C Michelle Lindley 

Five of the best novels about art

Rachel Cusk, Raven Leilani and Hari Kunzru are among writers inspired by artists to find shape and form in their own works
  
  

Words, words, words … a gallerygoer considers Rajasthan (Wall Painting), 2012, by Bridget Riley.
Words, words, words … a gallerygoer considers Rajasthan (Wall Painting), 2012, by Bridget Riley. Photograph: Nils Jorgensen/REX/Shutterstock

Stories about art and art-making are inherently metatextual. The anxieties of the art maker – the writer – come through in anxieties about painting, or photography, or sculpture, or dance. But the best art novels transcend this self-consciousness, offer up new ways of seeing, and in turn, give shape and form to what can feel a shapeless, formless world.

Often, they use art not as a means in itself but as a medium to explore sociology, history, philosophy. In my novel, The Nude, which follows an art historian seeking to acquire a rare sculpture of a female figure and her budding fascination with a young artist, I wanted to explore the limitations of one woman’s desire and power in a patriarchal world. Here are five other novels about art – and also about so much more.

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Second Place by Rachel Cusk

Second Place follows a writer’s obsession with a Delphian artist known as L, whom she invites to stay at her guest house – the titular second place – on the marshlands of the English coast. When L arrives, bringing along a female friend – the young and blunt Brett – the narrator begins to unravel. Though loosely based on Mabel Dodge Luhan’s 1932 memoir Lorenzo in Taos, the style is all Cusk’s own: exacting prose and cool-toned observations, resulting in a pared-down psychodrama about the knotty relationship between discourse, identity, and art-making.

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Luster by Raven Leilani

Luster revolves around Edie, a 23-year-old Black woman navigating adulthood, racism at her dead-end corporate job, and a new relationship with a white man named Eric. When she meets Eric, Edie becomes unwittingly enmeshed in the complicated dynamics of his quasi-open marriage and relationship with his adopted Black daughter, Akila. All the while, her ambitions as a painter loom. Artfully rendered and featuring humorous, incisive prose, Luster is a call to arms on a Black woman’s right to pleasure and belonging, and a searing indictment of what it means to be creative in the treacherous world of American capitalism.

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Wet Paint by Chloë Ashby

This compassionate debut by art historian Ashby centers on Eve, a young waitress suppressing traumas large and small, including the death of her best friend, Grace. When Eve decides to take up life modelling, posing nude for a group of students, her anxieties and aspirations sharpen into focus. Eve is both acutely observed and acutely observant; the novel takes its time with her, meticulously tracking one woman’s desperate longing for selfhood, self-possession and, ultimately, resilience.

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Exhibit by RO Kwon

After meeting at a party in San Francisco, two Korean American women – Jin, a photographer, and Lidjia, an injured ballerina on hiatus – form an immediate bond built on equal parts pain and pleasure. Hypnotically stylised, Exhibit traverses themes of art and ambition, kink and queerness as a generational curse lingers over the story. Sensory details suffuse every interaction between these characters, every second guess and cursory glance, as Kwon untangles what happens when a woman gets what she most desires.

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Blue Ruin by Hari Kunzru

Kunzru’s third instalment in his three-colours trilogy tells the story of Jay, a middle-aged grocery delivery driver who was once a promising performance artist. Now, undocumented and suffering from long Covid, he’s barely getting by. That is until he runs into Alice, a woman from his art school days and, to complicate matters, an old paramour. Alice offers Jay a place to stay, the property in which she’s been quarantining with two others from the art world: her husband, a painter; and a gallerist. Both meditative and precise, this is the portrait of the artist as a gig worker, and an unsparing look at art as both a consumer product and means of survival.

• The Nude by C Michelle Lindley is published by Verve (£10.99). To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

 

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