The Artist’s Palette Art Book Review

Posted By yonghow on September 26th, 2025

The Artist's Palette Art Book Review

A beautifully illustrated look at the paints and palettes used by many of the world’s greatest artists from the sixteenth century to today

What can the palette an artist used or depicted tell us about their artistic process, preferences, and finished works? From traditional wooden boards to paint pots, ceramic plates, and studio walls, these deceptively simple yet potent tools provide vital evidence. The Artist’s Palette presents fifty unique palettes alongside paintings by the celebrated artists who used them, gathering expert analysis of color, brushstroke, and technique to offer new histories of these artists and their work.

Alexandra Loske pairs each artist’s color palette with one or more of their paintings, revealing how the artist used paints and pigments. While Georges Seurat meticulously arranged the paints on his palette in prismatic order, a pointillist technique reflected on his canvases, Kerry James Marshall uses blots of zinc white and smears of pale pink on the surfaces of symbolically oversized white palettes held by the Black artists in his portraits, raising provocative questions about the role of color in Black history and Western art. Through these and other compelling accounts, Loske shows how, behind every great painting, there is a palette that tells its story.

Featuring a wealth of original photographs of palettes, paints, and pigments of all kinds, The Artist’s Palette takes readers into the studios of artists from Artemisia Gentileschi, Rembrandt, Ingres ( see top image above ) Paul Cézanne, Vincent van Gogh and John Singer Sargent to Egon Schiele, Georgia O’Keeffe, Helen Frankenthaler, Lucian Freud, and Keith Haring, revealing how the materials and tools they used hide secrets and are often reflections of the life and times of the artist who once held, prepared, and used them.

The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review

(image below) Edward Hopper’s ‘Nighthawks’ is just ceaselessly mesmerizing. I recommend checking out his monograph art book by Phaidon – Silent Theater.

The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review
The Artist's Palette Art Book Review

The Artist's Palette Art Book Review

The Artist’s Palette is an in-depth, scholarly look into the expert use of paints and colors by some of the greatest artists that has ever lived, and the presentation of the palettes alongside the painters’ most iconic pieces gives the reader something very tangible to relate to, and in so doing allows for a more immersive appreciation of their work. And they’re so pretty ! Highly recommended.

“The Artist’s Palette” art book details :

– Dimensions – 8.19 x 0.98 x 10.43 inches
– Hardcover, 256 pages
– Full color, in English

The Artist's Palette Amazon Buy Link
Buy From Amazon CA | Amazon JP | Amazon UK | Amazon FR | Amazon IT | Amazon DE | Amazon ES

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2 Responses to “The Artist’s Palette Art Book Review”

Chris James

What a great resource for traditional painters and those interested in process. Always been curious just how certain famous painters arranged and used their palettes. Many are a lot messier than I imagined, especially the pre Impressionist painters whose polished works would lead you to believe their palettes were just as orderly. Do they show Peter Paul Rubens’ palette? He’s the painter I admire most on a technical level.

yonghow

Chris James – one of Ruben’s paintings was showcased in a discussion, but he was not one of the artists featured. It would have been fascinating to see what his palette was like indeed !

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