“Steering the conversation towards anonymous artisans and the sort of craft that doesn’t usually end up on museum pedestals, Shales brings ‘making’ back down to earth where it can connect to our cities and everyday lives.”
— Theaster Gates
“Smart hands indicate intelligence and sensitivity. Alert eyes identify works made with ingenuity. Shales’s book sharpens our visual perception and appreciation of finely crafted objects and environments which have enriched our lives from the beginning of time.”
— Sheila Hicks
“Regardless of craft heroes, doctrine, and orthodoxies, it is the sensory object, however humble, that is celebrated here: ‘Can we respect craft that lies unsigned and underfoot and which oxygenates our lives, giving us tactile joy? To do so can restore our optimism that human manufacturing is healthier for our minds than it is harmful to our environment.’ Shales embraces the role of technology, but also stresses the importance of ‘slow’ craft in a rushed world. Such inclusiveness is an enrichment, not a dilution.”
— David Whiting, Crafts Magazine
“A wide-ranging discussion of questions that shape our understanding of craft.”
— Crafts Magazine
"Shales’ book is a valuable addition to craft scholarship. . . . It is by documenting the multifaceted scope of craft that Shales astounds. . . . His extensive exposition makes plain that craft is rarely the elite object owned and/or displayed by a wealthy patron. More often it is embedded in the everyday material culture that surrounds us."
— Capital and Class
"To be sure, Shales is a gifted, garrulous, and glorious explainer, in essence, he is a philosopher of the factory floor. He writes highly detailed and observant descriptions of tasks, processes, and objects—no easy feat, particularly when describing how something is made—an issue often overlooked in today’s digitized, desensitized, object-free worlds. Art history is a discipline that eschews fieldwork, but the stakes of Shales’s book are just that: a plea for art history to literally think with its hands, instead of just its head, performing research in the field, not only enlivening the narrative, but also, nudging scholarship toward a social imperative."
— Jenni Sorkin, caa.reviews
"Shales crafts a nuanced position . . . [and] points towards how we should widen our perception of craft and where we look for it. . . . [A] critical reading of a very vital cultural field."
— Journal of Design History
"Skills are of key importance in craft and Shales's book brings to the fore the role craft skills play within the field of craft along with that of art and artistry. . . . Craft is a rich field on its own, and Shales's book sheds light on skills and processes often overlooked that are worth engaging with."
— Journal of Canadian Art History