•  116
    Precision, Misprecision, Misprision
    Critical Inquiry 25 (1): 169-180. 1998.
  •  76
    A Thought Experiment, for a Book to Be Called "Failure in Twentieth-Century Art"
    The Journal of Aesthetic Education 32 (4): 43. 1998.
  •  75
    Ten Reasons Why E. H. Gombrich is not Connected to Art History
    Human Affairs 19 (3): 304-310. 2009.
    Ten Reasons Why E. H. Gombrich is not Connected to Art History This is a speculative essay on the place of E. H. Gombrich in art history. Gombrich is universally known, and still often studied at the undergraduate and graduate levels. He is indispensable for the historiography of the discipline. But at the same time, he is not often cited, and his work is not usually part of the ongoing conversations of the current state of art history or visual studies. This brief essay questions that condition…Read more
  •  105
    Logic and images in art history
    Perspectives on Science 7 (2): 151-180. 1999.
    : This essay is an attempt to see how some of Galison's ideas and analyses look from the vantage of art history. If there's to be dialogue between the history of science and the history of art, it will be necessary to find historically recognizable senses for words like "logic" and "homologous." I also propose how Galison's kinds of images might fit into larger classifications of images known to the history of art
  •  79
    Book review: The poetics of perspective (review)
    Philosophy and Literature 19 (2). 1995.
  •  118
    Art History without Theory
    Critical Inquiry 14 (2): 354-378. 1988.
    The theories I have outlined suggest that by displacing but not excluding theory, art historical practice at once grounds itself in empiricism and implies an acceptance of theory’s claim that it cannot be so grounded. But beyond descriptions like this, the theories are not a helpful way to understand practice because they cannot account for its persistence except by pointing to its transgressions and entanglements in self-contradiction. Nor does it help to say, pace Steven Knapp, Walter Benn Mic…Read more
  •  3
    The Art Seminar: Photography Theory (edited book)
    Routledge. 2006.
  •  47
    Beyond the Aesthetic and the Anti-Aesthetic (edited book)
    with Harper Montgomery
    Pennsylvania State University Press. 2013.
    Each of the five volumes in the Stone Art Theory Institutes series—and the seminars on which they are based—brings together a range of scholars who are not always directly familiar with one another’s work. The outcome of each of these convergences is an extensive and “unpredictable conversation” on knotty and provocative issues about art. This fourth volume in the series, _Beyond the Aesthetic and the Anti-Aesthetic_, focuses on questions revolving around the concepts of the aesthetic, the anti-…Read more
  •  1408
    Whitney Davis's General Theory of Visual Culture (review)
    College Art Association Books Reviews. 2012.
    This is a brief essay on Whitney Davis's book. A shorter version, edited down by the College Art Association, is on their online book reviews site (protected by a paywall).