Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist Hardcover – December 13, 1951
Author: Visit Amazon's Stephen Rogers Peck Page | Language: English | ISBN: 0195000528 | Format: PDF, EPUB
Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist – December 13, 1951
Free download Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist Hardcover – December 13, 1951 for everyone book with Mediafire Link Download Link
"An exhaustive but absorbingly interesting treatise.... The artist will find it planned and written with a completeness and orderliness which make it the perfect reference book."--Art News and Review
"Ingeniously edited, well-organized, and illustrated with almost a thousand excellent factual three-dimensional renderings."--Los Angeles Times
Direct download links available for Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist – December 13, 1951
Free download Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist Hardcover – December 13, 1951 for everyone book with Mediafire Link Download Link
Review
"An exhaustive but absorbingly interesting treatise.... The artist will find it planned and written with a completeness and orderliness which make it the perfect reference book."--Art News and Review
"Ingeniously edited, well-organized, and illustrated with almost a thousand excellent factual three-dimensional renderings."--Los Angeles Times
About the Author
The late Stephen Rogers Peck was a lecturer in artistic anatomy at Parsons School of Design and Pratt Institute, and a portrait painter and medical illustrator.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
Direct download links available for Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist – December 13, 1951
- Hardcover: 288 pages
- Publisher: Oxford University Press (December 13, 1951)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0195000528
- ISBN-13: 978-0195000528
- Product Dimensions: 9.9 x 7.7 x 1 inches
- Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #939,594 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
Copyright 1951? Wow, what a stimulating discovery, and what fun! Besides the skeletal and musculature illustrations, "Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist" is full of Peck's own drawings of basic anatomical features. These are not just the "final" drawings, like the master prints in Hale, but the beginning "rough sketches". I find this delightful because every beginner needs some inspirational guidance in drawing's first steps. A simple rough sketch of a nose, with shading; or bones drawn as a simple hinge joint, an arm or leg.... Peck's general reduction of the human figure to basic shapes is of inestimable help. The reader may just find himself saying, "Hey, I can do THAT!!!" And that is the wonderful thing about PECK's book.
Peck has impeccable credentials and must be compared to Robert Beverly Hale. Peck's is not merely an alternate duplication of the same material Hale covers. There is a 'personal' touch in Peck; but the problem with any/all anatomy books, for beginners, is that they are simply intimidating, in their detail, their precision, their absolute realism. PECK overcomes this anatomical intimidation. I would venture that PECK ought to be included in at least the first several "drawing" books that one acquires. Sometimes it seems that several pages offer more practical instruction to a new student than entire chapters in the books coming out in recent years with gimmicky titles.
"Atlas of Human Anatomy for the Artist," in combination with any beginning book on figure drawing is a must. With Famous Artist's School, Willy Pogany, Walt Reed, Jack Hamm, Viktor Perard and similar instruction, any ...................
book-buyer / beginning artist will find themselves advancing steadily.
No comments:
Post a Comment