Cart
Free Shipping in Ireland
Proud to be B-Corp

Museum Skepticism David Carrier

Museum Skepticism By David Carrier

Museum Skepticism by David Carrier


€8.99
Condition - Very Good
Only 2 left

Summary

Traces the birth, evolution, and decline of the public art museum as an institution meant to spark democratic debate and discussion.

Museum Skepticism Summary

Museum Skepticism: A History of the Display of Art in Public Galleries by David Carrier

In Museum Skepticism, art historian David Carrier traces the birth, evolution, and decline of the public art museum as an institution meant to spark democratic debate and discussion. Carrier contends that since the inception of the public art museum during the French Revolution, its development has depended on growth: on the expansion of collections, particularly to include works representing non-European cultures, and on the proliferation of art museums around the globe. Arguing that this expansionist project has peaked, he asserts that art museums must now find new ways of making high art relevant to contemporary lives. Ideas and inspiration may be found, he suggests, in mass entertainment such as popular music and movies.

Carrier illuminates the public role of art museums by describing the ways they influence how art is seen: through their architecture, their collections, the narratives they offer museum visitors. He insists that an understanding of the art museum must take into account the roles of collectors, curators, and museum architects. Toward that end, he offers a series of case studies, showing how particular museums and their collections evolved. Among those who figure prominently are Baron Dominique Vivant Denon, the first director of the Louvre; Bernard Berenson, whose connoisseurship helped Isabella Stewart Gardner found her museum in Boston; Ernest Fenollosa, who assembled much of the Asian art collection now in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Albert Barnes, the distinguished collector of modernist painting; and Richard Meier, architect of the J. Paul Getty Center in Los Angeles. Carriers learned consideration of what the art museum is and has been provides the basis for understanding the radical transformation of its public role now under way.

Museum Skepticism Reviews

Museum Skepticism is a fascinating study, original, brilliant, and erudite. I absolutely loved reading this book.Ellen Handler Spitz, author of The Brightening Glance: Imagination and Childhood
David Carrier is one of only a handful of scholars who inhabit with ease the diverse worlds of philosophy, art history, art criticism, and now museology. His philosophical acuity probes the responsibilities, shortcomings, and achievements of art museums, and the responses of their academic critics. Carriers provocative reflections on the successive metamorphoses of these irreplaceable yet infuriating institutions are sure to be a stimulus to the democratic conversation about their future that he so warmly advocates. Reading Carrier is like reading Montaigne: no one could be a more thoughtful, witty, or erudite imaginary interlocutor for the fortunate reader of this impassionedly personal yet highly disciplined book.Ivan Gaskell, Harvard University

Museum Skepticism certainly delivers, what it promises-a valid and convincing theory that answers the question: "What is it to lead the life of a work of art?" It offers a glimpse into the lives of several iconic public art museums and the personalities that contributed to the development of these institutions and their collections. . . . With its passionate tone and accessible language, it should be part of any art students library. -- Alise Piebalga * Leonardo Reviews *

About David Carrier

David Carrier is the Champney Family Professor of Art History at Case Western Reserve University and the Cleveland Institute of Art. His books include Sean Scully; Writing about Visual Art; The Aesthetics of Comics; High Art: Charles Baudelaire and the Origins of Modernist Painting; Principles of Art History Writing; and Poussins Paintings.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Overture 1
1. Beauty and Art, History and Fame and Power: On Entering the Louvre 17
2. Art and Power: Time Travel in the Museum 39
3. Museum Skeptics 51
4. Picturing Museum Skepticism 74
5. Art Museum Narratives 91
6. Isabella Stewart Gardners Museum 110
7. Ernest Fenollosas History of Asian Art 126
8. Albert Barness Foundation and the Place of Modernist Art within the Art Museum 146
9. The Display of Absolutely Contemporary Art in the J. Paul Getty Museum 165
10. The End of the Modern Public Art Museum: A Tale of Two Cities 181
Conclusion: What the Public Art Museum Might Become 208
Notes 225
Bibliography 269
Index 305

Additional information

GOR008317782
9780822336945
0822336944
Museum Skepticism: A History of the Display of Art in Public Galleries by David Carrier
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Duke University Press
2006-05-31
328
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Museum Skepticism