Books by Charlotte Mullins
Charlotte Mullins is an art critic, writer and broadcaster. She has worked
as the arts editor of The Independent on Sunday, the editor of Art Review,
the V&A magazine Art Quarterly, and is the newly appointed art critic for
Country Life.
A Little History of Art
by Charlotte Mullins
Part of the Little History series, published by Yale University Press
“Brief informed surveys of complicated subjects are always helpful so I was pleased to see a new book in the Yale University Press Little Histories series: art critic Charlotte Mullins taking on 100,000 years of art history in A Little History of Art. Theoretically aimed at young adults, these books are great for older adults too.” Read more...
Notable Nonfiction of Spring 2022
Sophie Roell, Journalist
“Her subtitle, ‘A New State of the Art’, is telling. I feel she really embraces this new tendency, and the rehabilitation of the aesthetic, the appetite for paint we see across many artists working in different parts of the world, and the desire to paint the figure. This is another reasoned selection of painters who really deserve a place amongst other artists who are keeping this art historical dialogue with painters of the past alive.” Read more...
The best books on Figurative Painting Today
Julien Delagrange, Artists & Art Critic
Interviews with Charlotte Mullins
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1
This is Tomorrow: Twentieth-century Britain and its Artists
by Michael Bird -
2
Ninth Street Women: Five Painters and the Movement That Changed Modern Art
by Mary Gabriel -
3
A History of Art History
by Christopher S. Wood -
4
Women, Art, and Society
by Whitney Chadwick -
5
Life Between Islands: Caribbean-British Art 1950s – Now
by Alex Farquharson & David A. Bailey
The best books on Art History, recommended by Charlotte Mullins
The best books on Art History, recommended by Charlotte Mullins
The critic Charlotte Mullins, author of A Little History of Art, recommends five books that have altered her understanding of art history. Too often, she argues, we have forgotten that our concept of the past is deeply influenced by the views of those who wrote about it first; these readable, well-researched books offer readers a fresh perspective.
Interviews where books by Charlotte Mullins were recommended
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1
Art Since 1900: Modernism, Antimodernism, Postmodernism
by B. H. D. Buchloch, David Joselit, Hal Foster & Rosalind E. Krauss -
2
Painting Today
by Tony Godfrey -
3
Painting (Whitechapel: Documents of Contemporary Art)
by Terry R. Myers -
4
Vitamin P2: New Perspectives in Painting
by Barry Schwabsky -
5
Picturing People: The New State of the Art
by Charlotte Mullins
The best books on Figurative Painting Today, recommended by Julien Delagrange
The best books on Figurative Painting Today, recommended by Julien Delagrange
Collectors and curators have been clamouring for figurative art in recent years, as a generation of painters take a more traditional, representational approach to addressing major cultural themes in their work. But is figurative painting today merely a reactionary impulse, a kind of nostalgia for art that preceded modernism, postmodernism and the fragmentation in art-making that was ushered in by conceptual art? There is much more to it than that, argues painter and art historian Julien Delagrange.
Notable Nonfiction of Spring 2022, recommended by Sophie Roell
In the past few months, lots of history books about the past as well as excellent insights into the present have hit the shelves. Some are gripping reads offering a few hours of escapism, others contributions to our human quest to make the world a better place. Some manage both. Five Books editor Sophie Roell offers a roundup of the most notable new books of nonfiction published in March, April and May 2022.