Art Books
Color “The Cave Method of Drawing for Students”

Color “The Cave Method of Drawing for Students”

Printed: 9.99 $

The Commission nominated by Your Excellency to give its opinion upon the method of Madame Cave, and upon the question as to whether that method can be introduced into the schools, has the honor of presenting to Your Excellency the results of the examination that it has made.

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Crayon Portraiture

Crayon Portraiture

Printed: 19.99 $eBook: 4.99 $
Author:
Series: Yellow Line Art Books, Book 0
Genres: Academics, Art Books

Complete Instructions for Making Crayon
Portraits on Crayon Paper and on
Platinum, Silver and Bromide
Enlargements

ALSO DIRECTIONS FOR THE USE OF
“TRANSPARENT LIQUID WATER COLORS”, "THEORY OF COLORS"
AND FOR MAKING
“FRENCH CRYSTALS”

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Cruikshank’s Water Colours (Illustrated)

Cruikshank’s Water Colours (Illustrated)

Printed: 26.99 $eBook: 3.99 $

It is fair to characterise the three suites of original water-colour drawings, as executed by our artist, as unique examples of the great George Cruikshank's special individual proficiency as an exponent of this branch of technical dexterity. 

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Drawn at a Venture

Drawn at a Venture

Printed: 6.99 $eBook: 0.99 $
Author:
Series: Yellow Line Art Books, Book 0
Genres: Art Books, Non-Fiction

THERE are various methods of introducing an artist to his public. One of the best is to describe how you saved his life in the Bush in ’82; or he saved yours; and then you go on: “Little did either of us anticipate in those far-off days that Fougasse was destined to become . . .” Another way is to leave Fougasse out altogether, and concentrate, how happily, on your own theories of black-and-white drawing, or politics, or the decline of the churches; after all, an introduction doesn’t last long, and he has the rest of the book to himself. Perhaps, however, it is kinder to keep the last paragraph for him: “Take these little sketches by Fougasse, for instance . . .” and the reader, if he cares to any longer, can then turn over and take them. Left to ourselves, that is the method we should adopt. But the publisher is at our elbow. “This is an introduction,” he says. “For Heaven’s sake introduce the fellow.”

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Handbook of Drawing: “With Upwards of Two Hundred Woodcuts and Diagrams”

Handbook of Drawing: “With Upwards of Two Hundred Woodcuts and Diagrams”

Printed: 14.99 $

'Art is universal in its influence ; so may it be in its practice,if it proceed from a sincere heart and quick observation. In this case it may be the merest sketch, or the most elaborate imitative finish. Either will be whole and perfect.'
" GOETHE ".

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LINE AND FORM: “ILLUSTRATED DRAWING BOOK”

LINE AND FORM: “ILLUSTRATED DRAWING BOOK”

Printed: 14.99 $eBook: 3.99 $
Author:
Series: Yellow Line Art Books, Book 0
Genres: Academics, Art Books

As in the case of "The Bases of Design," to which this is intended to form a companion volume, the substance of the following chapters on Line and Form originally formed a series of lectures delivered to the students of the Manchester Municipal School of Art.
There is no pretension to an exhaustive treatment of a subject it would be difficult enough to exhaust, and it is dealt with in a way intended to bear rather upon the practical work of an art school, and to be suggestive and helpful to those face to face with the current problems of drawing and design.

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Love in Art

Love in Art

Printed: 12.99 $

THE LOVE between man and woman has been told in story and poem since long before the days of Sappho. It forms, indeed, the subject of the great bulk of what we call literature. In music, love's domain is less extended. With the exception song and the opera, most of the greatest music has, in its title at least, no hint of the great heart historyof human kind.

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Pen Drawing

Pen Drawing

Printed: 9.99 $eBook: 1.99 $

Art, with its finite means, cannot hope to record the infinite variety and complexity of Nature, and so contents itself with a partial statement, addressing this to the imagination for the full and perfect meaning. This inadequation, and the artificial adjustments which it involves, are tolerated by right of what is known as artistic convention; and as each art has its own particular limitations, so each has its own particular conventions. Sculpture reproduces the forms of Nature, but discards the color without any shock to our ideas of verity; Painting gives us the color, but not the third dimension, and we are satisfied; and Architecture ispurely conventional, since it does not even aim at the imitation of natural form.

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Oxford: “Illustrated With 100 Illustrations In Colour”

Oxford: “Illustrated With 100 Illustrations In Colour”

Printed: 29.99 $eBook: 2.99 $
Author:
Genres: Art Books, Non-Fiction

AT the east end of the choir aisle of the Cathedral there is a portion of the wall which is possibly the oldest piece of masonry in Oxford, for it is thought to be a part of the original Church of St. Frideswyde, on whose site the Cathedral Church of Christ (to give its full title) now stands. Even so it is not possible to speak with historical certainty of the saint or of the date of her Church, which was built for her by her father, so the legend says, when she took the veil; though the year 740 may be provisionally accepted as the last year of her life.

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The Elements of Drawing

The Elements of Drawing

Printed: 12.99 $eBook: 3.99 $

["The Elements of Drawing" was written during the winter of 1856. The First Edition was published in 1857; the Second followed in the same year, with some additions and slight alterations. The Third Edition consisted of sixth thousand, 1859; seventh thousand, 1860; and eighth thousand, 1861.
The work was partly reproduced in "Our Sketching Club," by the Rev. R. St. John Tyrwhitt, M.A., 1874; with new editions in 1875, 1882, and 1886.
Mr. Ruskin meant, during his tenure of the Slade Professorship at Oxford, to recast his teaching, and to write a systematic manual for the use of his Drawing School, under the title of "The Laws of Fésole." Of this only vol. i. was completed, 1879; second edition, 1882.
As, therefore, "The Elements of Drawing" has never been completely superseded, and as many readers of Mr. Ruskin's works have expressed a desire to possess the book in its old form, it is now reprinted as it stood in 1859.]

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