His works include Painting in Scotland: the Golden Age (Oxford 1986), and Scottish Art 1460-1990 (Edinburgh 2000),[3][4][5] According to Cairns Craig, the book views Scottish art as emanating from public art practices of the Protestant Reformation.[6] The Times Literary Supplement considered that Macmillan was excellent on the Renaissance but later prone to "a certain unevenness". Nonetheless, the "TLS" praised his "intellectual underpinning" and treatments of William Quiller Orchardson and William McTaggart.[7] In 1991 this book won the Saltire Society Scottish Book of the Year award. Macmillan's works also include Scottish Art in the 20th Century (Edinburgh 1994, Scottish Arts Council Book Award), and Scotland's Shrine: The Scottish National War Memorial, which is accompanied by a foreword by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II (Lund Humphries, 2014).
Macmillan is author of monographs on Scottish and European artists, including Will Maclean, Steven Campbell, Elizabeth Blackadder, Victoria Crowe, and (with Tom Hewlett) of FCB Cadell.[8] His 2015 critique of intellectual and moral probity in the contemporary art world, entitled The Thought Police, appeared in Treason of the Scholars.[9]
His Scotland and the Origins of Modern Art was published by Lund Humphries in 2023.[10]
Distinctions
In 2004 he was awarded the Henry Duncan Prize for his contribution to Scottish Historiography by the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
In 2005 he was awarded the Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun Prize for his contribution to Scottish life by the Saltire Society.
In 2018 he was awarded the Sir Walter Scott Medal[11] of the Royal Society of Edinburgh for his outstanding contribution to the appreciation of Scottish Art and its place within the European Tradition.
Bibliography
Books
Duncan Macmillan, Painting in Scotland: the Golden Age (Phaidon, 1986)
Duncan Macmillan, Scottish Art 1460-1990 (Mainstream, 1990)
Duncan Macmillan, Symbols of Survival, The Art of Will Maclean (revised edition 2002)[12]
Duncan Macmillan, Scottish Art in the 20th Century (1994)[13]
^Craig, Cairns (2007). "Recovering History". In Caroline McCracken-Flesher (ed.). Culture, Nation, and the New Scottish Parliament. Bucknell University Press. p. 34.
^Thomson, Duncan. "Scotland's best". Times Literary Supplement (London, England), Friday, 5 April 1991; pg. 23; Issue 4592.
^Treason of the Scholars, by Peter Goodfellow with contributions from David Starkey, Roger Scruton and Duncan Macmillan, Panter and Hall, London, UK (2015) ISBN978-0-9933568-0-3.
^Macmillan, Duncan (2023), Scotland and the Origins of Modern Art, Lund Humphries, London, ISBN978-1-84822-633-3