Advertisement
More from the Review
Subscribe to our Newsletter
Best of The New York Review, plus books, events, and other items of interest
Duane Michals
Jed Perl’s most recent book is Authority and Freedom: A Defense of the Arts. (March 2025)
Ralph Ellison’s Alchemical Camera
The novelist’s photographs reveal an aestheticizing impulse that is difficult to reconcile with the relentless seriousness of his observations and critiques of American society.
Ralph Ellison: Photographer
edited by Michal Raz-Russo and John F. Callahan
November 7, 2024 issue
Succumbing to Spectacle
During the last half-century, artists, curators, and scholars have been increasingly preoccupied with the idea of spectacle and with how to embrace, critique, or co-opt the power of work that envelops and overwhelms the viewer.
Jenny Holzer: Light Line
an exhibition at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York City, May 17–September 29, 2024
Tricks of the Light: Essays on Art and Spectacle
by Jonathan Crary
The Avant-Gardists: Artists in Revolt in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union, 1917–1935
by Sjeng Scheijen
September 19, 2024 issue
Reimagining the Ordinary
The French artist Jean Hélion approached painting with a philosophical precision, each style a hypothesis to be investigated and tested.
Jean Hélion: La Prose du monde
an exhibition at the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris, March 22–August 18, 2024
July 18, 2024 issue
Picasso’s Transformations
Pablo Picasso reconceived everything he touched, but fifty years after his death his transformative art has been eclipsed by Andy Warhol’s art of appropriation and replication.
Picasso: A Cubist Commission in Brooklyn
an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, September 14, 2023–January 14, 2024
Picasso in Fontainebleau
an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, October 8, 2023–February 17, 2024
It’s Pablo-matic: Picasso According to Hannah Gadsby
an exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, June 2–September 24, 2023
Picasso and the Spanish Classics
an exhibition at the Hispanic Society Museum and Library, New York City, November 2, 2023–February 4, 2024
Andy Warhol: Thirty Are Better Than One
an exhibition at the Brant Foundation Art Study Center, New York City, May 10–July 30, 2023
Looking at Picasso
by Pepe Karmel
Monsters: A Fan’s Dilemma
by Claire Dederer
Picasso’s War: How Modern Art Came to America
by Hugh Eakin
November 2, 2023 issue
The Modern Hephaestus
David Smith was an expressionist with an all-or-nothing approach to art who reveled in the violent acts of metalworking that created new forms of permanence.
David Smith: The Art and Life of a Transformational Sculptor
by Michael Brenson
David Smith Sculpture: A Catalogue Raisonné, 1932–1965
edited by Christopher Lyon
September 21, 2023 issue
The Chilliest Mystique
Two exhibitions of computer and video art demonstrate that technological savvy and artistic naiveté all too often go hand in hand.
Coded: Art Enters the Computer Age, 1952–1982
an exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, February 12–July 2, 2023
Signals: How Video Transformed the World
an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, March 5–July 8, 2023
May 11, 2023 issue
Going to Extremes
For Matisse art was a perpetual emergency, a matter of testing boundaries, breaking through.
Matisse: The Red Studio
an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, May 1–September 10, 2022; and SMK–National Gallery of Denmark, Copenhagen, October 13, 2022–February 26, 2023
Matisse in the 1930s
an exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, October 20, 2022–January 29, 2023; the Musée de l’Orangerie, Paris, March 1–May 29, 2023; and the Musée Matisse Nice, June 23–September 24, 2023
February 9, 2023 issue
The Power of Ornament
An exhibition at the Drawing Center explores the astonishing variety that the ornamental impulse has inspired across centuries and continents but never grapples with the aesthetic questions it raises.
The Clamor of Ornament: Exchange, Power, and Joy from the Fifteenth Century to the Present
an exhibition at the Drawing Center, New York City, June 15–September 18, 2022
August 18, 2022 issue
Proud of His Conundrums
The midcentury art critic Harold Rosenberg skewered his fellow New York intellectuals as a “herd of independent minds,” but his own work has more striking provocations than deep conclusions.
Harold Rosenberg: A Critic’s Life
by Debra Bricker Balken
The Loft Generation: From the de Koonings to Twombly, Portraits and Sketches, 1942–2011
by Edith Schloss, edited by Mary Venturini, with photo editing by Jacob Burckhardt
March 24, 2022 issue
Colors in Conversation
Joan Mitchell was a Romantic whose paintings join nature and feelings with an operatic lyricism.
Joan Mitchell
an exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, September 4, 2021–January 17, 2022; the Baltimore Museum of Art, March 6–August 14, 2022; and the Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris, October 5, 2022–February 27, 2023
November 4, 2021 issue
Interpreting Nature
A transcendent exhibition of Cézanne’s drawings at MoMA reveals an artist who is drunk on sensation but always sober enough to pin it down.
Cézanne Drawing
an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, June 6–September 25, 2021
July 22, 2021 issue
See More, Think More
The art historian Leo Steinberg tried in his writings to reconcile a passion that was inarguably subjective with a desire for something like objectivity.
Michelangelo’s Sculpture: Selected Essays
by Leo Steinberg, edited by Sheila Schwartz
Michelangelo’s Painting: Selected Essays
by Leo Steinberg, edited by Sheila Schwartz
Renaissance and Baroque Art: Selected Essays
by Leo Steinberg, edited by Sheila Schwartz
After Michelangelo, Past Picasso: Leo Steinberg’s Library of Prints
an exhibition at the Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, Texas, February 7–May 9, 2021
May 13, 2021 issue
Cubism’s Poet
Writer, painter, and a close friend of Picasso, Max Jacob was part of the glory of interwar bohemian Paris.
Max Jacob: A Life in Art and Letters
by Rosanna Warren
February 25, 2021 issue
The Cults of Wagner
Alex Ross’s ‘Wagnerism: Art and Politics in the Shadow of Music’
Wagnerism: Art and Politics in the Shadow of Music
by Alex Ross
October 8, 2020 issue
A Rage for Clarity
Félix Fénéon: The Anarchist and the Avant-Garde—From Signac to Matisse and Beyond
an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, through July 25, 2020
May 14, 2020 issue
Spirits of San Francisco
The Householders: Robert Duncan and Jess
by Tara McDowell
Robert Duncan: The Ambassador from Venus
by Lisa Jarnot, with a foreword by Michael Davidson
Collected Essays and Other Prose
by Robert Duncan, edited and with an introduction by James Maynard
The Collected Early Poems and Plays
by Robert Duncan, edited and with an introduction by Peter Quartermain
The Collected Later Poems and Plays
by Robert Duncan, edited and with an introduction by Peter Quartermain
The H.D. Book
by Robert Duncan, edited and with an introduction by Michael Boughn and Victor Coleman
An Opening of the Field: Jess, Robert Duncan, and Their Circle
by Michael Duncan and Christopher Wagstaff
March 26, 2020 issue
Subscribe and save 50%!
Read the latest issue as soon as it’s available, and browse our rich archives. You'll have immediate subscriber-only access to over 1,200 issues and 25,000 articles published since 1963.
Subscribe nowSubscribe and save 50%!
Get immediate access to the current issue and over 25,000 articles from the archives, plus the NYR App.
Already a subscriber? Sign in