JENNIFER HIGGIE is a writer who studied painting at art school in Australia before moving to London. Previously the editor of frieze magazine, she was also the presenter of Bow Down, a podcast about women in art history. She is a screenwriter, the editor of a collection of writings on art and humour, The Artist's Joke, a novel, Bedlam, a children's book, There's Not One, and The Mirror and the Palette: Rebellion, Revolution and Resilience - 500 Years of Women's Self-Portraits.
A bewitching, invigorating history of women artists, the work
they've made and the impossibly hard conditions in which it was
produced. I can't think of a more satisfying riposte to anyone who
asks why there have been no great women artists than to present
them with this incandescent book
*OLIVIA LAING*
Brilliant . . . reveals an until-now hidden history of women's
self-portraiture. A gift that keeps on giving
*NEW STATESMAN, Books of the Year*
An uplifting and dazzling tour through history . . . a breakout
book that shifts the spotlight onto the names that the art world
has painted over. It's illuminating and essential reading
*STYLIST*
Sumptuous as well as fascinating
*OBSERVER*
Joyous . . . As Jennifer Higgie argues in this fine, haunting book,
women have always made art, despite the discouragement lobbed in
their path. The Mirror and the Palette is a redress, and vividly
done - so much so that it rustles with the women's presence. You
feel them standing behind you, expectant . . . A revelatory
study
*SUNDAY TELEGRAPH*
Jennifer Higgie puts female artists centre stage with this
fascinating biography looking at 500 years of self-portraits
*THE i NEWSPAPER*
A fascinating survey of women's self-portraits from the Renaissance
to the 20th century . . . Extraordinary
*DAILY MAIL*
This engrossing book sheds new light on forgotten and disregarded
female artists throughout history - and about time too . . . an
absorbing story of women's art made in the European tradition
*EVENING STANDARD*
Higgie's book is a useful primer for those seeking to understand
the obstacles and challenges faced by women artists over the
centuries, as well as a timely assessment of what it means to look
at women artists from history today. The Mirror and the Palette is
an important and brilliantly accessible resource
*VOGUE*
Jennifer Higgie has created a masterpiece of her own within the
pages of this rich, celebratory tome, which examines a
cross-section of female artists spanning back across the past 500
years. Illuminating and captivating, this is a sumptuous and vital
read for all lovers of art
*WOMAN & HOME, best non-fiction books of 2021*
Higgie's book is a riposte to Renoir and centuries of unknowing and
misjudging. Reading it is like travelling with an ever-excited
companion who has lots to say . . . always compelling
*LITERARY REVIEW*
Higgie's chatty, intimate style grips from the opening pages
*FINANCIAL TIMES*
[Higgie is] a master storyteller and brilliant translator of
sensory experiences, she makes us care about her artists as people.
An eye-opening intervention in the memory system of art history,
The Mirror and the Palette is a major contribution, not least for
the author's appealing, accessible writing
*TLS*
[An] illuminating new study on why women have been largely shut out
of art history. Higgie's clever thesis looks at self-portraits as a
springboard, giving fresh insights into brilliant artists such as
Frida Kahlo, Loïs Mailou Jones, Amrita Sher-Gil, Suzanne Valadon,
Gwen John, Artemisia Gentileschi and Paula Modersohn-Becker
*THE ART NEWSPAPER*
The Mirror and the Palette reminded me immediately of the best kind
of Antonia Fraser reading experience: knowledgeable and richly
researched but written with an intuitive, sympathetic eye for the
most humanising details of personalities we know only as cultural
icons, or not at all. Higgie's own quiet but persistent presence as
a reader and a looker in these sinuous little biographies is also
the courage of the researcher who really cares about her subject
and can turn dry information into the kind of compulsive read that
makes you wish you had your daily commute back
*NIAMH CAMPBELL, author of THIS HAPPY*
The stories told by the lives of these women artists and the
self-portraits they made comprise a history as compelling as it is
shocking. The verve and clarity of Higgie's writing and the range
of her research combine to position THE MIRROR AND THE PALETTE as a
future classic of art history
*MICHAEL BRACEWELL*
Superbly researched and elegantly written . . . a fascinating study
in the defiant and determined creativity of women that was so
lamentably actively erased by official art histories . . .
gloriously readable and deeply intelligent
*GRISELDA POLLOCK*
In this idiosyncratic and fascinating primer, Higgie skillfully
restores marginalized women self-portraitists to their rightful
place in the art pantheon. Full of edgy insights, this engrossing
survey will delight art connoisseurs and general readers alike
*PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (Starred)*
A lively and edifying read
*BBC HISTORY MAGAZINE*
In The Mirror and the Palette Jennifer Higgie celebrates 20 women
artists who defied the odds and broke taboos to present themselves,
and their female perspective on the times they lived in, to the
world
*CHRISTIES*
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