Abrams/Baltimore Museum of Art, 431 pp., $60.00
Princeton University Press, 208 pp., $39.50
In 1989 John Pope-Hennessy wrote an article for these pages entitled 'The Fall of a Great Museum,' in which, as a former director, he deplored recent developments at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.[1] It was a memorable attack, full of anger and contempt—an attack which still rankles in certain quarters. It was part of a general outcry which brought about the quiet reversal of some proposed policies, but which failed to secure its chief object, the ousting of the then-director, Elizabeth Esteve-Coll. Rereading Pope-Hennessy's article recently, I was struck less by the broad thrust of the argument than by several assumptions on which it rested, all of which seem to indicate a shift of taste and intellectual approach since the days of his directorship.
Review, 5628 words
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