Best of
Drawing
2004
The Artist's Complete Guide to Drawing the Head
William Maughan - 2004
He then demonstrates, step by step, how to draw each facial feature, develop visual awareness, and render the head in color with soft pastels.
Charles Reid's Watercolor Secrets: An Intimate Look at the Discoveries from a Lifetime of Painting
Charles Reid - 2004
With each entry, you'll learn how to improve your own watercolor technique. Discover how to:Simplify your shadow shapesCreate form using silhouettesUse edges to create a crisp or soft effectPrepare your supplies to paint outdoorsBalance your use of detail by focusing on the essentialsQuickly capture the essence of the environment in which you're paintingFive detailed step-by-step demonstrations guide you in creating watercolor masterpieces of your own. With Reid's concise and encouraging explanations, you'll feel as if you've found your own personal teacher.
Lee Hammond's Big Book of Drawing
Lee Hammond - 2004
Master the Essentials of Realistic DrawingsWith Lee Hammond's Big Book of Drawing, your art will spring to life! From laughing children and frolicking tigers to fruit so vivid it makes your mouth water, you'll discover how to realistically draw your favorite subjects and how to draw them well! Learn to:- Use easy-to-master graphing and shaping techniques to better portray your subject - Replicate the effects of light through blending and shading - Accurately render the personalities of people and animals - Realistically draw flowers and natural elements by applying hard or soft edges - Achieve a range of effects by using different brands of colored and graphite pencilsWhether you're a beginner or a professional, with Lee Hammond's instruction you'll find the arsenal of tools you need to create stunning, real-life drawings that will captivate your audience.
Marcel Dzama: Drawings from the Bernardi Collection
Wayne Baerwaldt - 2004
Executed with guileless simplicity and infused with a radiant innocence and an idiosyncratic sense of humor far removed from other strategies that have fueled artmaking over the past decade, Dzama's work is part of a new sensibility among artists born in the mid-1970s, that mingles the influence of Henry Darger, cartoon strips and a dark surrealistic streak. This concise and affordable survey examines the evolution of Dzama's singular approach to drawing between the key years of 1996 and 2001, using works held in the Bernardi Collection. In an accompanying essay, James Patten links Dzama to Mikhail Bakhtin's ideas on grotesque humor and the carnivalesque, showing how each drawing contains an amalgam of allusions to twentieth-century popular culture.
Beautiful Botanicals
Bente Starcke King - 2004
It's a must-have for any nature or art lover!
Cotton Puffs, Q-Tips, Smoke and Mirrors: The Drawings of Ed Ruscha
Margit Rowell - 2004
1937) is among the most popular American artists working today. His evocations of commonplace subjects have earned him a reputation as a Pop artist, while his interest in language and typography has aligned him with Conceptual art. This book, published to accompany Ruscha's first museum retrospective of drawings, showcases his singular vision and his wide range of highly personal mediums and techniques, from pastels and gunpowder to blood, coffee, and tobacco stains. Ruscha's work includes paintings, photographs, prints, books, and films, but his unique works on paper are perhaps his richest vein. Through his interpretations of cultural icons and vernacular subjects such as the Hollywood sign, trademarks, and gas stations, as well as his renderings of words and phrases in countless stylistic variations, Ruscha proposes a modern landscape based on keen observation and wry humor.
Action! Cartooning
Ben Caldwell - 2004
Its simply larger, better illustrated, and more in depth than any similar title on the market. In elaborate detail, it focuses on superheroes and their atmospheric world filled with speed and movement. Every aspect of creating cartoons is taught: the supplies, developing mood, and the techniques that endow characters with personality. See how to draw a variety of faces (female, heroic, cute, gaunt), and give the appearance of age. From the skeleton to the torso, to the arms, hands, and legs, follow every stroke that goes into producing bodies of all shapes and sizes. Finally, theres instruction on sending those figures into running, jumping, punching, kicking action in a fully realized scene. With advice so thorough, any amateur can become a pro.
The Infinite Line: Re-making Art After Modernism
Briony Fer - 2004
Examining the work of major artists of the period—including Mark Rothko, Piero Manzoni, Agnes Martin, Dan Flavin, Eva Hesse, Blinky Palermo, and Louise Bourgeois—Briony Fer focuses on the overriding tendency toward repetition and seriality that occurred at the moment of modernism’s decline, gained ground in its aftermath, and continues to shape much of the art seen today.Although seriality is mainly associated with American artists and with Minimalism, Fer broadens our understanding of it, looking at Minimalist seriality as one crucially important strategy among several. She argues that repetition becomes generative of new modes and habits of making and looking; at stake is how we think about the artwork in relation to both temporality and subjectivity. Paying close attention to specific artworks, this timely critical reassessment offers a fresh perspective on a wide range of familiar and less familiar art.
From Mind, Heart, and Hand: Persian, Turkish, and Indian Drawings from the Stuart Cary Welch Collection
Stuart Cary Welch - 2004
In 1999, Welch made a generous gift of drawings to the Harvard University Art Museums, which form the basis of the present catalogue. Spanning five centuries and extending from Istanbul to Calcutta, these drawings represent the great empires of the Ottomans in Turkey, the Safavids in Iran, and the Mughals in India as well as numerous regional Hindu kingdoms. This beautifully illustrated book presents more than seventy exquisite drawings—some of which are counted among the greatest Indian, Persian, or Turkish drawings ever made—and explores the connections between the arts and artists of the three cultures. As with drawings from European traditions, the works display an immediacy that is often absent in paintings. The drawings deal with fascinating and diverse subjects ranging from court portraits, stories from fable and myth, and hunting scenes to animals, flowers, and people sketched from life. The contributors to the book shed light on various aspects of the drawings and the artists, and Welch offers an engaging account of his trials and triumphs while acquiring the works in his unparalleled collection.
Eyeball Animation Drawing Book: Creatures Edition
Jeffrey C. Cole - 2004
Keep the pencil point sharp and the eyes rolling! This Drawing Book will generate page after page of original eye-popping creations!
The Art of Silver
Stephen Silver - 2004
Stephen has worked at top animation studios, including Warner Bros., Disney and Nickelodeon, where he developed characters for shows such as Disney's "Kim Possible", Kevin Smith's "Clerks: The Animated Series" and Nickelodeon's "Danny Phantom." Stephen's successful career as a designer of animated characters, merchandise and publishing has been the culmination of a lifelong dream and drive to be an artist. Through selections from his personal sketchbook and conceptual art, we see Stephen's development through his creative journey. The drawing tips, useful techniques and the sheer volume of quality artwork in this book will surely be a source of inspiration to help the aspiring artist along their own creative path.
Freaky Flora: From A to Z
Michel Gagné - 2004
Taking the readers on a botanical tour, this title is a useful companion to Gagne's Frenzied Fauna: From A to Z.