Organized chronologically, starting with a scroll by a 12th-century Chinese master, this book covers a lot of paintings, most of which are also famous, as well as being designated great. Several paintings and even artists are new to me, most especially the most recent 3: British artist Bridget Riley, Portuguese Paula Rego, and German Anselm Kiefer. Of the 66 paintings covered, most are from Europe or the Americas. I spotted 2 Chinese, 1 Japanese and 1 Mughal Indian among the rest.
You get a very brief biography of the artist, a short text about the painting and its history, and more about selected details within the painting. There is also a small depiction of the painting next to a standing manikin to show scale, though they also give the actual dimensions in American and metric measures (inches and centimeters). They give the date it was painted and the materials used, and the current location of the painting. Most artworks get 4 pages with the painting and the main text on the first double page spread, and the details on the following pages. A few get only one double page spread.
Paintings are organized by centuries: 1100-1500, 1500-1600, 1600-1700, 1700-1800, 1800-1900, 1900 to present. The book was published in 2011 and the last painting was done in 2007.
My favorites are probably The Great Piece of Turf by Albrecht Dürer, The Hay Wain by John Constable, and The Waterlily Pond by Claude Monet.