Book Reviews

Author Finds Beauty in Guarding Art

Even for those who frequent art museums, the daily routines of museum guards can be enigmatic. In uniform in the corner of galleries, guards are responsible for the difficult task of keeping priceless artworks safe from hoards of curious onlookers. In his celebrated 2023 memoir All the Beauty in the World, author Patrick Bringley shares insights about art and life from the perspective of a museum guard. The result is a text that makes readers reconsider the art workers who safeguard cultural treasures and provides a new appreciation for how to look closely at works of art.

A former guard at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Bringley came to a profession in security after working in the events department at The New Yorker. The career change was triggered by the passing of his brother from cancer at a young age. In the ensuing years of guarding and looking closely at centuries of human creativity on view at The Met, Bringley found solace and learned about the power of beauty to uplift the human spirit. In his book he movingly explores what he learned and how it changed his life. There are lessons in his story for those who have experienced grief and who might in turn find meaning from encountering art in the aftermath.

Bringley’s descriptions of some of his favorite artworks from The Met are both precise and extravagant. He is able to weave stories about art and artists with experience and aesthetic impact in a book that becomes its own tour through the museum and through his decade of working at one of the world’s largest art institutions. In between the author’s entrancing ekphrases, evocative illustrations contributed by Maya McMahon bring artworks to life visually.

Some of Bringley’s anecdotes include details one might expect. For instance, he shares that keeping watch over boisterous crowds during blockbuster shows is challenging work and that standing all day is hard on the body. Other details from his years of observing people and art are more nuanced and share poignant aspects of what it means to look at, and engage with, art. These episodes tend to come from human encounters with visitors, students, art enthusiasts, and co-workers, among others.

Many of the writer’s insights go beyond the galleries of The Met and reveal the inner workings of the museum’s guard corps. Bringley shares personal stories about many of his co-workers, illustrating the rich and vibrant diversity of those with whom he worked at the museum. The book becomes something of an accidental portrait of New York in the process, depicting the city and the institution as the nexus of a beautifully interconnected world with many profound stories to share.

All the Beauty in the World is a pleasurable jaunt and one that encourages its readers to take their time on their next museum visit, whether it be at The Met or elsewhere. Certainly, Bringley had an advantage of being alone in galleries for hours on end as part of his job, but he also brings to the endeavor a keen sensitivity for looking at art and for incisive commentary on how it touched and uplifted his life. In doing so he inspires readers to look closer, see better, and experience more deeply.

All the Beauty in the World was published by Simon and Schuster and is available at popular book sellers as well as through the publisher. For readers in the Providence area interested in supporting local bookstores, Books on the Square is also a great venue for book purchases. Learn more about Patrick Bringley at www.patrickbringley.com.

Book Review: Rendez-vous with Art

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Title: Rendez-vous with Art

Authors: Philippe de Montebello and Martin Gayford

Length: 248 pages

Publisher: Thames & Hudson

Year: 2014

More than a straightforward art history text, Rendez-vous with Art is an unusual volume that compiles engaging conversations between Philippe de Montebello, the longtime director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Martin Gayford, a British critic and journalist. These art-focused chats touch on a wide range of issues and emphasize the need to look closely at art in the modern world. It is a fast and delightful read.

The book is appropriately titled as it centers around a series of short meetings had by Montebello and Gayford in some of the world’s leading art places. Within the context of singular conversations about individual works of art, the authors touch either pointedly or glancingly on topics as varied as museum studies, sociological issues around art, or simply the need for close and careful looking. The enjoyment of looking and dissecting images is central to their friendly banter.

The conversational nature of the text invites us, the readers, into the intellectual but accessible crossfire between these two great art minds. It is a stimulating device that encourages us to interrogate our own preconceived notions about great art seen in important institutions. The book makes us a fellow interlocutor on a journey that is both about our perception of works of art and our ability to narrate those perceptions to others in a meaningful way.

In this sense, Rendez-vous with Art, touches on the central conceits of art history - the necessity to look, to examine, to describe, and to question. The artworks discussed are the fulcrum of the text. The physicality of objects is central to the face-to-face conversations at the core of this unwittingly quick and enjoyable read, which inserts art into a place often held by theory in art-writing.

The co-authors also contribute their respective views as the longest-serving director of one of preeminent art museums, and a journalist and critic whose skills for research and composition of sure-footed prose are at the top of their powers. They bring their years of expertise to bear in thoughtful and provocative talks that make us want to learn more, and look more.

This is, in short, a book that will renew your passion for closely examining, fully understanding, and deeply appreciating works of art.

Rendez-vous with Art is available at all major retailers, but do consider patronizing your local independent bookstore!

If you are an author or publisher who would like a book considered for future reviews here, please contact me at michael@michaelrosefineart.com.