Modern Art, Revised (Trade Version) (3rd Edition)

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Modern Art, Revised (Trade Version) (3rd Edition)

Always among the most visually and intellectually stimulating books, Modern Art has now been revised to include the latest critical theory and the most recent forms of painting, sculpture, and architecture. 800 illustrations, including 350 in full color.

Rating: (out of 6 reviews)

List Price: $ 85.00

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5 comments

  1. Anonymous says:

    Review by for Modern Art, Revised (Trade Version) (3rd Edition)
    Rating:
    this text was required reading for an uper division Modern Art History course i have taken, which requires no prerequisites. the book, however, certainly assumes previous indepth knowledge of topic. overall, a very informative, technical book.

  2. João Mário Grilo says:

    Review by João Mário Grilo for Modern Art, Revised (Trade Version) (3rd Edition)
    Rating:
    Everybody knows the boring of reading introduction material about art. It’s always more of the same. Because of that I suspected very much this book with its “open title”… No reason for that: Modern Art is a careful work about 20th century aesthetics, crossing an open and contextual perspective with closed analysis of key works. And best of all, the synthetic approach of painting, sculpture and architecture is very well balanced and justified. It’s not a book, but a very good surprise as both an introduction as a very deep analysis of 20th century art.

  3. Mike G says:

    Review by Mike G for Modern Art, Revised (Trade Version) (3rd Edition)
    Rating:
    I just completed a college course with this book as the chosen Textbook. The writing was of a much more advanced nature and it actually seemed like it should have been for a more advanced course. Like the title of this review says, you get an advanced English lesson also. It’s mainly an Education book, so it probably should be geared more to the Student-through-expert levels. Like most books on art, it is a shame that so many illustrations are in Black & White. It’s a cost thing I suppose. The information and opinions were well balanced. The text also has very little unnecessary “Fluff” fillers. I would have no intention of selling the book or trading it away. It’s a keeper.

  4. Christopher J. Rogers says:

    Review by Christopher J. Rogers for Modern Art, Revised (Trade Version) (3rd Edition)
    Rating:
    I would NOT recommend this Book. Hunter, Jacobus and Wheeler are very critical and often lend their opinions intrusively with lack of reason / explanation. I had this book for Two Art History classes, the Instructor rarely referenced it, because of the Authors. If you are new to art or want to learn more this is NOT the book!

    Example at the end of Chapter 13: “Later, the new style would be used more literally, even daringly, in the “development” of the new city, a process that would also bring with it the wasting, if not complete destruction, of the undervalued heritage of the recent past.” Note the Authors spend most of the paragraph bashing the Rockefelier Center in New York. They never explain why it is “bland” or how the effort becomes “pallid”. You will literally read chapters over and over, finding little tangible support for the authors conclusions. Imagine the Snobbiest / Know it All Person you know then think about how they would write a book.

    MINUSES:

    The pictures: Are way to dark, Some are discolored and Stretched to fit the page. Not enough pictures of Architecture.

    The chapters are not well organized.

    The book over concentrates on Language and Voice: Therefore becoming inconclusive gibberish.

    It Fails to bring meaning to its own Title; Modern Art. By the end of the book the reader has No Idea what Modern Art is in a whole: where it has been, why it changed, stylistic elements, political context, and etc.

  5. João Mário Grilo says:

    Review by João Mário Grilo for Modern Art, Revised (Trade Version) (3rd Edition)
    Rating:
    Everybody knows the boring of reading introduction material about art. It’s always more of the same. Because of that I suspected very much this book with its “open title”… No reason for that: Modern Art is a careful work about 20th century aesthetics, crossing an open and contextual perspective with closed analysis of key works. And best of all, the synthetic approach of painting, sculpture and architecture is very well balanced and justified. It’s not a book, but a very good surprise as both an introduction as a very deep analysis of 20th century art.