Book Description
Collects excerpts from the personal travel journal sketchbooks of forty-three artists, illustrators, and designers.
Author : Danny Gregory
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Page : 272 pages
File Size : 22,47 MB
Release : 2013-02-28
Category : Art
ISBN : 144032025X
Collects excerpts from the personal travel journal sketchbooks of forty-three artists, illustrators, and designers.
Author : Samuel Chamberlain
Publisher :
Page : 132 pages
File Size : 18,16 MB
Release : 1929
Category : Architecture
ISBN :
Author : Charlie O'Shields
Publisher : Doodlewash Books
Page : 280 pages
File Size : 50,97 MB
Release : 2018-11-22
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0960021922
Charlie O'Shields is the creator of Doodlewash®, founder of World Watercolor Month in July, and host of the Sketching Stuff podcast. Every single day, for over three years, he created a watercolor illustration and wrote a short essay about whatever came to mind that day and posted it on his blog. These are some of the collected favorites along with some brand new musings. With over 180 illustrations, this book is part personal memoir and sometimes just a randomly fun romp through the sillier bits of this crazy world we all inhabit. Written to take on the impossible task of inspiring creativity, unleashing your inner child, and instilling hope, it will, at the very least, make you smile and touch your heart.
Author : Amy Hungerford
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Page : 216 pages
File Size : 40,9 MB
Release : 2003-01-15
Category : History
ISBN : 0226360768
"Examines the implications of conflating texts with people in a broad range of texts: Art Spiegelman's Maus, Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, the poetry of Sylvia Plath, Binjamin Wilkomirski's fake Holocaust memoir Fragments, and the fiction of Saul Bellow, Philip Roth, and Don Delillo."--Jacket.
Author : Unk White
Publisher :
Page : 72 pages
File Size : 30,5 MB
Release : 1971
Category : Travel
ISBN :
Author : Ronald Searle
Publisher :
Page : 128 pages
File Size : 13,15 MB
Release : 1958
Category : Paris
ISBN :
Author : Hilene Flanzbaum
Publisher :
Page : 280 pages
File Size : 34,89 MB
Release : 1999-03-19
Category : History
ISBN :
The editor sought to present representations of the Holocaust in America in such media and artifacts as "movies, theater, architecture, advertising, survivor testimony, television, the discussion of race, and literature and cultural theory."--Introduction, p. 15.
Author : Martha J. Cutter
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 369 pages
File Size : 48,54 MB
Release : 2018-04-01
Category : History
ISBN : 0820352020
Redrawing the Historical Past examines how multiethnic graphic novels portray and revise U.S. history. This is the first collection to focus exclusively on the interplay of history and memory in multiethnic graphic novels. Such interplay enables a new understanding of the past. The twelve essays explore Mat Johnson and Warren Pleece’s Incognegro, Gene Luen Yang’s Boxers and Saints, GB Tran’s Vietnamerica, Scott McCloud’s The New Adventures of Abraham Lincoln, Art Spiegelman’s post-Maus work, and G. Neri and Randy DuBurke’s Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty, among many others. The collection represents an original body of criticism about recently published works that have received scant scholarly attention. The chapters confront issues of history and memory in contemporary multiethnic graphic novels, employing diverse methodologies and approaches while adhering to three main guidelines. First, using a global lens, contributors reconsider the concept of history and how it is manifest in their chosen texts. Second, contributors consider the ways in which graphic novels, as a distinct genre, can formally renovate or intervene in notions of the historical past. Third, contributors take seriously the possibilities and limitations of these historical revisions with regard to envisioning new, different, or even more positive versions of both the present and future. As a whole, the volume demonstrates that graphic novelists use the open and flexible space of the graphic narrative page—in which readers can move not only forward but also backward, upward, downward, and in several other directions—to present history as an open realm of struggle that is continually being revised. Contributors: Frederick Luis Aldama, Julie Buckner Armstrong, Katharine Capshaw, Monica Chiu, Jennifer Glaser, Taylor Hagood, Caroline Kyungah Hong, Angela Lafien, Catherine H. Nguyen, Jeffrey Santa Ana, and Jorge Santos.
Author : A. Isabelle Howe
Publisher :
Page : 184 pages
File Size : 31,32 MB
Release : 2003
Category : Art
ISBN :
After earning his MFA at the University of Texas, Kreneck joined the faculty at Texas Tech University, where he has remained through a career of nearly four decades." "This book is filled with full-color reproductions of many of Kreneck's screenprints, and it includes a step-by-step description of the artist's new screenprinting technique, which he calls "no prints.""--BOOK JACKET.
Author : William H. Gerdts
Publisher : Abbeville Publishing Group
Page : 296 pages
File Size : 32,79 MB
Release : 1996-05
Category : Art
ISBN :
The life and work of one of the most admired American Impressionists are fully detailed in the first major monograph on the artist. William Glackens was one of the most influential American painters in the first decades of the twentieth century. From his beginnings as a witty magazine artist-illustrator in Philadelphia and New York to his participation in the forward-thinking group of artists dubbed The Eight, Glackens was a perceptive interpreter of his surroundings. Glackens, one of the most versatile and popular artists of his time, assimilated the lighthearted modern French themes of spirited cafés and bustling parks and resorts in such canvases as Chez Mouquin (1905) and Sledding, Central Park (1912). An admirer of the more traditional figure painting of the Impressionist Renoir, his name also became closely linked to the modern artists who exhibited their works at the famous Armory Show of 1913, which Glackens helped organize. This important study, the first major monograph on Glackens, includes an insightful essay by Dr. William Gerdts and a complete catalog, introduced by curator Jorge Santis, describing the incomparable holdings of the Glackens Collection of the Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. With a chronology, bibliography, and index, this profusely illustrated volume is sure to become the standard reference on Glackens for historians and collectors of twentieth-century art.