Art Books for the People
The Origins of The Penguin Modern Painters
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Aug '25
£14.00
This title is due to be published on 31st August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Demonstrates the historical significance of The Penguin Modern Painters within debates surrounding art, publishing and adult education.
The Penguin Modern Painters (1944–1959) was a groundbreaking series of British art monographs designed to promote the work of contemporary artists to a general readership. This Element makes a contribution to the understanding of the relationship between publishing and the visual arts during the Second World War.The Penguin Modern Painters (1944–1959) was a groundbreaking series of British art monographs designed to promote the work of contemporary artists to a general readership. In examining the factors that influenced the wartime conception and development of the series, this Element makes a contribution to the understanding of the relationship between publishing and the visual arts during the Second World War. The study argues that the emergence of The Penguin Modern Painters was inextricably linked to the aims of British wartime cultural policy and the ideology of the pre-war adult education movement. The key personalities involved are identified and their multiple and often conflicting motives analysed to provide new insights into the shifting perspectives of Britain's elites regarding the way that art was presented to the public in the 1940s. This Element provides a foundation on which further study of twentieth-century art publishing in Britain might be developed.
ISBN: 9781009578141
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
75 pages