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This accessible book explains the significance of relationships between the body and the mark, visual imitation, drawing and writing and visual storytelling, providing a simple guide to these key ideas. For millennia drawing has been conceived as an exploratory activity, mediating between the vision of the drafter and what they are drawing. Drawing reveals hidden relationships, directs attention, scrutinises the material world and provides plans for further action.
The book unpacks the key ideas that have shaped the rich, complex and foundational activity of drawing. It presents an unexpected, engaging and authoritative range of illustrated examples of drawings made by culturally and historically diverse people for different purposes, with different media, in widely different times and situations.
Educator, author and artist Simon Grennan builds together concepts to create a complete guide to ideas about drawing.
List of contents
List of Illustrations
Introduction: what is drawing?
1. ImitationThe threshold of visualisation and the problem of media
Depiction and visualisation
Imitating vision and imitating drawing
Digital imitation
Analogue imitation
Imitating experience
2. MarkTone
Line
Planning
Mapping
Drawing systems representing three dimensions
Typification
Writing
Mark making across media
Introducing the body
3. TraceThe surface
The surface of the drawing as the skin of a body
The surface as a visualisation of an idea
The limits of the drawing
The significance of drawing media
Trace, media and body
Trace and style
Trace as evidence
Movement, mind and absence
Choreographing traces
Trace and depiction
4. StoryStory and point of view
The story of the drawing
Story and style
Drawing style and character
5. Drawing TodayFeeling
Technology old and new
Systematic drawings
Identity and power
Textiles and the line
Conjecture and hypothesis
Collaborative drawing
Performing drawing
Moving drawings
Contemporary drawing and public cultural institutions
Selective glossary
References
Further reading
Index
About the author
Simon Grennan
Summary
This accessible book explains the significance of relationships between the body and the mark, visual imitation, drawing and writing and visual storytelling, providing a simple guide to these key ideas. For millennia drawing has been conceived as an exploratory activity, mediating between the vision of the drafter and what they are drawing. Drawing reveals hidden relationships, directs attention, scrutinises the material world and provides plans for further action.
The book unpacks the key ideas that have shaped the rich, complex and foundational activity of drawing. It presents an unexpected, engaging and authoritative range of illustrated examples of drawings made by culturally and historically diverse people for different purposes, with different media, in widely different times and situations.
Educator, author and artist Simon Grennan builds together concepts to create a complete guide to ideas about drawing.
Foreword
A short, accessible illustrated guide to key ideas that are used to describe, understand and explain drawing.
Additional text
Simon Grennan’s book presents a probing journey through the meaning and uses of drawing. An engaging compliment to support and extend the understanding of the role and nature of drawing for the student and practitioner alike. The examples demonstrate the pervasiveness of drawing across fields and to different ends. It would be a great accompaniment to practice-based art or design education, demonstrating the way drawing can be simultaneously reductive and expansive in its use. The reader finishes the book with an understanding of how drawing can be viewed as both a necessary practical tool and theoretical exercise.