Make Your Mark

Make Your Mark
Author: Margaret Peot
Publsiher: Chronicle Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2004-04-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0811838234

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So many people want to explore the artist within, but don't know where to start. Make Your Mark is the answer. Packed with exciting and accessible art projects, step-by-step instruction, beautiful illustrations, and helpful diagrams, Make Your Mark is a veritable at-home art instructor. Author, artist, and teacher Margaret Peot shares her encouragement and ideas in this fully illustrated guidebook, mapping out new pathways for the personal artistic journey. Eleven chapters focus on different art techniquesfrom stencils and prints to collage and rubbingssuggesting 55 easy-to-follow, step-by-step projects that offer sophisticated and satisfying results. Peot's warm and engaging voice, helpful tips, clear explanations, and simple instructions make it easy to get started, and the sheer range of projects will keep the creative fires burning. Decorated with more than 180 illustrations, every page is brimming with encouragement.

The Art and Science of Drawing

The Art and Science of Drawing
Author: Brent Eviston
Publsiher: Rocky Nook, Inc.
Total Pages: 479
Release: 2021-05-28
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781681987774

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Drawing is not a talent, it's a skill anyone can learn. This is the philosophy of drawing instructor Brent Eviston based on his more than twenty years of teaching. He has tested numerous types of drawing instruction from centuries old classical techniques to contemporary practices and designed an approach that combines tried and true techniques with innovative methods of his own. Now, he shares his secrets with this book that provides the most accessible, streamlined, and effective methods for learning to draw.

Taking the reader through the entire process, beginning with the most basic skills to more advanced such as volumetric drawing, shading, and figure sketching, this book contains numerous projects and guidance on what and how to practice. It also features instructional images and diagrams as well as finished drawings. With this book and a dedication to practice, anyone can learn to draw!

Making Marks

Making Marks
Author: Elaine Clayton
Publsiher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2014-05-06
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781582704227

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Presents exercises for creating stream-of-consciousness drawings which can improve inner awareness of memories and emotions, give insight into past conflicts, and increase self-compassion and empathy for others.

Figure Drawing for Artists

Figure Drawing for Artists
Author: Steve Huston
Publsiher: For Artists
Total Pages: 195
Release: 2016-06
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781631590658

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Learn to draw the human figure with a two-step approach used by the biggest animation studios in the business with Figure Drawing for Artists.

The Pen and Ink Book

The Pen and Ink Book
Author: Joseph A. Smith
Publsiher: Watson-Guptill Publications
Total Pages: 176
Release: 1999
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0823039862

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This resource covers all the materials and techniques of drawing with ink.very type of pen, brush, ink, drawing surface and technique is described.

Mark making in Textile Art

Mark making in Textile Art
Author: Helen Parrott
Publsiher: Batsford
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013-08-15
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 1849940673

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At its very essence, textile art is about mark-making. As an artist would use a pencil, an embroiderer or quilter can use stitch to make marks on fabric – a fundamental creative act. The making of marks often starts and underpins the entire design process, and a textile artwork is usually made up of repeated stitched marks. This fascinating book shows how marks can be used in textile work, both simple and complex, and explores the crossover between stitch and drawing. Author Helen Parrott is well known for her strongly graphic textile art, which uses marks to stunning visual effect. The book is divided into the types of marks that can be made on fabric, varying in complexity, arrangement and 'feel' – single, grouped, massed, regular, irregular, calligraphic, permanent, transient, and so on. It covers both hand and machine stitch, which make very different types of mark and between them offer limitless potential for mark-making, used both separately and together. It aims to help you take inspiration from the world around you to create marks, develop your own mark-making skills and strengthen your personal creative voice, and is an essential book for any textile artist.

Making a Mark

Making a Mark
Author: Andrew Meirion Jones,Marta Díaz-Guardamino
Publsiher: Oxbow Books
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2019-03-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781789251913

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The visual imagery of Neolithic Britain and Ireland is spectacular. While the imagery of passage tombs, such as Knowth and Newgrange, are well known the rich imagery on decorated portable artefacts is less well understood. How does the visual imagery found on decorated portable artefacts compare with other Neolithic imagery, such as passage tomb art and rock art? How do decorated portable artefacts relate chronologically to other examples of Neolithic imagery? Using cutting edge digital imaging techniques, the Making a Mark project examined Neolithic decorated portable artefacts of chalk, stone, bone, antler, and wood from three key regions: southern England and East Anglia; the Irish Sea region (Wales, the Isle of Man and eastern Ireland); and Northeast Scotland and Orkney. Digital analysis revealed, for the first time, the prevalence of practices of erasure and reworking amongst a host of decorated portable artefacts, changing our understanding of these enigmatic artefacts. Rather than mark making being a peripheral activity, we can now appreciate the central importance of mark making to the formation of Neolithic communities across Britain and Ireland. The volume visually documents and discusses the contexts of the decorated portable artefacts from each region, discusses the significance and chronology of practices of erasure and reworking, and compares these practices with those found in other Neolithic contexts, such as passage tomb art, rock art and pottery decoration. A contribution from Antonia Thomas also discusses the settlement art and mortuary art of Orkney, while Ian Dawson and Louisa Minkin contribute with a discussion of the collaborative fine art practices established during the project.

Encaustic Art in the Twenty First Century

Encaustic Art in the Twenty First Century
Author: Anne Lee,Ashley Rooney
Publsiher: Schiffer Craft
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2016
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0764350234

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From beehive to hotplate to the artist's hand, encaustic has evolved as a versatile medium applied to almost every artistic style. A long-overdue look at a newly popular art form, this book explores 79 North American artists' feelings about their work in encaustic and how they use it to express their inner worlds and the world around them. Eight chapters organize the artists by geographical region and focus on how the heated beeswax and resin material is used to create seductive, skin-like surfaces and rich, layered membranes. More than 2,000 years old, this cross-disciplinary medium ranges from painting to sculpture, assemblage, collage, and printmaking and encourages risk-taking in a way that other materials do not. Its inherent contradictions--it can be hot or cold, malleable or solid, opaque or translucent, layered or thin, permanent or fragile--make it all the more fascinating.