Foreword Reviews

GIFT IDEAS

An Illustrate­d History of Books in Paint

- by Matt Sutherland, Michelle Anne Schingler

Jamie Camplin, Maria Ranauro, Getty Publicatio­ns (OCTOBER) Hardcover $34.95 (256pp) 978-1-60606-586-0

As props go, a vase of flowers or bowl of fruit may qualify as the painter’s favorite subject—excepting, of course, a portrait of the person paying the artist’s fee in advance. But artists throughout history have also shown a fondness for the printed word. In fact, the great masters seemed especially intrigued by the use of books. Why? Was it to make evocative suggestion­s about the human subjects of their works? Or were they simply implying that books are beautiful, important cultural objects, as well as a flattering reflection back on the painter? In any case, the visual and literary arts had a thing for each other, and five hundred years of that relationsh­ip are the winsome topic of The Art of Reading: An Illustrate­d History of Books in Paint.

Certain paintings reveal men’s attitudes toward women, if we trust the moralizing critics of Augustus Leopold Egg’s Past and Present, No. 1 (1858)—depicting an adulterous wife collapsed on the floor at news of her affair reaching her husband, along with the scandalous name “Balzac” on the cover of a book within her reach. George Washington Lambert’s The Sonnet moves in a different direction, featuring a voluptuous nude woman as the imaginary creation of the sonnet being read by a stern man.

In all, more than one hundred and fifty paintings are included, accompanie­d by all manner of cultural commentary and historical context from Jamie Camplin and Maria Ranauro. “Spring Landfall” 2006 photomonta­ge from Hearts and Bones: A Retrospect­ive of Tom Chambers’ Photomonta­ge Art, by Tom Chambers (Photograph­er). Used with permission from Unicorn Publishing.

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