A Beach Read for the Art Historian

A Beach Read for the Art Historian

Reviews & Visits Thursday, July 16, 2009 7:47 pm 2 comments
hovingmummies

Chick lit? Romance novels? Not for the art historian or museum professional, surely!  If you’re looking for a juicy read that you can apply to your day job, look no further than (the regrettably out of print) Making the Mummies Dance by Thomas Hoving.  I’ve been looking for a copy of this book for years, and finally found it for only five bucks among the vast shelves of my new favorite bookstore.  This book not only kept me sane through a week alone in my new apartment without TV or internet, it helped me get back into museum mode after a month of doing little more than catching up on Bravo marathons post-graduation.  

This wonderfully gossipy tell-all from the director who revolutionized the Metropolitan Museum of Art between 1967-77 is readable, informative, and has all the famous and infamous names of the 60′s and 70′s. Hoving doesn’t shy from telling every detail, good or bad, about his former curators, trustees, donors, and enemies — and he’s also not shy about his own accomplishments. I found Hoving’s self-confidence more amusing than annoying, and in my opinion it was often justified: he did, after all, expand the Met’s encyclopedic collections as well as its campus, truly pushing the Met into the household name it is today  Either way, it’s not hard to get past the boasting (to his credit, he does identify what he thinks were his mistakes) and simply enjoy this conversational confessional, with its glimpse into the inner workings of the glittery world of Museum trustees and executives, who jetsetted back and forth between countries every other week, courted donors with grand parties, and built palatial palaces for art in an age before recessions and budget cuts.  Definitely a must-read for any museum professional or museum lover.

Making the Mummies Dance, Thomas Hoving, 1994. Buy from Amazon

2 Comments

  • Val Span

    That sounds interesting, and hopefully not too hard to find. As an art history grad who now works as a technical editor (so typical), I love to find entertaining books (and blogs) revolving around art history. Another excellent book is The Caravaggio Conspiracy by Peter Watson. Watson set himself up as an art dealer to search out stolen paintings, so it’s a bit cloak-and-dagger, international travel, mission impossible – but all true!

  • thanks for the reference. Yes, Hoving solved the world’s problems on his own and rewrote art history single handedly, but gosh he wrote well! I read Hoving’s book King of the Confessors (about the cross of Bury St Edmunds) way back in 1991 and loved it.

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