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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Drawing & drawings
Gamers, get ready to level up with How to Draw Video Games! From
helpful sidekicks to 8-bit aliens and block-style beasts, the video
game galaxy is an epic and endless world of battle-ready bosses,
spewing lava levels and handyman heroes with the courage to save
the day--all you need to do is draw them. This book teaches you how
to get ideas from your brain onto paper by following basic
demonstrations and using real life cheat codes. Instead of pressing
"up, up, down, down, left," grab a sketchbook, marker and pack of
colored pencils to start designing cool characters and the worlds
they live in without the finger blisters and rage quits! 25+
demonstrations cover everything from inventing heroes and evil
villains to storyboarding your game win. Learn how to draw
legendary worlds and create difficult boss levels, including
scrolling, three-dimensional and Minecraft-style block landscapes.
Build cool vehicles, spaceships and sweet rides for heroes to hop
on! Includes info on tech techniques, programs and digital
upgrades. Stop playing video games and start drawing them!
Praised by critics and teachers alike for more than 40 years, Burne
Hogarth's Dynamic Anatomy is recognized worldwide as the classic,
indispensable text on artistic anatomy. Now revised, expanded, and
completely redesigned with 75 never-before-published drawings from
the Hogarth archives and 24 pages of new material, this
award-winning reference explores the expressive structure of the
human form from the artist's point of view. The 400 remarkable
illustrations explain the anatomical details of male and female
figures in motion and at rest, always stressing the human form in
space. Meticulous diagrams and fascinating action studies examine
the rhythmic relationship of muscles and their effect upon surface
forms. The captivating text is further enhanced by the magnificent
figure drawings of such masters as Michelangelo, Rembrandt, Rodin,
Picasso, and other great artists. Dynamic Anatomy presents a
comprehensive, detailed study of the human figure as artistic
anatomy. This time-honored book goes far beyond the factual
elements of anatomy, providing generations of new artists with the
tools they need to make the human figure come alive on paper.
Acclaimed Royal Academy artist Jeanette Barnes and Paul Brandford
breathe new life into sketching for town and city dwellers
everywhere.Mercurial, inspirational, practical and charming, this
guide covers everything from architecture to accidental paintings,
cocktails to clouds, smudges to skyscrapers.With easily digested
bite-size entries, it introduces many types of art materials, their
uses and a number of insights and exercises to build confidence in
a range of approaches to drawing. For the more experienced
sketcher, the artists discuss the processes behind drawing and
strategies to inject more creativity and open-mindedness about how
to take a drawing forward.With great charm, the book gives a window
onto the experiences of Jeanette, who has travelled to many cities
worldwide in search of inspiring city subjects and a half-decent
cocktail. Full of tips and ideas about working on location and back
in the studio, this book is filled with the scribbles, sketches and
preparatory drawings that feed into the larger works for which she
is known.As a whole, the book is a multipurpose tool which can be
used to unlock the potential of drawing both technically and
philosophically so that the reader can be the architect of their
own drawing experience rather than the recipient of someone else's.
After thirty years of drawing, many of them teaching, the authors
still feel an excitement when picking up a pencil or some charcoal.
This book gives every reader the chance to share that excitement
and bring urban living to life.
Created by one of Japan's most popular artists, this book provides
detailed and complete instruction for illustrating fun and
appealing characters and elements that celebrate life. The author's
special and distinct style is simple, appealing, happy, and cute
and offers artists, crafters, and art enthusiasts--with and without
experience--the instruction and inspiration to draw in the Japanese
character style. This book is for artists and crafters of all skill
levels that want to bring their own illustration to their work. It
offers both entertaining and fun drawing instruction and techniques
along with inspiring and sweet unique-style characters and
elements.
Originally written for an exhibition Jean-Luc Nancy curated at the
Museum of Fine Arts in Lyon in 2007, this book addresses the medium
of drawing in light of the question of form--of form in its
formation, as a formative force, as a birth to form. In this sense,
drawing opens less toward its achievement, intention, and
accomplishment than toward a finality without end and the infinite
renewal of ends, toward lines of sense marked by tracings,
suspensions, and permanent interruptions. Recalling that drawing
and design were once used interchangeably, Nancy notes that drawing
designates a design that remains without project, plan, or
intention. His argument offers a way of rethinking a number of
historical terms (sketch, draft, outline, plan, mark, notation),
which includes rethinking drawing in its graphic, filmic,
choreographic, poetic, melodic, and rhythmic sense. If drawing is
not reducible to any form of closure, it never resolves a tension
specific to drawing but allows the pleasure of drawing to come into
appearance, which is also the pleasure in drawing, the gesture of a
desire that remains in excess of all knowledge. Situating drawing
in these terms, Nancy engages a number of texts in which Freud
addresses the force of desire in the rapport between aesthetic and
sexual pleasure, texts that also turn around the same questions
concerning form in its formation, form as a formative force.
