NEW YORK, NY.- In a lockdown year, with travel reduced, there was no movable feast quite like an art book. Art is made by all sorts of people, everywhere, all the time, along many different paths, some of which are illuminated by these intriguing publications chosen by our critics.
Holland Cotters Favorites
Ray Johnson c/o
Maverick American artist Ray Johnson (1927-95), who managed to be nowhere and everywhere in the art world through his invention of Mail Art, was lucky in his longtime friend William S. Wilson, to whom, over 60 years, he gave thousands of letters, collages, drawings and clippings. Wilson saved every last scrap, and a jampacked sampling of them makes up this gold mine of a book, edited and curated by Caitlin Haskell with Jordan Carter. Funny, biting, morbid, its a page-turner for sure, and accompanies a show at the Art Institute of Chicago through March 22. (Art Institute of Chicago, distributed by Yale University Press)
The Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse
Edited by curator Valerie Cassel Oliver, this catalog for one of the outstanding exhibitions of the season originating at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, its now in Houston proposes that the culture of the African American South, as defined by music and vernacular art, is the bedrock of American culture itself, with a strong influence on new art today. The book vividly illustrates and deepens the shows powerful argument. (Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, distributed by Duke University Press)
Yannis Tsarouchis: Dancing in Real Life
This book lovingly excavates the career of a Greek modernist painter who designed sets for Maria Callas and kept a Greek classical figurative tradition alive in paintings of homoerotic nudes. Tsarouchis (1910-89) was both too radical and too conservative for the art world of his time and fell into oblivion outside Greece. Edited by Niki Gripari and Adam Szymczyk and including a selection of the artists writings, this tender tribute brings him back. (Sternberg Press)
Titian: Love, Desire, Death
The London exhibition by this name reunited six major mythological paintings that Titian produced for the Spanish court. One of them, The Rape of Europa, belongs to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, where the show, now called Titian: Women, Myth & Power is making its final stop (through Jan. 2). A slender Gardner-issued publication devoted to that picture is an indispensable companion volume to the handsome London catalog. (National Gallery, London; published by Yale University Press)
Women in Abstraction
Edited by Christine Macel and Karolina Ziebinska-Lewandowska and produced for a major show at the Centre Pompidou, Paris, this book documents the contributions of more than 100 female painters, sculptors, photographers and performers to the history of modernist abstraction and, by including artists from Asia and South America, demonstrates that abstraction itself has always been a global phenomenon. That many worthy figures arent included only makes the case for a continuing corrective art history stronger. (Thames and Hudson)
Godzilla: Asian American Arts Network 1990-2001
Edited by Howie Chen, this compendium brings together archival documents related to the formation, in New York City in 1990, of Godzilla, a collective of artists and curators intent on pointing out the exclusion of Asian American artists from the contemporary art world and pushing for their presence in that world. The book includes protest letters, news releases, and the minutes of group meetings. The result is a how-to in advocacy politics, a study in the complexities of identity politics, and a chorale of treasurable voices. (Primary Information)
Roberta Smiths Favorites
Sophie Taeuber-Arp: Living Abstraction
Following the Guggenheims 2018 reveal of the mystical abstractions of Hilma af Klint, the Museum of Modern Art, Kunstmuseum Basel and Tate Modern further expand the mostly male ranks of European modernism to include Sophie Taeuber-Arp, one of its greatest polymaths (and colorists), whose egalitarian view of art and craft proved that abstractions in woven wool can trounce the oil on canvas kind. Edited by Anne Umland and Walburga Krupp. (Museum of Modern Art/Kunstmuseum Basel)
Frida Kahlo: The Complete Paintings
The painting on the cover of this exceedingly large volume recently set an auction record for the artist, but dont let that spoil it for you. This lavish book, edited by Luis-Martín Lozano, contains many rarely seen paintings bolstered by numerous drawings, extensive photographs from her life and reproductions of related works by other artists. (Taschen)
