Jeffrey Chipps Smith is Kay Fortson Chair in European Art at the University of Texas at Austin, USA.
Visual Acuity and the Arts of Communication in Early Modern Germany, edited by Jeffrey Chipps Smith, puts productive pressure on its period's blind spots. Its essays consider German visual culture from the late fifteenth to early eighteenth centuries by means of healthy reliance on present-day creativity and hermeneutic skill. ... Focused on the power of visualization, the authors use early modern objects and texts largely as a prompt for investigating aspects of visual culture that early modern people seem not to have written much about. ...[T]he notion of 'visual acuity' here affirms a keenness of perception and interpretation on the parts of both maker and scholar, as it builds on the material, object, and social focuses of previous decades of art history. - CAA Reviews Established scholars and graduate students come together in this volume to explore relationships between art and understanding during the early modern period. This truly interdisciplinary volume connects historians, art historians, music historians, and literary scholars whose essays range from calligraphy to performance to architecture. - Renaissance Quarterly [The] selected essays, which are contextualized and harmonized in [Chipps Smith's] wonderful introduction, demonstrate the elegant simplicity of acute seeing. ...The issues laid bare in this volume - visual literacy, copies and emulation, memory and devotion, and the arts of communication and reception - are indeed all topics of acute interest to scholars of early modern as well as medieval Germany. - Sehepunkte Visual Acuity and the Arts of Communication in Early Modern Germany would be a worthy addition to the library of any scholar of the arts and communication, visual or otherwise, in sixteenth-century Germany. - Sixteenth Century Journal The theme appealed to Smith as an art historian, and many essays in the volume are by FNI participants in that field. Other essays demonstrate that historians and scholars of music or literature also have much to gain - and to add - by engaging with visual images and considering the act of seeing. - Historians of Netherlandish Art The broad scope of topics make this volume dynamic and interesting. By taking an individual case-study approach rather than forcing an attempt at a larger synthesis, editor Jeffrey Chipps Smith and the contributors have created a volume that highlights the multiplicity of ways in which visual presentation and reception were utilized in early modern Germany. - Journal of Jesuit Studies