Between the sections of the text, Nancy has placed a series of
sketchbooks on drawing, composed of a broad range of quotations on
art from different writers, artists, or philosophers.
Around 1500, Lucas Cranach the Elder steps onto the world stage -
in Vienna. The publication explores this, the artist's earliest
period of work and presents all the paintings he produced during
this time, their expressiveness radically different from the
courtly-elegant compositions he subsequently produced as court
painter in Wittenberg. Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472-1553) produced
his earliest works around 1500 in Vienna, shortly before moving to
Wittenberg to become court painter to the Elector of Saxony. These
brilliant paintings, drawings, and woodcuts document both the
thirty-year-old's close contacts with the humanist circles of
Konrad Celtis and Johannes Cuspinian, and identify him as a
precursor of the so-called Danube School.
The list of subjects that Giorgio Agamben has tackled in his career
is dizzying--from the dangers of our current political moment to
the traces of the distant past that inflect the culture around us
today. With Pulcinella, Agamben is back with yet another
surprising--and surprisingly relevant--subject: the commedia
dell'arte character. At the heart of Pulcinella is Agamben's
exploration of an album of 104 drawings, created by Giovanni
Domenico Tiepolo (1727-1804) near the end of his life, that cover
the life, adventures, death, and resurrection of the title
character. Who is Pulcinella under his black mask? Is he a man, a
demon, or a god? Mixing stories of the enigmatic Pulcinella with
his own character in a sort of imaginary philosophical biography,
Agamben attempts to locate the line connection between philosophy
and comedy. Perhaps, contrary to what we've been told, comedy is
not only more ancient and profound than tragedy, but also closer to
philosophy--close enough, in fact, that, as happens in this book,
at times the line between the two can blur.
Formed by Harvey S. Shipley Miller and donated to The Museum of
Modern Art, New York, in 2005, The Judith Rothschild Foundation
Contemporary Drawings Collection was conceived to be the widest
possible cross-section of contemporary drawing made primarily
within the past 20 years, surveying gestural and geometric
abstraction, representation and figuration, systems-based and
Conceptual work, as well as appropriation and collage. While the
collection primarily focuses on the work of artists living and
working in what are widely regarded as five major centers of visual
art today--New York, Los Angeles, London/Glasgow, Berlin and
Cologne/Dusseldorf--it also includes artists from 30 countries
throughout Europe, Latin America, Asia and Africa. Established
artists such as Jasper Johns are represented through examples of
recent work, while others, such as Joseph Beuys and Philip Guston,
are highlighted through core historic groupings, and still others
are shown in a comprehensive overview of their careers, including
Alighiero e Boetti, Lee Bontecou, Ray Johnson, Anish Kapoor, Franz
West, Bruce Conner and Hannah Wilke. Minimal and Conceptual
drawings from the 1960s and 1970s acquired by the foundation from
New York-based collectors Eileen and Michael Cohen are juxtaposed
with major works by self-taught artists including James Castle,
Henry Darger, Ele D'Artagnan and Pearl Blauvelt, representing a
diverse anthology of works on paper. Additional highlights, both
contemporary and historic, include works by Tomma Abts, Kai
Althoff, Robert Crumb, Tacita Dean, Peter Doig, Angus Fairhurst,
Mark Grotjahn, Richard Hamilton, Eva Hesse, Charline von Heyl,
Christian Holstad, Roni Horn, Ellsworth Kelly, Martin Kippenberger,
Roy Lichtenstein, Sherrie Levine, Lee Lozano, Agnes Martin, Cady
Noland, Jennifer Pastor, Elizabeth Peyton, Adrian Piper, Paul Thek,
Richard Wright and Andrea Zittel. Reminiscent of the classic 2002
MoMA catalogue "Drawing Now" and published to accompany a major
2009 exhibition at The Museum, this volume brings together
approximately 250 representative works.
