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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Drawing & drawings
Many people crave a creative outlet, but more often than not, don't
know where to start. In White, Valentina Zucchi and Francesca Zoboli
invite you to nurture your creativity and build your confidence by
taking inspiration from works of art that celebrate the silent and tidy
colour of white.
White could be considered a non-colour, since it often suggests an
absence of something. In fact, the reverse is true: white contains
everything, even all the other colours. It has many shades, from chalk
to snow white, and is found everywhere, from clouds to wedding dresses.
Throughout the book, Valentina and Francesca provide creative and fun
prompts - many based on famous works of art - which will encourage you
to draw or paint on the pages using various techniques. Packed with
inspiration from the world's most celebrated artists, including Paul
Klee, Michelangelo, Claude Monet and more, you will discover the many
shades of white and just some of the ways it can be used to convey
meaning.
White is a short course in unlocking your creative self - perfect for
budding artists of all ages who are keen to try out different
techniques and materials and begin their artistic journey.
Many people crave a creative outlet, but more often than not, don't
know where to start. In Black, Valentina Zucchi and Francesca Zoboli
invite you to nurture your creativity and build your confidence by
taking inspiration from works of art that celebrate the most enigmatic
colour of all, black.
Black is a special colour: rich, glossy and elegant on the one hand;
strict, sensible and solemn on the other. Throughout the book,Valentina
and Francesca provide creative and fun prompts - many based on famous
works of art - which will encourage you to draw or paint on the pages
using various techniques. Packed with inspiration from the world's most
celebrated artists, including Francisco Goya, Jackson Pollock,
Rembrandt and more, you will discover the many meanings of black and
just some of the ways it can be used to express your creative passion.
Black is a short course in unlocking your creative self - perfect for
budding artists of all ages who are keen to try out different
techniques and materials and begin their artistic journey.
Many people crave a creative outlet, but more often than not, don't
know where to start. In Blue, Valentina Zucchi and Viola Niccolai
invite you to nurture your creativity and build your confidence by
taking inspiration from modern works of art that celebrate blue,
perhaps the best-loved colour of all. Discover the most important
blues, ones that the all-time greatest painters have used in order
to paint velvet, mountains, Madonnas, angels, skies and storms.
Throughout the book, Valentina and Viola provide creative and fun
prompts - many based on famous works of art - which will encourage
you to draw or paint on the pages using various techniques. Packed
with inspiration from the world's most celebrated artists,
including the ancient Egyptians, John Constable, Pablo Picasso,
Vincent van Gogh, Yves Klein and more, you will discover the many
meanings of blue and just some of the innumerable stories that
bring it to life. Blue is a short course in unlocking your creative
self - perfect for budding artists of all ages who are keen to try
out different artistic techniques and materials, and begin their
artistic journey.
Definitive source on intricate tattoos of Polynesia's Marquesas
Islands offers a rare glimpse of a vanished art. Its 38 plates of
black-and-white drawings and photographs provide an unusually
complete and intimate record.
Frederick Arthur Farrell (1882-1935) came from a distinguished
Glasgow family. He initially studied civil engineering, and as an
artist was self-taught, although he owes a debt to the advice and
example of Muirhead Bone. By the outbreak of World War I he was
developing a reputation as an up-and-coming etcher and
watercolourist of portraits and topographical subjects. He enlisted
as a sapper, or military engineer, with the Royal Engineers Railway
Troops Depot but was discharged from the Army due to ill health. In
December 1916, Farrell returned to the Front as a war artist,
attached for three weeks to the 15th, 16th and 17th Highland Light
Infantry in Flanders. In November 1917 he was in France, attached
for two months to the staff of the 51st (Highland) Division. In
between, authorized by the Minister of Munitions and Admiralty, and
supported by Glasgow's Lord Provost, Farrell drew the heroic home
effort of women in Glasgow's munitions factories, shipyards and
engineering works. As a former soldier, Farrell's sketches and
watercolours of the Front powerfully offer a landscape filtered
through personal experience and emotion. Battle scenes and
strategic deliberations are reconstructed, informed by first-hand
accounts. Many include portraits of actual soldiers. There are
poignant images of graves, devastated landscapes and destroyed
churches. However, there are also scenes of reconstruction and
renewed activity amid the desolation. He is at his most dynamic in
his drawings of the munitions factories which are full of noise,
light and movement. In these there is a sense of joy and energy in
industry and machinery, in patterning and design. The commission
Farrell received from the Corporation of Glasgow to produce 50
drawings of the front line and munitions factories in the city to
record the war for posterity was extraordinary. He was unique in
being the only war artist to be commissioned by a city rather than
by the government, Imperial War Museum or armed forces. Glasgow was
one of the first cities to recognize the importance of creating
such a memorial, rather than just creating images for propaganda
purposes.
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