Really Free: The Radical Art of Nellie Mae Rowe
This catalog, with a leading essay by curator Katherine Jentleson, accompanies the largest show of the great visionary Nellie Mae Rowe (1900-82), painter, sculptor, doll-maker, environment-builder and Christian, at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta (through Jan. 9). Some of her drawings announce God is Not Dead, in bold colorful cursive writing. Rowe is the fourth great American outsider artist to receive a major catalog since 2007, after Martin Ramírez, Bill Traylor and Joseph Yoakum. May the trend continue. (DelMonico Books D.A.P., New York)
Erna Rosenstein: Once Upon a Time
This small cornucopia of a book, edited by Alison M. Gingeras, accompanies the first American exhibition of the formidable Polish artist and activist Erna Rosenstein (1913-2004) at Hauser & Wirth (through Dec. 23). It shows the stunning variety of her work, not just its many shades of surrealism and biomorphic abstraction, but also its affinities with fluxus, nouveau realism and art povera. Her life and work are detailed against the vivid tapestry of postwar Eastern European history itself an education. (Hauser & Wirth Publications)
Simple Pleasures: The Art of Doris Lee
Doris Lee (1905-83) worked simultaneously as a fine and a commercial artist, illustrating The Rodgers and Hart Songbook, while exhibiting paintings with the still-extant AAA Galleries in Manhattan. The paintings, which combined Grandma Moses with the textured color fields of Milton Avery cheerfully reflect this duality. This catalog, by Melissa Wolfe, and a traveling show at the Westmoreland Museum of American Art in Greensburg, Pennsylvania, (through Jan. 9) should begin to end her obscurity. (Westmoreland Museum of Art and Giles Ltd., London)
Jason Faragos Favorites
Kuma. Complete Works 1988-Today
This years unhappy Tokyo Olympics at least leave an architectural legacy: the lean, low-impact New National Stadium, made of the unfinished cedar that Kengo Kuma has made his authorial and ecological signature. This immense architectural tome spanning three decades, weighing in at 11 pounds establishes once and for all that sustainability and style need not be set at odds. New photography highlights his serene Nezu Museum and brawny V&A Dundee; temporary experiments in New York and Milan; and a Fukuoka storefront whose 2,000 intersecting cedar struts frame the worlds most elegant Starbucks. (Taschen)
Marcel Duchamp
He first declared a bicycle wheel to be a work of art in 1913, but it took nearly half a century with the 1959 publication of Robert Lebels catalogue raisonné of his early painting, his ready-mades and his cryptic notes for the New York art world to crown the discreet and debonair Duchamp as King Marcel. Long out of print, its now been reeditioned and bundled with a supplement that maps the influence of Lebels book over the decades, all housed in a handsome slipcase. (Hauser & Wirth Publishers)
Chizu (Maquette Edition)
Few photobooks have the mythic status of Chizu (The Map), first published in Tokyo in 1965, for which Japanese photographer Kikuji Kawada shot worn flags, dented Lucky Strike boxes and the walls of the Atomic Bomb Dome in Hiroshima as haunted abstractions in blown-out, high-contrast black-and-white. The 1965 edition is a single volume with gatefolds but a maquette in the New York Public Library shows that Kawada initially conceived Chizu as a two-volume project. NYPL curator Joshua Chuang and historian Miyuki Hinton have overseen this painstaking reproduction, while a new bilingual supplement offers further perspectives on this rarest and most mysterious artistic response to the nightmare of World War II. (Mack)
The Torlonia Marbles: Collecting Masterpieces
Villa Albani Torlonia: The Cradle of Neoclassicism
Statues also die; some get a second life. The years most beautiful exhibition, at the Capitoline Museums in Rome, brought to public view the worlds finest privately owned Greek and Roman sculptures and its catalog, edited by archaeologists Salvatore Settis and Carlo Gasparri, is as handsome as it is learned. But if its Roman grandeur youre after, get the lush coffee table book Villa Albani Torlonia, for which Massimo Listri photographed the aristocratic familys neoclassical mansion, its chipped goddesses and rusting heroes standing against acres of trompe loeil marble and gold leaf. (Both, Rizzoli)
Private Lives: Home and Family in the Art of the Nabis, Paris, 1889-1900