Laugh Lines: Caricaturing Painting in Nineteenth-Century France is
the first major study of Salon caricature, a kind of graphic art
criticism in which press artists drew comic versions of
contemporary painting and sculpture for publication in widely
consumed journals and albums. Salon caricature began with a few
tentative lithographs in the 1840s and within a few decades, no
Parisian exhibition could open without appearing in warped,
incisive, and hilarious miniature in the pages of the illustrated
press. This broad survey of Salon caricature examines little-known
graphic artists and unpublished amateurs alongside major figures
like Edouard Manet, puts anonymous jokesters in dialogue with the
essays of Baudelaire, and holds up the material qualities of a
10-centime album to the most ambitious painting of the 19th
century. This archival study unearths colorful caricatures that
have not been reproduced until now, drawing back the curtain on a
robust culture of comedy around fine art and its reception in
nineteenth-century France.
Winner of the 2019 CHOICE Award "The authoritative book on the
origins, history, and influence of illustration. Bravo!" David
Brinley, University of Delaware, USA History of Illustration covers
image-making and print history from around the world, spanning from
the ancient to the modern. Hundreds of color images show
illustrations within their social, cultural, and technical context,
while they are ordered from the past to the present. Readers will
be able to analyze images for their displayed techniques, cultural
standards, and ideas to appreciate the art form. This essential
guide is the first history of illustration written by an
international team of illustration historians, practitioners, and
educators.
Create your own floral and plant illustrations, with no previous
artistic experience necessary! Each project in this beautiful book
is broken into easy-to-follow, step-by-step instructions, making
how to draw leaves and flowers (including poppies, pansies, and
cherry blossoms!) as easy as 1-2-3. You'll also learn the process
of creating patterns and digitising your illustrations!
Ben Woolfitt begins each day by drawing. Using graphite, silver and
metal leaf and selected objects for frottage, Woolfitt plumbs the
depths of his unconscious as he draws on each page of his books.
Although best known for his large-format paintings, Woolfitt has
completed hundreds of drawings which showcase his signature
process: taking a pre-existing sign -- a piece of bamboo, for
example -- and imbuing it with subjective energies through the act
of recording and accentuating its impression on the page. The
drawings in Ben Woolfitt: Rhythms & Series are charged with
rich psychological meaning; they speak where language fails.
Distributed randomly in his drawing books, Woolfitt's work
transforms the linear structure of the bound volume into a
nonlinear repository of his sensations and feelings, offering a
special glimpse into his psyche. Ben Woolfitt: Rhythms & Series
contains more than 65 reproductions of Woolfitt's distinctive
drawings along with an interview with the artist by AGO curators
Kenneth Brummel and Alexa Greist.
Die Studie widmet sich Lea Grundig (1906-1977) als Prasidentin des
Verbandes der Bildenden Kunstler Deutschlands (VBKD) von 1964 bis
1970. Nach Inhaftierung und Verfolgung wahrend der NS-Diktatur
fluchtete Grundig 1940 nach Palastina und kehrte 1949 nach
Deutschland zuruck, wo sie zur Professorin fur Graphik an der
Dresdner Kunstakademie berufen wurde. Sie gehoerte zur "Weimarer
Generation" von bildenden Kunstlern und genoss in der ehemaligen
DDR hohes Ansehen. Im Jahre 1964 erfolgte die Wahl Grundigs zur
neuen Prasidentin des VBKD. Sie war die erste und einzige Frau an
der Spitze des ostdeutschen Kunstlerverbandes. Lag das
Hauptaugenmerk der Forschung bislang auf dem Wandel Grundigs
wahrend der 50er und 60er Jahre zur angepassten und konservativen
Kulturfunktionarin, beleuchtet diese
kunsthistorisch-zeitgeschichtliche Studie erstmals anhand von
bislang unbeachteten Archivunterlagen der Akademie der Kunste zu
Berlin die Faktoren, Massnahmen und Auswirkungen der
Prasidentschaftszeit Grundigs. Besonderes Augenmerk liegt dabei auf
den Beziehungen der Grundig zu Israel vor der Folie des staatlichen
Antizionismus und Holocaust-Gedenken in der DDR, den
deutsch-deutschen Kunstbeziehungen, den Diskursen innerhalb des
VBKD sowie dem Verhaltnis des VBKD zu den kulturpolitischen
Liberalisierungsbewegungen in der Tschechoslowakischen
Sozialistischen Republik sowie in der Volksrepublik Polen.
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