the people's critic

The people's critic

With his finely tuned bullshit meter and his dramatic flair,
Robert Hughes has become America's best guide through the thickets of fine art.

+ + +

"American Visions:

The Epic History

of Art in America."

By Robert Hughes.

Knopf, 635 pages.

BY GARY KAMIYA | Robert Hughes may not be the best art critic writing today, but he has certainly been the most necessary. For 27 years, he has used his mass-culture bully pulpit at Time magazine to remind Americans that, beneath the din and hammer of our jacked-up culture, quieter objects are worth regarding. It wasn't until the '80s, however, that the Australian expat really earned his adopted country's thanks. During that decade his writing -- accessible yet authoritative, boisterous yet refined -- cut like a scalpel through the mystification, hysteria and general gobbledygook that hung over the art world like a footnoted, greenback-stuffed cloud. Hughes wasn't responsible for the collapse of the wildly inflated '80s art scene -- the random movements of the aesthetic stock market saw to that -- but his astringency offered some blessed relief from the prevailing hype.

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Winslow Homer The Gulf Stream, 1899. Oil on canvas, 281/8x491/8" (71.4x124.8 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Catherine Lorillard Wolfe Collection, Wolfe Fund, 1906.


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