To truly understand British art is to recognize the pivotal contributions of the many foreign artists who have called Britain home. Traditional narratives have long obscured foreign influence, but this radical study challenges the notion of an exceptional or exclusive British culture, and in so doing rewrites the history of Renaissance and Enlightenment–era art.
Broadcaster and lecturer Leslie Primo expertly places art history in the wider political contexts of xenophobia and influence, addressing both foreign artists working in Britain and British-born artists affected by foreign cultures. From Hans Holbein to Artemisia Gentileschi, William Hogarth to Angelica Kauffman, familiar masters and lesser-known creators are situated within the multiculturalism inherent to, yet commonly dismissed by, the art world at this time.
Weaving together artists’ experiences of both acclaim and adversity, The Foreign Invention of British Art not only demonstrates how immigration and diversification are so often the driving force behind creative innovation, but also reveals the true heritage behind some of the nation’s defining artworks.
Reviews
A timely celebration of multiculturalism … British art historian and lecturer Primo … argu[es] persuasively that the 'new artistic sensibility' that eventually became known as the British school of art could not have developed without the influx of artists from abroad … Born in Britain as a person of color with Caribbean heritage, Primo informs his study with a deep sensitivity to the xenophobia and discrimination that incomers still experience in British society.
— Kirkus Reviews
A sweeping story of British art that is simultaneously familiar and refreshingly strange. Above all, it is a recentering of the story of British art, in which artists from the Continent—and their impacts on English-born painters—are seen not as anomalies but logical, essential contributors to a body of work made in Britain across three centuries. The reader is in good hands with Primo, who seamlessly blends lively artists’ biographies with perceptive formal analysis, foregrounding dozens of jaw-dropping paintings from 1500 to 1800… Primo excels in distilling big subjects into manageable units that feel rich and satisfying. His love for the material is infectious, and his voice radiates a thoughtful, unassuming affability. A master class in big, narrative-driven art history.
— Choice
Contributors
Leslie Primo
Author
Leslie Primo is an independent art historian specializing in early to late medieval and Renaissance art. He has presented several art history programs for the BBC and regularly lectures at the National Portrait Gallery, Imperial College London, The Arts Society, and other leading institutions. Primo’s commitment to interrogating the historical canon and championing inclusive narratives continues through this book, his first withThames & Hudson.
