Margaret Mellis (1914-2009) was an artist of diverse skills: a painter a maker of collages & reliefs & a sculptor. She was a key figure in British Modernism & with her first husband the author & critic Adrian Stokes was pivotal in establishing the influential artists colony in St Ives. Surprisingly relatively little has been written about Mellis. This book which incorporates groundbreaking new research is the first comprehensive monograph on this important artist. After first meeting Adrian Stokes in Paris Mellis moved to London to be near him & studied with Stokes at the Euston Road School. The pair married in 1938 & moved to Cornwall in 1939 where they set up house in Carbis Bay. Here they entertained some of the leading literary & artistic luminaries of the day. During her St Ives period Mellis work developed from painting to collage & relief under the tutelage of Ben Nicholson & Naum Gabo. She returned to a more realistic form of painting when her marriage came to an end & she left Cornwall in 1946. Following a period in France with the artist Francis Davison whom she married in 1948 the couple settled in Suffolk in 1950. Here Mellis continued her exploration into colour & form. The shifts & developments within her oeuvre brought in large-scale abstract paintings in the 1960s & culminated in an extended series of dynamic & original constructions made from driftwood which first began to appear in 1980. Skillfully unravelling the complexities of Mellis oeuvre in the context of her fascinating life Andrew Lambirth presents an unrivalled account of a truly remarkable artist & woman. Including a wealth of visual material which illustrates Mellis unique vision Margaret Mellis combines insightful analysis with outstanding imagery & as such is essential reading for anyone interested in Modern British Art.