The impressionists were gripped by social life at the opera, the cafe, the seaside; the Nabis, two decades later, saw just as much modernity at home. This catalog of an exhibition at the Cleveland Museum of Art and Portland Art Museum (through Jan. 23) presents the sometimes tender, sometimes stifling domestic imagery of Maurice Denis, Félix Vallotton, Pierre Bonnard and above all Édouard Vuillard, whose dense, crosshatched scenes in the boudoir or at the kitchen table captured what one critic called the daily tragedy and mystery of ordinary existence, and the latent poetry of things. Curators Mary Weaver Chapin, Heather Lemonedes Brown and other contributors offer insight into domestic music performances, home garden design, and even pet ownership in fin-de-siècle Paris. (Yale University Press)
Antarctic Resolution
The seventh continent is not frozen but in constant flux and changing faster than ever thanks to us. Probe the 1,000 engrossing pages of this landmark publication, edited by Giulia Foscari and UNLESS and inaugurated at this years Venice Architecture Biennale, and you will learn everything you never knew you needed to know about human society on an uninhabited landmass: Antarctic law enforcement, Antarctic communication technology, Antarctic water management. Terra Australis stands here as a nearly utopian built environment, and the book concludes with an indispensable Archive of Antarctic Architecture, with site plans and photography of more than a centurys efforts to inhabit the most extreme of environments. (Lars Müller Publishers)
Siddhartha Mitters Favorites
A Black Hole Is Everything a Star Longs To Be
Kara Walker offers an extraordinary tome: some 650 drawings, sketches and texts from her archive since the 1990s. Its all here Trump, Obama, the plantation, sexual demand and degradation, all the American phantasmagoria of her famous silhouette works and monumental installations; but also clippings, notecards, dream diaries, the artist wrangling with the fetters of prominence and racial expectations. In an essay, Walker wonders why she kept all this stuff; there must have been some urge to talk about it later, an urge toward radical openness that any proper and studied artist would prefer to keep in check. Its a treasure. (JRP Editions)
The Journey: New Positions in African Photography
This volume showcases 17 photographers from nine countries, graduates of a 2008-18 mentorship program founded by Simon Njami, a respected curator (and co-editor of this book, with Sean OToole). A few have become recognized Sammy Baloji, Lebohang Kganye while others, like Gosette Lubondo, are emerging just now into the continents photo vanguard, with a full spectrum of documentary and conceptual approaches. Here, 13 essays by critics approach the subject by theme Knowledge, Fiction, Desire and broaden their discussion to other emerging photographers as well as the archive. Its a generous approach that proposes African photography as a fertile and expansive field of collective inquiry. (Kerber)
Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America
In an exhibition this year at MoMA, Black architects and designers imagined interventions in 10 American cities that would not only make visible but repair the effects of anti-Black planning, policy and spatial violence. It was an important show, if dense and all-too-brief. Fortunately, the catalog (edited by Sean Anderson and Mabel O. Wilson) supplements these propositions with texts by prominent scholars and critics that give the project an open feel and cross-disciplinary weave. In preparing for the exhibition, the architects and designers formed the Black Reconstruction Collective, modeling the self-determination and liberation values they insist are necessary. (MoMA)
Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities
Shahzia Sikander is known for disruptions of the Indo-Persian miniature painting tradition, which she expanded compositionally and infused with feminist and political themes. Rich with essays and conversations (edited by Sadia Abbas and Jan Howard), this catalog accompanies an exquisite exhibition on her early career (1987-2003). It follows her training in Pakistan, move to the United States in 1993, and navigation of U.S. social and racial realities; it leaves off in the frenzy of the war on terror. It proves instructive to reexamine those years through Sikanders keen grasp and artistic choices. (Distributed for Hirmer Publishers by University of Chicago Press)
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.