artbull-review-process
GitHub解析《艺术公报》双盲同行评审流程,涵盖审稿标准、图片要求及常见拒稿原因。帮助用户在投稿前压力测试论文、理解匿名规范、解读决定信并规划修改策略,预判编辑与审稿人关注点。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill artbull-review-process -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "artbull-review-process",
"description": "Use to understand how The Art Bulletin evaluates a submission — double-blind peer review, what referees and the editor look for in art-historical work, and the likely decision outcomes. Helps anticipate review; it does not contact editors or simulate a specific referee."
}
Review Process (artbull-review-process)
The Art Bulletin uses double-blind peer review: both author and reviewers are anonymous, which is why submissions must be Microsoft Word (not PDF) with all author-identifying information stripped from text and notes. Knowing what referees weigh helps you pre-empt the objections that sink papers.
When to trigger
- Before submitting, to pressure-test the paper against likely referee objections
- Understanding why anonymity (Word, no self-revealing citations) matters procedurally
- Interpreting a decision letter and planning next steps
- Deciding whether the contribution is strong enough for the discipline's flagship
How the journal evaluates
- Double-blind, expert review. The editor sends anonymized manuscripts to specialist referees;
anonymity protects the process, so any breach (names, "as I argued in…," telltale metadata) is a
real risk (see
artbull-submission). - What referees weigh. The originality and significance of the art-historical argument; the quality of close visual analysis; the soundness of documentary, archival, and provenance evidence; command of the historiography; and whether the figures support the claims.
- Images are part of review. Referees judge whether the illustrations are adequate and whether the visual claims are visible in them — thin or absent figures undermine the case.
- Editorial judgment. The editor(s)-in-chief weigh referee reports and decide; rigorous peer review is central to the journal's standing. (As of 2026-06-22 The Art Bulletin has two Co-Editors-in-Chief; confirm the current masthead before naming them.)
- Likely outcomes. Reject; revise and resubmit (the common path for promising work needing more); or accept (often conditional). Plan for an R&R rather than a clean accept.
Pre-empt the common objections
- "Description, not argument" → strengthen the thesis (see
artbull-argument-development). - "Thin looking" → deepen close analysis and supply detail figures (see
artbull-visual-analysis). - "Ignores key scholarship" → fix positioning (see
artbull-scholarly-positioning). - "Evidence does not support the claim" → tighten sources (see
artbull-evidence-and-sources).
Anti-patterns
- Breaking anonymity in text, notes, or file metadata (see
artbull-submission) - Submitting before the argument and figures can withstand expert scrutiny
- Expecting a clean accept; not budgeting time for an R&R
- Treating reviewer disagreement as defeat rather than direction
Desk-screen and referee-axis matrix for the discipline's flagship
Before a manuscript reaches specialist referees, an editorial screen at the College Art Association's quarterly weeds out submissions that cannot be reviewed or do not fit.
| Stage | What it checks | Common failure here | Where to fix it |
|---|---|---|---|
| Desk — form | Word (not PDF), anonymized, within caps | A PDF that cannot be anonymized; identifiers in metadata | artbull-submission |
| Desk — fit | Significant contribution, not a catalogue entry | "Under-studied object" as the whole point | artbull-topic-selection |
| Referee — looking | Close visual analysis tied to figures | "Thin," "impressionistic" analysis | artbull-visual-analysis |
| Referee — figures | Whether the plates make visual claims checkable | Absent or low-quality illustrations | artbull-images-and-permissions |
Worked vignette: a strong reading let down by its plates
Suppose a fresh iconographic reading of a fresco cycle goes out for double-blind review. Referee A admires the argument but writes that the visual claims "cannot be verified in the images supplied" — the single full-cycle photograph is too small to show the detail the reading turns on. The editor's letter, read as the rubric, signals the figure problem is decisive: here the plate is part of the evidence, so a brilliant reading the reader cannot see fails on its own terms. The fix is to supply detail crops, clearing their permissions early — the figures needed rescuing, not the argument.
Reviewer-pushback patterns and the venue-specific countermove
- "This is description, not argument." The flagship rewards a contestable thesis; rebuild the claim
so a reader could dispute it (
artbull-argument-development). - "Anonymity is broken." A self-revealing "as I argued in…" or live metadata can taint the
double-blind process; neutralize both before resubmission (
artbull-submission).
Calibration anchors (hedge where uncertain)
- Plan for revise-and-resubmit rather than a clean accept; for promising art-historical work, R&R is the common path at journals of this standing (a working expectation, not a published rate — confirm specifics against the journal's current submission guidelines).
- Because review is double-blind, the figures travel anonymized and are judged as evidence — thin or absent plates undercut even a sound argument; the editor(s)-in-chief weigh the reports and decide.
Output format
【Model】double-blind; anonymity intact? [Y/N]
【Referee axes】argument · visual analysis · evidence · historiography · figures
【Weakest axis】where a referee will push → which skill fixes it
【Likely outcome】reject / R&R / (conditional) accept — plan accordingly
【Next】artbull-submission (pre-submit) or artbull-revision-and-response (post-decision)
Supplementary resources
../../resources/external_tools.md— anonymization and manuscript-prep tooling../../resources/official-source-map.md— double-blind policy and review wording (待核实)
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:29


