While Bernard Berenson's roles as a connoisseur, Renaissance art expert, defender of Western culture, and arbiter of taste extraordinaire are well known, his role as critic and theorist of modern art has until now been little understood. Mary Ann Calo's new intellectual biography is the first study to place Berenson's career in the context of modernist art and criticism. The unequivocal hostility towards modern art Berenson expressed late in life does not adequately represent his views, Calo argues. Tracing his writings over half a century, she examines his transition from an innovative modern critic to a reactionary conservative who used his influence to discredit twentieth-century art and to preserve the notion of culture as aristocratic privilege. Calo point out how Berenson's increasing social, political, and aesthetic conservatism belies his youthful interest in modern art. Her focus on the development of Berenson's aesthetic principles and intellectual life demonstrates that his theory of art anticipated, and perhaps made possible the modernist art he loathed. Author note: Mary Ann Calo, Visiting Assistant Professor at Colgate University, has for a decade taught art history courses in Florence, Italy.
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From the Publisher:
Berenson's legacy to modern art is revealed through his writings
From the Inside Flap:
"Calo is clear, erudite but not difficult, informative, and interesting.... [Her] work will be like a gust of fresh air.... [It] shows us a way to understand Berenson fairly and adds a vision of him embedded in the intellectual pursuits of his time. This is a valuable source book."
—Mary Vernon, Meadows School of Art, Southern Methodist University
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- PublisherTemple University Press
- Publication date1994
- ISBN 10 1566391172
- ISBN 13 9781566391177
- BindingPaperback
- Edition number1
- Number of pages264