The Art Bulletin (the-art-bulletin)
Journal positioning
The Art Bulletin is the College Art Association's flagship scholarly journal and the
leading generalist venue for art history across all periods, media, and world
regions — from antiquity to the contemporary, painting to architecture to material
and visual culture. Its defining expectation is a substantial, original scholarly
argument whose significance reaches beyond the single object or local specialty:
work that art historians in other fields will find consequential, grounded in close
visual and material analysis and full command of primary sources. A descriptive object
study, a connoisseurial note, or an attribution claim with no larger art-historical
stake is a poor fit here, however sound. This skill is a fit / venue-selection /
re-framing aid. It does not replace the journal's current submission guidelines.
Before submitting, re-check the live Art Bulletin / CAA author instructions and style
guide.
When to trigger
- The author names The Art Bulletin for an art-history manuscript and wants a
fit/framing check.
- A close study of a work, monument, or corpus must be re-framed to show its
discipline-wide art-historical significance.
- The author is choosing between The Art Bulletin and a period/area or theory-driven
art-history journal.
- The author needs the journal's original-argument bar and desk-reject heuristics.
Scope & topic fit
- Major scholarly articles in any field of art history — ancient, medieval, early
modern, modern, contemporary — and any region or tradition.
- Studies that reframe an art-historical problem or open a new line of inquiry, not
merely add an object to an established account.
- Architecture, sculpture, painting, prints, photography, decorative and material
arts, and broader visual and material culture.
- Iconography, patronage, workshop and reception studies, and the historiography of
art, when the argument carries beyond the case.
- Cross-period or cross-cultural arguments and methodologically reflective work
legible to the whole discipline.
- Object- or archive-based research put to conceptual work, not description for its
own sake.
Method & evidence bar
- The contribution is an original, clearly stated art-historical argument with
significance beyond the single object or local specialty — name the intervention.
- Close visual and material analysis of the work(s) is central and does real
argumentative work, not illustration of a thesis settled elsewhere.
- Command of primary sources and documents — visual, archival, textual — is deep and
read critically, with attention to their conditions and silences.
- The piece is framed historically and, where apt, theoretically; the framing earns
its place rather than ornamenting the case.
- Engagement with relevant scholarship reaches across (not only within) the subfield,
demonstrating the broader art-historical stake.
- Interpretive claims are proportionate to the evidence and alert to what the objects
and documents can and cannot support.
Structure & house style
- Long-form scholarly article with a sustained argument; re-check current word limits
and article types (articles, shorter formats) on the live guide.
- Chicago notes-and-bibliography style with full footnotes; archival and visual
citations follow the journal's form.
- Double-blind review: anonymize the manuscript (remove self-identifying citations and
acknowledgements) per current policy.
- Image rights are central: secure reproduction permissions for every illustration and
budget for fees and embargoes well before acceptance.
- Figures must meet the journal's specifications (resolution, format, captions, credit
lines); a separate illustration list and permissions documentation are typically
required.
- Foreign-language sources are quoted and translated per policy; prose is accessible to
art historians outside the subfield.
Official-submission checklist
- Before giving submission-ready advice, read
../../resources/source-basis.md and
../../resources/official-source-map.md; start from the CAA anchors, then cite the
current Art Bulletin page you checked.
- Search the live site for "The Art Bulletin submission guidelines" and follow the
current CAA version.
- Re-check article types and word limits, the Chicago citation/footnote form, and the
abstract requirement.
- Confirm anonymization requirements for double-blind review.
- Re-check image-reproduction permissions, figure specifications, the illustration
list, and any subvention/illustration-cost policy.
- Re-check competing-interest, funding (if applicable), and AI-use disclosure, plus any
translation policy for non-English sources.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions
win.
Pre-submission self-check
Common desk-reject triggers
- A descriptive object study or catalogue-style note with no broader art-historical argument.
- An attribution or connoisseurial claim presented without a larger interpretive stake (better placed elsewhere).
- Thin or uncritical use of visual evidence and primary documents, or claims out of proportion to the objects.
- No explicit positioning in the art-historical literature beyond the immediate case.
- Missing or unsecured image permissions, or figures below specification.
- Wrong venue: a piece pitched to one period/area community a specialist journal would serve better.
Re-routing decision
- Theoretically and methodologically reflective art history →
art-history.
- Contemporary art, criticism, theory, or the avant-garde →
october.
- Connoisseurship, attribution, provenance, or museum/exhibition scholarship →
the-burlington-magazine.
- Interdisciplinary theory across the humanities →
critical-inquiry.
- Aesthetics / philosophy of art is the core contribution →
the-journal-of-aesthetics-and-art-criticism.
Output format
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] The Art Bulletin
[Field/period/region] <closest field, period, region>
[Argument] <the art-historical intervention in one line — what it changes>
[Objects/images] <what works are analyzed and how the visual analysis carries the argument>
[Sources/scholarship] <does the primary research + positioning clear the broad-significance bar?>
[Image permissions] <are reproduction rights and figure specs in hand?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <word limit / Chicago style / anonymization / image permissions / translation>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>