Want to learn Art History the creative way? GARDNER'S ART THROUGH THE AGES: A GLOBAL HISTORY, VOLUME II, 16th Edition, is the unique resource for you! Exploring pivotal artistic works from the Stone Age to the modern era, readers have trusted the expertise in this text for more than 85 years. Even better, the learning features make art history as colorful as the images on the page. Use the Scale feature to imagine art works in their true size. Use the ebook to zoom in on fine image details like brush strokes just as the artists saw them. Use Google Earth coordinates to find the location of famous works of art in their homelands. Much more than an ordinary text, this resource combines scholarship and storytelling with YouTube playlists, videos, flashcards, how-to writing resources, quizzing and other features that bring art history into focus and inspire success in your course. Important Notice: Media content referenced within the product description or the product text may not be available in the ebook version.
A pretty good textbook. I read on screens badly so opted for the paperback version -- terrible choice on my part. Biiiig floppy book, tiny pictures. (But at least all in color.) Ebook version probably superior in several ways. Kleiner's commentary didn't make me want to fight him most of the time, and the art included was more diverse than I expected. That isn't to say it actually *was* diverse; most of what's covered is extremely Western, for better or worse. Still, a decent overview of Western art, at least, from the 1500s through modern era. If this particular art history class had actually been taught by a professor instead of...whatever verb my class's professor was instigating (monitoring?), I might've really enjoyed the textbook (and course) as a jumping off point. Ah well.
I bought volumes 1 and 2 a long time ago at a used book store, but have only in the last couple of years pulled them out to read as an art survey class for the kids. There's probably updates to this by now, but this one's not bad. We didn't read through every single word, but this is a great full color art history textbook. I love that it brings in context from what is happening socially at the time, and it tries to be sensitive to issues of gender, sexual identity, race, and ethnicity. Even so, it spends a loooot of time in Europe to the detriment of other cultures, and though more women are included as we get closer to the present, the majority of the artists are still white men.
This book I read for my college class offers a pretty good picture of art since 1300. While I was taking the class, I learned a lot about art, which this textbook definitely helped with. Old Masters and pioneers alike are discussed here, with the politics of art touched on but not emphasized too much.
However, this textbook knows more about art than the historical context behind said art. It also does not have any aesthetic judgment on the art, approaching each work with similar enthusiasm, even when an artwork is bad. Although I suppose that is standard for art textbooks nowadays, to allow the student to form their own opinions.
We love a textbook for class that I had to read all of to pass. I’m glad I did though. I enjoyed getting to know more about the aspects of art history I already knew in addition to the many things I had no clue about. It’s obviously very brief, but I think it does it’s job well. It’s made me really think about perusing art history.
I enjoy reading about Art History, but I don't enjoy reading textbooks. This is a textbook. Regardless, I was happy with it until it gets into the last hundred years of art history and then much of the featured art is crap. Hardly art. Love reading about Da Vinci and Van Gogh.
A well-written textbook. Very thorough in taking a beginner chronologically through significant art movements. Examples are well chosen and highly relevant. Easy read - and more importantly, a enjoyable read. Perfect book for someone interested in a solid grounding of art history.
Alternate Title: Let's Use Big Fancy Words to Describe Art without Saying Anything of True Merit!
Alternate, alternate title: We're Totally Just Guessing What These Paintings Represent, but We're Using Lots of Words to Make it Sound Like We Do Know (*shrug*).
Art history is entirely subjective to the viewer I think, and I hate when textbooks try to shape your view to be narrow and uninterpretive of the works.
CONSTANTLY referencing things from the first volume (which ends with chapter 13), so if you can either get both volumes OR get the combined version, even if you're only taking one half of art history, you'll be much better off.
Now this is how a textbook should be written. The most entertaining, exciting, and educational textbook I've ever had to read. It tells a story while imparting knowledge. It gets you excited about all aspects of the subject. It doesn't repeat itself over and over. While there are some paragraph long sentences, comma use is always appropriate. You might have to re-read a chapter or two, but only because they were so interesting you blew through them in one second.
OK I haven't read many art history books, but I like reading this. Maybe it is the topic which makes it so enjoyable for me, but I think it is the writing as well. I have read some terribly written history books. This book I enjoy.
A later version of my Art History textbook. Thank goodness I don't have to read this one! (I refer to the pictures) While comprehensive in Gardners view of Art history there were no women... what?
Like any interpretation of ART, I think that only the photos tell a kind of truth.