| Title | : | The Digital Canvas: Discovering the Art Studio in Your Computer (Abrams Studio) |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.92 (778 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 0810992361 |
| Format Type | : | Paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 192 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2006-07-01 |
| Genre | : |
The computer is an art studio in itself, for those who know where to look and how to use it. Inspirational yet highly practical, The Digital Canvas explores contemporary computer-generated art and shows how the computer can be a flexible and surprising tool for visual experimentation. This is not an instruction manual, but the digital equivalent of a survey of techniques and materials in the fine arts, emphasizing creativity and visual thinking over rote learning. It takes the elements common to all visual art and shows how they can be deployed using digital resources. The Digital Canvas is one of three titles this spring from Abrams Studio, our new imprint dedicated to providing artists and designers with innovative, affordable books to help them improve their skills.
Editorial : About the Author Jonathan Raimes is an artist and director of Foundation Publishing, a group specializing in publishing and print design, as well as branding and packaging. As an artist and graphic designer, he has worked with many luminaries in the art and design world, including Peter Blake, Ron Kitaj, and David Hockney. He lives in London.
Malcolm Garrett is one of Britain's best-known graphic artists and designers, a pioneer of interactive design, and the first interactive designer to be bestowed the honor of Royal Designer for Industry. He is currently visiting professor at the University of the Arts, London.
I look forward to more collaborations between Nishizuka and Litzinger!. Many of your unidentified frustrations with the way the world works are explained here. Under these circumstances, it is remarkable that he survived, let alone thrived. But maybe that's just me?
Naoki himself comes across incredibly juvenile and horribly codependent in this book. And there are lots of loose ends mentioned that perhaps, with our modern computer search facilities, could still be followed up on – even at this remove in time from the most bizarre series of murders in U.S. I believe that even parents dedicated to attachment methods recognize this truth. Even many of the problems given at the ends of chapters are unclear and require some guesswork to figure out what is being asked, and there are no answers given at the end of the book.
I can't imagine learning the basics of continuum mechanics from this bare-minimum-explanation book. I recommend this book as one of the best va
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