Unique and fragile objects, old master drawings are kept in
storage, their access limited to knowing scholars, other artists,
and dedicated collectors. Now, through the sponsorship of the
Midwest Art History Society and the commendable efforts of Burton
Dunbar and Edward Olszewski, the drawings will be readily
accessible to everyone. This first volume of Drawings in
Midwestern Collections offers a full listing of old master
drawings from collections throughout the Midwest. Thoroughly
researched, this important reference book introduces a corpus of
the rarest of European drawings through the year 1500, a time
when artists had just begun to value drawings as works of art,
and from which only a limited number of drawings have
survived.
Each of the thirty entries in this volume is written by a scholar
who has immediate access to the artwork itself and who is a
specialist in the art of that period. In addition to basic
information about the work, the authors have commented on each
drawing's artistic significance and on problems surrounding it.
Included also are reproductions of the drawings as well as
numerous illustrations of comparable works from other American
and European collections.
Drawings in Midwestern Collections presents previously
unpublished technical information on many of the drawings, argues
for the new attribution of several of them, provides an up-to-
date summary of scholarship on each work, and, taken as a whole,
provides insight into the diversity of the holdings of midwestern
museums. The first in a series of books that will include all
drawings in more than seventy midwestern collections, Drawings
in Midwestern Collections: Volume I, Early Works is certain
to enrich the lives of students, scholars, museum personnel, and
the general public.
About the Editors
Burton L. Dunbar is Professor of Art History at the University of
Missouri-Kansas City.
Edward J. Olszewski is Professor of Art History at Case Western
Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. He is also the author of
The Draftsman's Eye.