"In this candid book by Jennifer Higgie, an Australian art critic, each painter endures some life-changing trauma. The stark message is that women need to suffer in order to make great paintings, and that trauma is the alchemical ingredient necessary for transforming talent into genius."--Celia Paul "The New York Times Book Review"
"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. It's a subject that's been covered before, but with Higgie's background at Frieze, she's equally plugged into the contemporary currents of feminist art as she is its historical context, lending the text an important freshness... For those wanting to move beyond biography and learn more about the why and how of the struggle of women artists to make their voices heard, The Mirror and the Palette is an important and brilliantly accessible resource."-- "VOGUE"
"Higgie has organized the book thematically to bob and weave through the ties that have bound female painters -- and blow open the so-called liberties they've taken with their art. Coming exactly 50 years after Linda Nochlin published her famous essay 'Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?' Higgie wants to lay the question to rest, once and for all."--Hillary Kelly "Vulture, New York Magazine"
"A master storyteller and brilliant translator of sensory experiences, Higgie makes us care about her artists as people. She is able to retrieve personalities from historical obscurity with just a few words. 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. She shows that we are still just coming to terms with how biased our institutions have been, and how much bigger the story of art really is." --Julie M. Johnson "Times Literary Supplement"
"In this idiosyncratic and fascinating primer, critic and artist 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 Review"
"Higgie's writing is at its most emotionally evocative, even lyrical, when she imagines multitudes of women in their tiny attics and dimly lit studios, looking at themselves and deciding how they want to be remembered. She reflects the feelings of countless women, known and unknown... By skillfully balancing the historical and the imaginative, The Mirror and the Palette is not only a delight to read, but inspirational."-- "Art Fuse"
"As editor at large of frieze magazine and the presenter of Bow Down, a podcast about women in art history, Higgie has an extensive knowledge of the works of women artists, most of whom have struggled historically with being accepted as serious artists. An engaging analysis of the resilience of female artists throughout modern history."-- "Kirkus Reviews"