Essays and reminiscences by one of the preeminent art historians of
our time, spanning more than four decades.
An Oblique Autobiography assembles a new collection of essays and
reminiscences by one of the preeminent art historians of our time.
Spanning more than four decades of Yve-Alain Bois's work as a scholar,
journal editor, and occasional curator, this volume traces a deeply
personal itinerary through an important era of art history, in which the
discipline--in part occasioned by Bois's own journey from France to the
United States--was significantly reformulated by new methodologies.
Detailing Bois's early relationships with figures such as Roland
Barthes, Hubert Damisch, Lygia Clark, and Jacques Derrida, as well as
his extended engagements with Rosalind Krauss, Ellsworth Kelly, and
Martin Barré, these essays track Bois's intellectual commitments against
the backdrop of an evolving academic field. With texts that range from
academic journal articles to obituaries, written from 1976 to 2021, An
Oblique Autobiography reveals the range of Bois's authorial voice and
offers a remarkable self-portrait of one of art history's primary
protagonists.