book cover

The Bigger Picture: Women Who Changed the Art World

by Sophia Bennett, illustrated by Manjit Thapp

Interest age: 9 to 14
Reading age: 9+

Published by Tate Publishing, 2019

  • Historical
  • Non-fiction

About this book

For thousands of years, anonymous (and predominantly female) makers have created beautiful objects with great skill and artistry. Yet in the West, weaving, sewing, embroidery and painting on crockery were considered crafts, and not fine art like painting or sculpture. Instead, they were known as decorative arts and their makers weren't usually considered great artists.

This wasn't the case all over the world: in China, arts such as calligraphy and embroidery were always considered as important as painting and sculpture. Islamic art has always prized garden design, carpet making and architecture.

In this fascinating book, women artists from all over the world and their work are profiled - from Sonia Boyce, a contemporary London artist whose art considers the depiction of the black female figure, to the art activist group the Guerrilla Girls, famous for their subversive posters, and Paula Rego, Cindy Sherman, Louise Bourgeois and Ana Mendieta among many others.

There's also a useful glossary of art terms used in the book, a timeline and, in many cases, a short Q&A with the person being profiled, including questions about their influences and their top tips for becoming an artist.

About the author

Sophia Bennett is the author of the Threads series, whose debut novel won the Times/Chicken House Children's Fiction Competition in 2009 and was subsequently published around the world. You Don't Know Me is her fifth book of YA contemporary fiction for Chicken House. Sophia travelled extensively as an army child and had various careers before settling down to write. She now lives in London with her family, writes full time and mostly limits her travelling to school visits and book festivals, to celebrate reading and writing for pleasure.

More books like this

Share this page Twitter Facebook LinkedIn