The book is written in a straightforward manner, free of technical jargon, so I would happily recommend it to anyone interested in race, art or science . . . It would do a world of good if those who make art, as well as those who consume it, are more aware of the connections drawn in Bindmans important book. * Metascience * Race is Everything: Art and Human Difference parses the pivotal role of the visual arts in both defining and perpetrating racism in the West, particularly in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Cool, informed, and artful, Bindman traces these prejudices back to the Romans and Greeks, whose take on beauty has remained remarkably resilient . . . Bindmans compassion, however, never out- weighs his intellectual agility. Race is Everything is profound and troubling but fundamentally directive, illustrating what needs to be done to rectify our ignorance and the cultural inculcation of hatred. -- Antonella Gambotto-Burke * The Australian * Race has been typically treated as at most a troubling theme, topic, or issue in arts history, rather than a central, abiding and toxic structuring principle of the making, use and understanding of art. Bindman puts race centre stage, proving not only that for the last three centuries of European and American art race was everything, but that such art, through the misuse of its visualizing powers, has been centrally responsible for this disastrous obsession. Eloquent, deeply learned, and fiercely passionate, this book should be required reading for anyone concerned with the history of art. * Joseph Leo Koerner, Victor S. Thomas Professor of the History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University * In this remarkable book, David Bindman shows how concepts of packaged human differences labelled as races have deformed every aspect of the human experience and human society. Can a book about race be a page turner? Yes, absolutely, and this is it! * Nina Jablonski, Evan Pugh University Professor of Anthropology at Penn State, and author of Living Color: The Biological and Social Meaning of Skin Color * David Bindmans Race Is Everything more than fulfils the promise of its title. How we see race is determined by our ideologies of difference, which are often so habituated that we believe we see our world and its inhabitants in an unmitigated manner. By looking at the visual codes in modern Western art representing difference from the African to the Jew and beyond Bindman provides us with means of deciphering our visual codes while detailing how such codes evolved and persist. A brilliant (and beautiful) work of cultural criticism. * Sander Gilman, author of Stand Up Straight! A History of Posture * In this wonderful book David Bindman brilliantly explores the ways in which visual art has represented the very idea of racial hierarchy. Linking scientific ideas with the works and lives of artists in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, this lucid, lavishly illustrated text ranges from high art to popular racist imagery, and highlights resisters such as Frederick Douglass and W.E.B. Du Bois. * Steven Lukes, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, New York University *