhibition for a peg. By
contrast, art historians in universities are under pressure to publish, but
increasingly they seem intent on following the precedent of colleagues in
literature departments by writing in technical and obscure language. The
suspicion must be that the difficulties in selling books on art history are a
matter of supply as much as demand.
Paradoxically, perhaps, the easy availability of
high-quality images of works of art has shifted attention to the text in books
on art, since it is now rarely possible to assume that people will buy them
simply for their illustrations. The impressive sales figures of books by
leading academic historians, such as Eamon Duffy, David Cannadine or Margaret MacMillan,
show that there is a large popular appetite for well-written, intellectually
challenging texts on a wide range of historical subjects. This is an appetite
that is much less often satisfied by art historians. The way to sell more books
on art history is to encourage more people to read them, and that will be
achieved not by technological or economic innovation but by something that this
Magazine, and now the books it will publish, has always endeavoured to provide
– good writing.
1
www.thebookseller.com/news/british-publishing-houses-break-all-revenue-recordstextbook-
sales-take-hit-833321, accessed 15th August 2018.