#1 (with an asterisk)
Rogues’ Gallery is the bestselling work of art history in the country.
Vanity Fair: Rogues’ Gallery is “explosive”
Vanity Fair’s Society & Style gives Georgette Mosbacher‘s launch party for Rogues Gallery top billing over competing fetes that attracted mere movie stars and Chelsea Clinton in a post on Thursday night’s top parties. “Why?” asks VF. “Because social powerhouses have been awaiting this book with bated breath, and where better to toast it than […]
Sympathy for the Devil: At the Brooke Astor trial
On Thursday morning, Charlene Marshall was sobbing, her eyes bloodshot and bright red when she walked into Supreme Court in Manhattan where her husband Anthony is on trial, charged with manipulating his Alzheimer’s Disease-stricken mother, the philanthropist and socialite Brooke Astor, into changing her will in his favor, plundering her estate and selling off her […]
Frieze: a “meticulous” and “entertaining romp”
Brian Sholis of Frieze calls Rogues’ Gallery “an unabashedly unofficial history… ranging from the Met’s early days as ‘a firetrap with shellacked floors and walls covered with red billiard cloth’ to the questions facing the institution today as it adjusts to a new director, Thomas P. Campbell, after being led for 30 years by Philippe […]
I’ll Huff and I’ll Post
I’ve just made my debut on The Huffington Post (thanks Arianna!), with some contrarian observations about the prosecution of Anthony Marshall, Brooke Astor’s only child. Astor, Marshall and Annette de la Renta, who testified at the trial this week, have all been trustees of the Metropolitan Museum, and feature prominently in the cast of characters […]
Room With A View
David Patrick Columbia‘s New York Social Diary stopped by Georgette Mosbacher‘s book launch party for Rogues’ Gallery last night, in her sprawling apartment overlooking the Metropolitan Museum of Art. There’s more on the party here.
“Proustian figures drawn by ego and propelled by imagined furies”
“Mr. Gross’ history of the mechanisms and machinations of personality that created the Met is fascinating and a lesson to all of us on many levels about the marriage of human behavior and civic responsibility,” writes a particularly poetic David Patrick Columbia, reviewing Rogues’ Gallery on New York Social Diary today. “Mr. Gross who is […]
Pub date cometh
Rogues Gallery is “a fascinating read,” says artinfo.com, “by turns funny, outrageous, and disconcerting — that makes public what arguably should have been public knowledge long ago. Gross’s coup is not only in the vast amounts of information he has obtained but also in his ability to tell a story about the rich and powerful […]
Azzie vs. Anna
Azzedine Alaia, one of my favorite designers in the days when I covered fashion, has refused to allow models to wear seven of his gowns to the Metropolitan Museum’s Costume Institute gala tonight, according to Cathy Horyn in the New York Times: “‘It would have been silly to have seven girls wearing my dresses at […]
Good Buzz
“Undeniably fun, Rogue’s Gallery is a hefty (over 500 pages), detailed guilty pleasure that’s hard to put down,” says the presumably pseudonymous Buzz Girl at Book Page’s Book Case blog. She adds that one of her friends who works for the museum “had the pleasure of hanging up on Gross when barraged with inappropriate questions.” […]